Decoding the Gurus - Michael Shellenberger: Conspiratorial Propaganda
Episode Date: April 18, 2025In this episode, Matt and Chris pour themselves a stiff drink and slip into the fever‑dream crossover of Jordan Peterson and Michael Shellenberger, a conversation that opens with the claim... that Western Europe is now the single greatest threat to free speech; yes, croissants and GDPR apparently out‑authoritarian China and Russia. According to Shellenberger, we can now rest safe as free speech has been restored and “America Is Back!” thanks to God-Emperor Trump and the living avatar of honest utterance, Elon 'Horus' Musk.Our hosts marvel as Shellenberger insists USAID is a rogue soft‑power leviathan that somehow staged January 6th, sabotaged the 2020 election, and deserves to be nuked from orbit... although he can’t quite prove any of that YET. Alongside the conspiratorial drivel there is also a heavy serving of Peterson's obscurantist mythicism and dinner‑party anthropology as he explains how Hungary is a model democracy, the US nation beset by parasites, and that this is all inevitably connected to how people are not paying enough attention to Jesus.But that is not all! You will also learn about Manly Men vs. Gentlemen, Musk’s “move fast and break government” ethos, and the revelation that free speech is not a nice‑to‑have but a must‑have—unless you are a lawyer, journalist, or student on the wrong side of the Trump administration. So buckle up for an hour of dystopian déjà vu, as two self‑styled rebel intellectuals morph into state propagandists, cheerleading every single action of Trump and Musk while lecturing the rest of us on free thought.Sources“Trump, Musk, Kennedy: The Dawn of Transparency,” The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast, Ep. 526.Shellenberger's Substack, including gems like "Why Trump’s Victory Is, For Millions Of Us, Cathartic" and "Both USAID And The CIA Were Behind The Impeachment Of Trump in 2019"Taibbi & Shellenberger testify to the House Judiciary Committee to help uncover "the Biden-Harris Administration's unconstitutional censorship campaign"Singal-Minded articles detailing Shellenberger's sloppy journalism and conspiracy theories
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello. Hello, welcome to Decoding the Guru.
It's the podcast for an anthropologist and a psychologist listening to the greatest
clients the world has to offer.
And we try to understand what they're talking about.
I'm Matt Brown and with me is the Snowy to my Tintin co-investigator extraordinaire.
What's her name again?
Christopher Kavanagh.
That's right. Yeah, he's the anthropologist. Yeah, there you are. What's your name again? Christopher Kavanagh. Um, yeah, he's the anthropologist.
Yeah.
There you are.
What are you?
Um, I'm a process of elimination.
That's right.
You could have deduced that you could have had a formula.
And, uh, I do, I do note here.
You're, um, what is it, neo-neo colonialism?
Because you are the product of a colonial state, Australia.
Yes.
But you're kind of the offshoots of colonialism, right?
You were also a prison colony.
So you're a prison colony, colonial state.
But by comparing me to a dog, you are inflicting neocolonialism on an Irish person.
Yeah, it's an insidious system.
No, no.
You misunderstand.
It's a term of affection.
Sorry, was a good loyal dog.
Good dog.
He was the smartest character.
He was actually probably the best character in those.
No, Captain Hattick. I really should be compared to Captain Hattick because I like him.
Everybody wants to be Captain Hattick, don't they? The kind of belligerent drunk sea captain.
I like how they indicated drunkenness in those.
Oh yeah, the little spinny thing above his head.
Right. Yeah.
The portrayals of drunkness, I also remember being pretty accurate.
Yeah, pretty accurate.
Like, Surly, then he starts crying and then he starts fighting people.
That's how it usually goes.
Yeah. Yeah.
That's it. Well, there we go.
Tinting comparison sorted.
Notice that Matt didn't even consider to compare me to Professor Calculus,
which frankly, again, reverse racism, whatever it is, it's something.
It's something to behold because you're too young and good looking.
All right, fine.
Yeah, Professor Calculus does look a bit like Glenn.
Once you see it, you'll never be able to unsee it.
But yeah, so we're not here to discuss Professor Calculus or Captain Huddock.
Though, Matt, this is the coding episode.
We get down to business early.
So who are we here to discuss today?
We are talking about certain Michael Schellenberger. Yeah,
Michael Schellenberger. This is a character I'm sure you know
well, because you know everyone. But sadly, this is someone like
before today, I knew his name. I had vague associations with him,
but I knew very little about him. I'm what I learned.
You loved.
about him. I'm what I learnt. You loved? Well he's had an interesting career arc. He's a little bit older than me and he sort of started off in... he's
an anthropologist that's what I discovered like you Chris. I didn't even
know that. Okay he's an anthropologist was? Apparently, he's got a master of arts in anthropology. Yeah, but yeah, he grew up in,
this is going too far back, but he's a Quaker. He grew up in, he's a come from a Mennonite type of
family. I knew that.
Yeah, yeah. But yeah, you know, his early career was kind of in activism on the sort of general
California type left, you know, activism to save California's last ancient redwood forests and campaigns to make Nike improve their factory conditions, all that stuff.
I do know about this.
Yeah, I'm not going to give a blow by blow account of his career, you could you could say what you want. But what I learned was that there's this relatively recent,
I mean, recent in terms of like, he's not young.
So recent in like the last five, 10 years,
he sort of has veered quite a bit right.
And I guess it sort of started with this kind of pro-nuclear
stuff, post-environmental politics and tech solutions for environmental
problems as opposed to de-gross or sustainable development, that kind of thing. And kind of
setting himself up against progressively more of the left-wing orthodoxies, I suppose.
Was this homeless stuff before or after the anti-nuclear stuff?
Cause like, I know he had a particularly technocratic or maybe blame the poor
stance on the homelessness crisis or whatever.
And that's right.
So he was proposing, I think progressive things, uh a state-wide agency responsible for procuring
shelter beds and providing psychiatric and addiction care. But I think he also was in
favor of mandating stuff treatment for people that are drug addicted or prescribed treatments
for people who are mentally ill rather than giving support per se.
And he ran for governor in California in 2022.
Yeah. Yeah.
It didn't get much of a vote, but it came like third or something.
So losing with the shot.
So yeah, but it more recently has veered rightwards and I guess it was the
Twitter files, you know, linking up with the sort pro-free speech, anti-censorship type
people. Maybe you can take over and tell us a bit more about
that.
So-called pro-free speech, I think would be the way to put it.
He's basically now firmly immersed in the MAGA camp. But
like he was one of the handpicked journalists by Elon
Musk, for example, to
release the Twitter files and detail the corruption there. He's talked about the
censorship industrial complex with Renee DeResta, a previous guest on this podcast, at the head of it.
They're censoring everybody. Renee DeResta, she's like an octopus. The tentacles are everywhere. She's. Yeah, she is according to him. And he's also more recently had various run ins with Jesse
Singel who has presented like how sloppy his journalism is. Even in the case where one
of Schellenberger things was reporting on the WPATH files, right? These leaks from the WPATH, some organisation around transgender
health care stuff, right?
But again, Jesse Singo was criticising how sloppily he was presenting that stuff.
So, yeah, that's the theme, by the way,
that came across in what I was looking at, too.
Like, it's not so much whether the thing he was arguing for is necessarily Yeah, because Nukio rhymed for that.
Yeah, yeah, it was more that he would take position and then, you know, reinterpret
and, you know, take out, you know, cherry pick arguably the evidence for it and
filter it all through his particular framework to come up with a very particular narrative.
So yeah, I think he seems a bit fluid
in terms of what he's focusing on.
As we'll hear in talking to Jordan Peterson,
he's now seems to be firmly aboard the Maggot train,
particularly that faction that is aligned with the Elon Musk,
this sort of, I don't know what to call it,
this techno, I don't know what to call it, this techno,
I don't know. Utopians? Yeah, but they're, well, we'll hear it. So this is from the source material
that we're looking at is Trump, Musk, Kennedy, the dawn of transparency, episode 526 of Jordan B Peterson's podcast.
There's been five hundred and twenty five previous episodes of Jordan.
I sometimes think, Chris, that maybe we're creating too much content.
You know, maybe we should.
We aren't Jordan is.
That's it.
So now.
So this is very much in the freedom of like the current going on in America and
reactions to it.
And we saw before the election, the degree to which Jordan Peterson was essentially a
state propagandist for the incoming Trump regime, right?
He likened them to superheroes and gods, demigods.
He went through the cabinet, give them all a glowing report.
They're all A plus stars, Robert Kennedy, Tulsi Gavard, JD Vance.
Not a single figure amongst the incoming administration that Jordan could find
anything, you know, negative to say
about them. So we know how Jordan feels, but now they've been in control for a couple of months.
So we'll get to hear what does Jordan think about things now that they've started to actually,
you know, administer their policies and maybe Schellenberger, the diligent renegade who,
you know, is always willing to call out corruption and to, you know, look where the people in power don't want you to look.
Let's see how he does.
But this is Jordan Peterson's introduction of Schellenberger compared to our meandering one.
Hi, everybody.
I had the opportunity to speak today to Michael Schellenberger, who's a Democrat at one point,
like so many people, and has turned more to the conservative side exactly.
He's turned to whatever this new emergent side is that's signified by the union, let's
say, of Trump and Musk and JD Vance and Mehmet Oz and Robert Kennedy and Tulsi
Gabbard, etc., etc., whatever that is. And I've had Michael on as a guest a couple of times on the
show. He's a journalist. He broke the Twitter files. Elon Musk gave him access to the Twitter back end to delineate what had been occurring before
Musk purchased the platform. And Michael was also instrumental in breaking the WPATH files.
And WPATH is why you could call it an organization, but it's more like a cabal of perversion and incompetence, I would say.
That seems like a balanced description.
I do like the way that they're all, you know, Joe Rogan, Jordan Peterson, they're all
incapable of just acknowledging that somebody is firmly right wing now. Right? Like you can
support all the right wing policies. You can produce these propaganda for them. You can appear
only exclusively on right wing outlets talking about how great the new administration and what
not is. And yet they're always like, well, is he conservative? Are these people conservative? Like
is the leader of the Republican Party
actually a conservative?
It's, you know, it's all very fluid.
It's all very hard to say.
Yeah, indeed.
Yeah, so yeah, Jordan Peterson,
you know, if you want to visualize this,
he's wearing what can only be charitably described
as a clown suit, which is now part of the course.
I hadn't seen this particular one before, but he looks very,
yeah, he looks like the Joker as usual.
And he talks in this interview far more than the person he's interviewing.
Yes, that's standard Jordan Peterson protocol.
Yes, that is what he's doing.
And they start off things, Matt, with the concern that you
flagged up at the beginning. Free speech. Free speech is under threat in the modern world.
You might imagine it from repressive totalitarian states where the media is controlled by the
government or even perhaps in America now where people are being deported for views that they express that don't align
with the present or the reigning political power. Well, most recently lawyers that had the
temerity to investigate law firms, that is. Again, lawyers, media outlets, this kind of thing,
you might imagine that these might be concerns about free speech that they're talking about, but not exactly.
So let's see where their concerns lie.
We obviously had a massively historic election that also signified a change in the media environment, of which you've been a really fundamental part.
I think we saw today Vice President JD Vance gave a major speech at the Munich Security Summit in Munich, Germany, where he very strongly articulated what I think you could argue is the
new national conservative case, which included grave concerns around losing Europe to mass
migration. It included a strong defense of free speech. And this
is now the second time that I think he has intimated, this time I think he was
softer than the first time, that Europe's move towards totalitarianism,
particularly this mass censorship that they want to impose on our social media
companies and on us, on our voice in Europe, that that was not only
unacceptable but that it puts our alliance in danger.
I mean, he specifically said it puts NATO in danger.
So I think the Europeans today got a sense of the depth
of which America cares about free speech,
that free speech for us is a must have, not a nice to have.
In Europe, it feels like it may be more like a nice to have.
And I think you finally got administration
that's just saying,
hey, we're not gonna tolerate this censorship
and totalitarianism that you're imposing on our companies
and attempting to impose on our people.
So it wasn't super clear to me,
maybe I'm not up to date on Vance's speeches and so on,
what they're referring to with this terrible outbreak
of mass censorship in Europe.
I mean, I'm sort of gonna preemptively hand it to them at some degree.
Since from the little I gather, it seems like there is some legitimate concerns
one could have, I think, about some laws in, say, the UK where you may have police
turning up at your door and saying that you've been posting bad things on social media.
What else is he referring to?
Yeah, well, I think he's talking about in this specific context, stuff like that
around, which are, I do believe in general, somewhat exaggerated to put it mildly
amongst, you know, the trigonometry set, but they are talking about, you know,
actual things that can happen because there is the point that the American is it the first amendment, the right,
the free speech or whatever?
I don't know.
Well, I think it is.
Yeah, the first amendment of the United States protects freedom of speech,
religion, press and assembly.
OK, so yeah, so, you know, other countries have different forms of protections for
that, but sometimes there are more constraints on them, right? So you can make this point, but
it is certainly not the case that the Trump regime has been displaying itself, you know,
a an unparalleled supporter of the right to freedom of speech. In fact, there's been
supporter of the right to freedom of speech. In fact, there's been much more evidence of
widespread suppression of free speech in the Trump era. You can look at the way that they're attacking media organizations, as you said. You can look at the way that they have went
systematically through government agencies and tried to introduce loyalty tests, right? There's any manner of things,
not just the most recent treatment of the students
related to Palestinian protests and that.
But so they are here talking about the speech
where JD Vance stood up and gave a rising speech
to the Gallard European leaders and whatnot that Europe stands on
free speech is unacceptable. You know, this is a red line for us Americans. That's why
we're taking such a, you know, I think this was I think before the German elections, when
there was, you know, there were concerns about alternative for Deutschland where Elon and Trump, I think as well, were, you know,
hoping for a hard right party to win far, but that didn't come to be.
Right.
But I believe that speech was prior to the election.
So kind of, you know, implying that they're restricting the freedom of
speech of this valid populist movement and whatnot.
So, so Vance was condemning them for excluding
the alternative for Deutschland from the
discourse, the conferences and so on.
I see some of the other concerns that Vance
has got is one of them is criminalization
of religious expression.
So with this, it's stopping individuals
who are doing that kind of silent prayer
protest in front of- It's not always so silent, but yes. this, it's stopping individuals who are doing that kind of silent prayer protest.
It's not always so silent. But yes, abortion clinics.
Yeah, which can be very easily seen as intimidation of the women who
are wanting to go in there.
And the other one was this, you know, not liking their approach to
disinformation.
So people who like Vance and Elon Musk obviously, what you and I, Chris, and many Europeans would describe as straight up disinformation and propaganda, they would see as important
truths that the mainstream media doesn't want you to hear about.
So whatever you think about that, I mean, I think it's fair to say that calling these
differences of opinion about free speech, like authoritarianism or the biggest threat to freedom
in the West is a bit over the top. Well, they're going to go on about it, but I don't even grant
them the charity of saying difference of opinions over free speech, because they just constantly
demonstrate they don't care about freedom of speech. They're absolutely fine restricting
in ways that they agree with. So it's just, I guess platitudes is maybe the right word,
like disingenuous. It's like a thing that they batter, you know, want to batter people with,
but they absolutely do not apply the standards
that they're claiming to their own side.
So in any case, let's hear a little bit more
of this being fleshed out.
And this is Schellenberger talking about like his reaction
to hearing this.
And I think he really spoke for Americans this way,
certainly for me, which is that we actually really love Europe.
Like Americans really care about Europe,, not just as a tourist destination, we care about it
as an idea, as the birthplace of the enlightenment.
For us Americans, Europe is where our ideas that our country was founded on were born,
but they were never fully realized until you got to the United States and until you had
Thomas Jefferson insist against Alexandra Hamilton that we were gonna have a bill of rights and that the
first thing was gonna be free speech and that we weren't gonna mess around about
it that this was number one that we didn't want to have a country without
having this guarantee and like I said I just think I don't think Europeans
understand the depth of our commitment to that that really when they start
threatening our free speech rights as they've been increasingly doing, they need to know that they are threatening
their security. That it really makes us, we're tired. America is tired. Like we're very, very tired.
Yes, yes. They love free speech. Everything's going great in America at the moment. They're
carrying the torch for freedom of all kinds.
They respect Europe as the initial experiment. There were some attempts to do government and whatnot there, but it didn't reach its pinnacle until we got America and the finding follows.
Right. And then that is where civilization has kind of peaked over in the US.
Yeah.
So I mean, we don't need to rebut this, but we could mention a few of the many actions
that the Trump administration has taken against free speech, like pursuing lawsuits.
We already have.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Pursuing lawsuits and regulations against media outlets, anyone who criticizes their
policy, changing the defamation laws.
So you weaken the protections there.
So people with a lot of money, like Masku is very much known for his proclivity to use
his money to do those kinds of, to call them nuisance lawsuits, sort of diminishes them
because what they do is they frighten people from publishing critical things
because it can be incredibly expensive.
Or they just bankrupt them from the legal.
So that notion about we're so very tired of people frivolously attacking our right to speech.
Good God.
At least it's put aside all of the sacking of government employees, even members of the
military, who voice anything that isn't showing complete loyalty and ideological conformity
to the current administration, withdrawing federal funding from universities that are
not aligned with conservative viewpoints.
We could go on, we could go on, especially in terms of their treatment of science.
But they love free speech.
America is love for speech.
Europeans have lost their way.
Yes, this is the argument.
The birthplace of the enlightenment, but we've forgotten all those values.
And now, you know, they're going to become increasingly important because of how principled
the Trump administration is in its concern for those.
And just one bit more.
So America is tired. We love Europe. We believe in Europe, but they're testing our patience.
And I think we finally have an administration that can communicate the depth of our concern
around their push towards censorship. And they're really they pioneered it. They developed it. A
lot of it was, you know, we've certainly done our part to bring it there, but, um,
you know, they are the Western Europe is currently the greatest threat to free
speech in the West.
And, um, I think they need to understand that that's a big problem when it comes
to us, European relations.
There you go.
Not just, not just repeating, you know, what JD Vance claimed, but absolutely endorsing it.
The greatest threat to free speech in Europe is Western Europe. That's the area where you can't
criticize the government, Matt, or set up alternative political parties or make media outlets that are strongly critical of the government.
It's Western Europe where that is the primary concern.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So disagree. But that's his opinion. Very good.
And you also get that motif about, you know, the, we're so tired. You know, you usually hear that on the
like social justice side, like I'm so tired of defending this, you know, do the work.
So Schellenberger's making a combination here of left and right wing tropes and, you know,
the kind of reverence for Europe, Matt, you know, the idea of Europe, the Roman statues, the busts,
the classical architecture, Greek philosophers, that we're behind. But this modern Europe,
where it's like gay pride police cars and locking people up for making jokes, that's
the big concern here, right? And like, obviously, my public goes without saying, but you know, if you consider Russia, at least
to be adjacent to Europe, there are some concerning trends in
Russia, regarding free speech curtailment that might come into
play. But that kind of stuff wouldn't be of interest. Yes.
And also, they'll go on to talk about Eastern Europe as still being a shining beacon,
but they're not thinking of Eastern Europe when they're talking about that.
Allow me to illustrate, yes, so you could also be concerned with things like Hungary's
well-documented ruling back of press freedom and whatnot. If free speech is this red line for you,
that's definitely going to get on your goat. Or.
Yeah, well, you know, we should differentiate this a bit, too.
I spent I spent a lot of time traveling in Europe in recent years,
and I've made it a point in all of the countries I visited.
And that's most European countries, East and West, to meet with
thought leaders, politicians,
journalists, actors, in all the countries that I've gone to at dinners and lunches.
And I've come to a number of realizations as a consequence.
The first is very much akin to what you're describing, which is like what the hell's
going on in France and Germany
and the UK, the Netherlands, Western Europe, let's say, Western Europe.
That's a consequence in my opinion fundamentally of Brussels, the European Union, the pernicious
effect of Davos, the globalist utopians, the apocalypse mongers, the people
who tell you that the future is a miserable and wretched place unless you give us all
the power.
But that's not Europe.
That's Western Europe.
Now the Eastern Europeans, they're a different bunch, you know, and well, we could walk through
them to some degree.
Let's start with Hungary because that's a country that's been absolutely pilloried
by the legacy media in the press, in the Western press.
And you know, that Orban has been described as, you know, shoulder to shoulder with of
course Adolf Hitler because, you know, he's the guy you drag out when you don't have
anything else to say.
And I've been to Hungary a number of times, and Hungary has a very sophisticated family
policy, pro-family policy, and it's quite, it's been quite effective.
They've knocked their abortion rate down 38% with no increase in policing, so to speak,
right?
It's part of a cultural shift.
So there you go, Matt, as you said,
they've got big concerns about what's going on
in Western Europe, but in Eastern Europe,
I think it's basically any government
that has a right-wing populist leader.
There, the concerns are much less.
So, you know, people have complained
about judicial independence being undermined by urban media
control, lockdowns on NGOs and academic institutions,
legal manipulation, various things.
There's been mass protests, but, you know,
Jordan went to dinner with thought leaders and various people in
political power in Hungary. And he's been very impressed all the times that he's been traveling
around. So who are you going to believe, Matt? These lying NGOs probably funded by George Soros.
That was actually something Orban has claimed. So who are you who can believe those? Or the people who work for the regime who are taking you out for state dinner, who are inviting you to give you, you know, an award for your commitment to free speech.
Which one? Which one Matt?
Well, Chris, they've been raising the fertility rate over there. I think that's the best demonstration that free speech is alive and well.
Yeah, certainly.
Absolutely related.
Yeah, absolutely related.
Actually, I was doing a little bit of looking around and I
and I thought I would have to hand it to JD Vance because I saw that
as well as criticizing the Western European countries, who are all
socialists and hate freedom, as we know.
He did criticize an Eastern European country for anti-democratic...
JD Vances.
JD Vances, that's right.
But then I looked into it, I saw he was criticizing Romania's current government, which is a
left, a center-left social democratic party.
Of course.
And he was criticizing them for invalidating a far-right candidate due to alleged Russian
interference.
This is a topic I don't know about, but I just think it's telling that the only time
he did punch East, as you say, it's when somebody got in the way of alleged Russian interference.
So yeah, look, I mean, just stepping back a bit. I mean, transparently,
what is going on here, Vance and Trump and the entire magazine are clearly not pro-European,
not pro-NATO or the European Union. And if there's a vibe based reason for why that is,
it's because they are incredibly far right by Western standards.
And they don't like Western Europe because Western Europe is like Democrats, but more so, frankly.
That is the real reason. And like you said, the free speech stuff gets bandied about like a little
cudgel, but it's just transparently not the reason why Vance and Trump dislike them so much.
And you heard the litany of enemies that Jordan Peterson is trotting out, but this is in line
with Schellenberger later. There's the European Union, Davos, the globalist utopians, the apocalypse
mongers. So it's an Alex Jonesian rant kind of kind of conflating, you know, and Jordan Peterson is often doing this with postmodern neo-Marxist globalists, right?
And the general connecting factor is anybody that is viewed as like center or more to the left of like a hard right populist leader right but alongside that but you also get this
kind of appeal you know that it's the legacy media demonizing them right it's
all it's all a smokescreen and the way that you can actually find out this is
why these fucking dinners should be outlawed, that the IDW people keep
going on. Because he actually makes a reference again to like, when I was traveling around
and I was having dinners and lunches, you know, I didn't see any of the things that
NGOs or like freedom of speech organizations, things which purely exist to promote journalistic free speech. You know, that's all there for.
Rank Hungary as having really severe problems.
But Jordan Peterson doesn't care about that because he had a nice conversation at dinner.
And this is just this thing that we see all the time in this heterodox sphere is like,
if they met someone and they, you know, had a good time, then
everything's obviously being exaggerated about the chrism. They never actually do any work
that look into press freedoms or anything like that. That doesn't matter, right? It's
just their personal experience is the most important.
Well, personal experience is important, but also they like the vibes, right? They like the ultra conservative, traditionalist family Christian
vibes, as opposed to the decadent West, which of course,
is the line that Vladimir Putin's Russia has been trying
to push for so long.
Yes. So just to give a bit more flavor to those vibes.
And my experience in Budapest in particular,
where I got to know the Hungarian president,
that's not Orban, the previous president,
and she was the author of the Hungarian,
or one of the authors of the Hungarian pro-family policies.
And I also saw Budapest rebuilding itself.
The goal of the Orban administration is to make Budapest into the most beautiful city
in Europe.
And they have some real geographic advantages there.
It's built along the river and it's very beautiful already.
And then Poland, Poland has a thriving economy.
They don't have an immigration issue, and the Eastern
Europeans are incredibly, incredibly dedicated supporters of the Western tradition and the
US in particular, not least because they remember what it was like to spend 75 years under the
thumb of the Soviet totalitarians.
So even the left-wingers in Eastern Europe aren't completely
out of their minds, like they are in Germany in particular.
And maybe this is already happening, but it would be useful for the Trump administration people to
differentiate between the Western Europeans, the Eastern, you know, the European Union types, the globalists, the WEF, and the Eastern Europeans who are like I thought the last
few times that I went through Europe that the salvation of Europe would be Eastern Europe,
surprisingly enough, like who would have ever guessed that was going to be the case?
Yeah, so Eastern Europe is the salvation, not economically, one would assume, since,
despite some progress, they're still well behind more developed Western European countries, but
purely in terms of returning to conservative cultural Christian values, traditional family
structures. And, you know, I mean, I think it's fine to provide financial support to families, tax exemptions and so
on, the number of kids, that kind of thing, parental leave, all those are good things,
but the less salubrious side of it is the restrictions on LGBTQ rights, not allowing
any kind of representation in education and media and basically sending the cultural message that it's not okay to be gay.
Yeah, there's that. And there's also here, Matt, that Peterson has the bugbear about the Soviets, right, the communists. That's an issue. Right. So he mentions that these people in Eastern Europe remember what it was like to live under
the Soviet system.
And so they're not attracted to communism.
Right.
But he sort of ignores the modern version of that, which is Poland, Georgia, you know,
Ukraine.
Those are countries in Eastern Europe that are rather concerned not about the communist
Soviet Russia, which doesn't exist anymore, but the modern expansionist Russia run by
Putin.
And so Peterson and Schellenberger in general have been rather apologetic for the Russian regime and painting the reaction against that
as overwrought and largely led by NATO and Western European expansionism, all these kinds of things.
There it's interesting that he can acknowledge the Eastern Europe dislike for the influence of the Soviet Union, but he doesn't seem
to be capable of putting the next stage of that, that they might have legitimate concerns about
the modern Russian state, which has invaded neighboring ex-Soviet satellites in recent history.
But yeah. I think the skew that he puts on it is this, basically.
In Jordan Peterson's framing, Eastern Europeans who have lived under communism
really understand the value of liberalism, right?
And totally love these ideas of freedom and democracy,
because they know how terrible the alternative is.
In the decadent West, they kind of love communism now, right?
They're really into it.
But you know, that is not the correct framing, I think.
On one hand, yes, there's a huge amount of sentiment
towards Westernization, for want of a better word,
in places like Ukraine, Poland, Czechoslovakia, and so on.
But at the same time, you have other parties and other segments, which is
nostalgia for communism, that is there, that exists even in Eastern Germany.
But also under communism, there was quite a lot of promotion of traditional
conservative, like social structures, which is often aligned
with those groups. So yeah, like it's a bit more complicated than that. And that the kind of
attraction that there is in Eastern Europe, which is legitimate, I think, is for precisely the kind
of political and economic organization that exists in Europe today, not in some sort of, you know, rose-tinted
image of the past that Jordan Peterson has. And yeah, you know, there are left-wing parties
in the West, but if you take like the Greens in Germany or other left-wing parties, they're not
radicals that are looking to institute communism, but in Jordan Peterson's mind,
they are, right? Because they're too left wing. He sees that as equivalent to communism.
And in the wake of all the news surrounding various students in the US or green card permanent
resident holders, whatever, all being threatened, if not actually deported for
supporting anti-American points of view in the parlance of the current Trump regime,
or doing these mass roundups of people who are alleged to be members of gangs,
right? But without actually taking them to court and whatever.
Like these are all infringements of free speech
because if you're not granted a judicial process,
this would be constraining your free speech, right?
Like in a country, this kind of thing.
But listen to Jordan Peterson on his conclusion here
when it comes to Europe and free speech.
So, and the free speech issue, the thing is, you know, we still don't understand free speech properly because, you know, you said that if the Europeans keep undermining free speech and that battle is being played out in the virtual world,
particularly with regards likely to X, say, more than anything else.
That their security is going to be undermined and you are thinking about them compromising
their relationship with the US.
But what's necessary to understand is that you do undermine your
security by interfering with free speech because there's no difference between free speech
and creative and corrective thought. Those are the same thing. And so any culture that
clamps down on the right to free speech, which isn't just another hedonistic privilege,
they interfere with the, literally interfere with
the mechanism that keeps their country honest and innovative. So it's a disaster.
Find sentiments, Matt. Find sentiments.
And all of this is based on European regulators, the European Union, putting some potential penalties on Musk's ex regarding
the dissemination of disinformation and promoting Nazis, for instance, which it indisputably
does.
Like all of this stuff about free speech and how Europe is backtrailing towards fascism
and stuff is because they want to place some restrictions, like some degree of moderation on that platform.
Well, it is that, as he mentions, X, but it's also things around here, speech laws and all
that kind of stuff.
So there's a discussion that you can have there about government overreach and the way that laws are applied too heavy
handedly by the police or right like well or
there's the police should be going out and dealing with people's
opinions online that they treat about a mother and like I would probably agree with you know
Schellenberger and Peterson and more reasonable versions of their criticisms
about like where that balance should be.
But it's the absolute rank hypocrisy that gets me because if you made this kind of peon
for freedom of speech and expression and how it's the fundamental value of a society and
Western Europe is, you know, damaging itself by forgetting what that means.
Then you should absolutely be a critic of the Trump regime when it starts doing all
of the various chilling things which it's done towards free speech.
Very, very overt measures.
But Jordan Peterson, Michael Schellenberger,
any other cadre of MAGA apologists never do. They never will.
And like just to highlight, we'll go back to Schellenberger now.
This is him talking about, you know, well, Trump is back.
So what's happening in America, you know, in comparison to the West, which is letting itself down, you know, Western Europe, it's letting itself
down.
What's going on in America?
Yeah, I mean, so, look, you know, America is, I mean, sounds so corny, but I mean, America's
back in just a big way.
I mean, you've just got a character there in the White House that is they are moving
faster than anybody.
I mean, I was just there talking to folks, you know, various places, and everybody's
surprised at how fast they're moving. And of course, Elon has accelerated that, the number of
things that are happening. The thing that we were ostensibly going to talk about today, for example,
not to, we don't have to go to it right away, but just the whole reason there's a debate in the United
States right now about the United States Agency for International Development, USAID, is simply because Elon was seeking to
basically gain access to the computer systems, the servers, the buildings themselves that these
agencies occupy. And that was the agency that wouldn't give them access, it wouldn't give them
clearance. So that was when Trump just, they just shut it down. They just were like, if we can't get, we were the democratically elected, he's the democratically
elected president of the United States who has full authority according to article two
of the U S constitution over every single executive branch agency.
And that includes agency of international development when they are refusing access
to the representative of the president of the United States who happens to be our greatest
Technologist they just were like fine if you're gonna play that, you know
Play stupid games win stupid prizes and the stupid prize they got was that they got shut down
Including pulling back all of their people
Incident they're referring to is when USA attempted to prevent
Elon Musk's cyber whiz kids
from accessing classified information in their things.
And you know, this has been in the news, right?
They, there's like email, like, I forget, but they're basically communicating with each
other on completely insecure lines.
So there's been a lot of-
Oh, Signal.
They were on Signal and they accidentally added a journalist to the...
Yeah.
But that was in Doge. That was another incompetent aspect of the...
No, that's right. Separate issue. Another separate issue is Donald Trump with his
treatment of classified documents and so on. But I mean, the point is, is that these government
agencies have rules for accessing classified information, security clearance, right? Because USAID is
not just purely humanitarian stuff. It is also connected to geopolitical stuff. It's
kind of got a twin mandate, it's fair to say. It's partly humanitarian, yes, but it's also
partly inferring American geopolitical interests.
So I could well imagine that there are security things in place.
Anyway, whatever.
Trump, it's been shut down.
It's been totally, totally shut down.
It's all ended now.
But that's not, yes, one, that's not true.
And two, Schellenberger speaks with confidence that like, you know, we're in the US and the president
has complete control over USAID, right?
And that's not true.
The USAID exists by congressional statute, right?
They set the budget for it.
The president appoints the administrator and this requires Senate.
Like it's all tied into the American system, right.
Which is set up around three separate.
Yeah.
Checks and balances.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that's a trend that's been going on even before Trump, right.
With the presidency accruing more and more power.
More and more power.
And it's happened.
It's been sped up a lot under Trump. So the way Schellenberger represents it's it's happened it's been sped up a lot of Trump so the way Schellenberger represents it's all very simple Trump was elected by the people Trump's the
president he's the king of America now anyone that Trump appoints can do whatever they want
because they have the mandate of Trump everyone yes so what's congress even for yeah what for
what do you need any of these other organizations? You just have a king and the king does whatever they want, right?
The Supreme Court.
Yeah.
And in this case as well, like you mentioned Matt with Doge, the issue is that like, you
know, Trump just created a new organ, right?
A new system, agency, whatever you want to call it.
But the actual legal rules around what it can and can't do,
what they can and can't access are unclear. And it's even unclear when there's been challenges
what exactly Elon Musk's role is in government, right? Because he's not elected and there are
obviously restrictions on people who the president can employ, special advisors and whatnot, but it
doesn't just give them full access to everything that they want access to.
Right.
There's people have the right to privacy, but Schellenberger, again, somebody who's supposed to be this, you know, lone journalist willing to stand up about corrupt use of power or whatnot, has no issue with that.
no issue with that. He's just like, this is the deep state preventing Elon Musk from, you know, bringing America back. America's back, you know, as he said at the start, especially
in the light of America tanking the economy just very recently. It's back in a very interesting
way. But like the Schellenberger and Peterson, this is all, you know, it's all good. It's all glory to the leader.
Everything they're doing is great.
Elon Musk is the chief technologist.
That's it.
It's propaganda.
It is propaganda.
That's the thing that was getting me about,
like, as I agree with you, the European thing,
the little I know about some of the laws around,
you know, speech and stuff in Europe,
I tend to agree with these guys
around those particular things to some degree,
but clearly that's not what's important to them.
They are first and foremost cheerleaders for Elon Musk,
for JD Vance, Donald Trump,
who are this cadre of powerful people
that are running things
and just simply not interested in anything else. I mean, what's also telling Chris is like, we focus on playing clips.
So we talk about what they talk about on these things.
But it's true, this was a month ago, but it is telling what they don't talk about.
I bet they won't be talking about any of the controversies which have been all over the
news in terms of what you
just referred to, for instance, the way that Trump's tariffs things have caused a major crisis for
very little discernible gain and frankly make no sense according to anyone who understands the
economy. I mean, I don't see them addressing those sorts of issues critically, rather, it's a matter of just acting as cheerleaders for whatever it is they happen to be doing.
Well, I just had a look at the Schellenberger substack and you have Bacchus Ungorsargon.
Trump is waging class warfare on Wall Street for the sake of the American working class. That's the most recent argument.
And Tahrif chaos is the messy birth of a new nationalist order.
OK, so, yeah, yeah, that's it.
In difference to working people behind elite panic over tariffs.
It's those elites.
They're such they're such softcocks, Chris. They're so weak.
Yeah, it's only them that will suffer from tariffs on Chinese goods.
That's it. Yeah.
So if the economy collapses, Matt, you know, it's not like ordinary
working class people feel no irony at the brunt of that.
It's no only going to affect billionaires and millionaires.
Yeah, that's right.
That's right.
If there's a lot of inflation and things
end up costing a lot more, that only really affects
those very rich elites.
Yeah, so I think the point is that this is, I don't know.
I mean, it's the usual story, isn't it?
It's presented as this is an intellectual discussion
about fundamental issues.
And Jordan Peterson, in his amazing way, relates it to all kinds of
abstruse concepts that he's got floating around his head.
But, you know, really what it is, is partisan cheerleading.
This is not even partisan.
It feels absolutely like propaganda.
It is propaganda. Yeah, that's quite correct.
For the American administration.
And just to give another example, you know, we heard propaganda for the American administration.
And just to give another example of that, you know, we heard USAID and
Hyatt is preventing the will of the dear leader and the corruption
that's been uncovered by Elon Musk and whatnot, but it might go farther than that.
What you're seeing them bringing into government, which none of us could have
imagined is first of all this awareness that
You can't really reform institutions when it's there's a people talk about that
But really you have to just shut them down and build something fresh
That's the only way you can get the old guard out and you have to have new leadership and a new car a new constitution
or new set of rules
But also that you don't really know what's going on until you move fast and break things.
And so this is something that I experienced too, which is you just have to go out there
and do things in the world to figure out what is the federal government.
You think you know what the federal government is because we have lists of agencies and employees
and whatever, but we saw what the US Agency for
International Development, we didn't know what they were doing.
And what we discovered is that they were part of the blowback of US counterterrorism, counterinsurgency,
counterpopulism that was pushed abroad with the Arab Spring and then the color revolutions
in Eastern Europe and came back.
And that those characters that led the censorship,
disinformation, lawfare, and other dirty tricks
that they use for regime change abroad,
brought those tactics and strategies to the United States
and weaponized them against Trump, MAGA, Republicans.
Right, right.
Now I've been looking into USAID
because I knew very little about it until Trump got rid of it.
Like, like Schellenberger, right?
He said, nobody knew you.
Nobody knew.
That's right.
But it's actually pretty easy to find out because you can search the, what's
it called, foreignassistance.org.
You can actually see all the funding for the different things that there
are breakdowns there, but let's follow.
So according to Schellenberger with USAID, it's primarily been used for
dirty tricks campaigns, fostering terrible things like Arab Spring regime
change overseas, and now USAID has then taken this sort of bag of dirty tricks
and applying it to the US population.
Is that right?
Yeah.
I mean, it was a little bit confused because he said what we discovered is that they were
part of the blowback of US counterterrorism, counterinsurgency, counterpopulism that was
pushed abroad with the Arab Spring and then the colour revolutions in Eastern Europe and
came back.
And then those characters used the specialties
in censorship, disinformation, lawfare
against MAGA people, right?
But so, like if I'm following along here,
so the Arab Spring and the color revolutions,
so that would be like the yellow shirts and like,
oh, sorry, in France, he said Eastern Europe.
So those are inauthentic movements, right?
But aren't a bunch of those populist?
Because he describes it as anti-populist,
but they were like, a lot of those were also
movements to try and oust dictators and like, I'm based on the people having had enough
and wanting to have a government that represent not an out of touch elite, right? That was
extracting things. So like, it sounds a little bit confused, but I think the general thing is for Schellenberger,
this is the interesting horseshoe thing where he is in the camp that the US foreign policy,
it's all just the US doing bad things, overthrowing countries and meddling in foreign affairs, right? Like, you know, the CIA doing dirty tricks in Iran and all that kind of stuff.
And then that's come back.
So like, I guess he would probably be someone that presents the Maidan revolution,
for example, as a product of like US interference, right?
In Ukraine. Yeah.
So anti-populist because it always did the pro-Russian.
Yeah, it is very confusing because his,
the way they phrase it is confusing.
And maybe it's confusing on purpose
because I don't think Michael Schellenberger fully understands or cares really.
What?
I get the general point there.
I think he just like kind of mixed in things together, right?
The general point is US has been doing terrible things abroad.
Like the US was part of this or involved with it.
It's maybe the soft power wing of that. And they were bringing
back these techniques to the US, neither being uncovered that they were doing this. But also,
like, isn't part of the narrative that USC was anti American, like it was supporting Hamas and it was, you know, they, they got this
wrong because they, they identified the condoms going to Hamas or whatever, but
it was actually, they just got like the names confused and all that kind of
thing. So is the point that there was a reaction to the American foreign policy
thing and it led to like an anti-American policy which was in US EAD and
then that was like I'm not sure. I mean I was looking into the USA thing right and there's
definitely like most you know government agencies there are all kinds of audits and things that are
always going on. They sometimes find that money was
misspent or, you know, they didn't get good value for money
or all the usual things. But fundamentally, it's what maybe
1% of government spending, it's pretty, pretty small. A lot of
like the big ticket items that are spent on is economic
development, humanitarian assistance, like food aid and
stuff like that, when there's, when there's a crisis. One of the big ones is health, so HIV, AIDS-fighting, and other initiatives like to
prevent contagious diseases, stuff like malaria. And there's percentages being spent on what they
call peace and security and various other governance things and whatever. Most recently,
a lot of it's been spent on Ukraine, right?
So a lot of it has formed.
So it's a pretty general,
it's a very general kind of category of American spending,
like encompassing everything
from malaria reduction programs, providing family planning,
including contraceptives to very poor countries
where they got-
Very unfortunate if they have the same name as like a terrorist organization. including contraceptives to very poor countries where you know they've got very
unfortunate if they have the same name as like a terrorist organization any any
location or like they come over was Gaza or Hamas but there was one where there
was a confusion over the name but but at the same time it includes like military
support to Israel right and a lot of non-military support to Ukraine was to basically bolster their economy
as they resist Russia. So, I mean, here's my take, here's my guess of it. Because from
what I heard from these guys in this interview, it's very confused. All they know is that
they don't like it. All they know is it's completely corrupt.
Yeah, it's a villain because Trump said it's a bad thing.
Exactly. Trump said it's a bad thing. So now we figure out how it's a bad thing. I think it's very similar to the thing that went on with tariffs. Trump unveiled tariffs
against everybody, which make no sense. But there is no shortage of people just jumping
in to same wash it and like Michael Schellenberger established. And you know, we leapt over the bit at the start, Matt, but I think
it's worth noting, we always talk about the anti-institution, anti-establishment sentiment,
right? And here, you hear it in force that, look, the establishment, the institutions
are so corrupt, they need to be absolutely torn down and built up with new leadership,
right? But I'm like, you know, these guys, they constantly go on the bite high.
The far left is radical communists that want to return to year zero.
But their rhetoric here is exactly the same.
They're saying this is so rotten, it's so corrupt.
And there's so many, like, you know,
corrupt individuals that are going to prevent the glorious new regime.
So we've got to wipe it all out, only install loyalists, and restart society.
You might say a year zero for a reset.
Well, it's very ironic because right at the very beginning, Chris, you noted a very common thing,
which is Jordan Peterson, when he introduced Schellenberger, is reluctant to say that he's moved in a strongly conservative
direction.
Yeah.
Right?
You know, he qualifies it.
So, I mean, this is a common theme that we see with our gurus, but with these guys in
particular, which is a great reluctance to accept the fact that they are conservative.
Right?
And now at the same time, we see this reluctance,
as you pointed out to Stan, that the program of Make America Great Again, Make America Healthy
Again, whatever it is that the MAGA project is doing, is incredibly radical. It's incredibly
radical. So you have this weird situation where these cheerleaders for what is a kind of revolutionary year zero utopian basically conventional, institutional, favoring, say the course type
people, people like me, but we also sometimes like to think
of ourselves as radicals and revolutionaries
because it's kind of cooler.
So there's kind of the inverse thing.
Yeah, but it's an inverse because they're actually,
they're actually doing it this month.
They're actually doing it. It's great, like They're trying to dismantle it, not just say it. You also heard
just to mention the Mark Zuckerberg move fast and break things being referenced. It's kind of,
as you hinted when you introduced them, that Schellenberger likes to present himself as,
you know, on the kind of cutting edge of modern technology and this kind of Silicon Valley
ethos, right? But of course, it's like cheerleading a very specific segment of that. But like just
by invoking, you know, the cat faces move fast and briefings and the USAA, nobody knew what they did.
But actually, you know, people in government
did know what it did. Civil service people were aware, right? It's just like, it's the same thing
as Elon Musk discovering the stuff around the grooming gangs in the UK. Like they act like if
they never learned it, it's there for absolutely, they're like babies. They don't have a, you know, an image that
knowledge exists before they come across it. Like, I don't have a theory of mind yet. I can't,
I can't exactly know what else could know something. Object permanency doesn't seem to exist. But
anyway, let's see what else links into this US-eid stuff, because, you know, we're painting them
as polemical
partisans who will wedge anything into like a Trumpist narrative. But perhaps that's unfair, Matt.
Perhaps that's unfair.
How did it become so deranged that it would use the weapons of regime change
against our own democratically elected president from 2016 to 2020, including,
you know, many of us suspect suspect but can't yet prove in January
6th.
How did that happen?
And then the subsequent question is, what do we do now?
I mean, Jordan, after we've spent billions of dollars creating this elaborate foreign
policy establishment, otherwise known as the blob, which includes many academic journals,
academic divisions of universities, whole think tanks, parts of the federal government.
Nobody has theorized what comes now.
Nobody has theorized what happens if the United States shuts down its main agency for soft
power.
That's what USAID was, Agency for National Development.
It was just a mechanism of soft power alongside the CIA.
It was really supposed to be, you know, State Department, AID, CIA, all supposed to be run by the National Security Council, also to be run by the President of the United States. What happens when that's not there anymore?
Yeah, what happens indeed. But at the beginning, Chris, January 6th. Yeah, January 6th. So remind me, when he's saying this, is he still referring to USAID as being like an instrument that's being deployed against Americans. Yeah, yeah. This follows on, I mean, it's unclear, right? But it's probably the whole
deep state apparatus, right? But yeah, so they use the weapons of regime change against their own
president. So presumably suggesting that, you know, the 2020 election that Donald Trump lost
was because the Biden administration
was, I mean, we've learned that with the Twitter files and whatnot, that that's the only way
Trump could have been defeated.
And actually January 6th itself, as Schellenberger says that, he can't prove it yet, but he suspects
that that may be, not what it appears. Yes.
I'd say it's.
And you've probably got a clip of this, but I think a little bit later on, he suggests
that the January 6 thing was kind of orchestrated by the left, like ensuring that the capital
wasn't properly protected.
And so really, they kind of brought it upon themselves.
Yes.
So let's have a listen to some of that.
Basically, Jedi mind trick brainwashing to pre-bunk or program the journalists and the social media
companies into thinking that a future story about Hunter Biden and Burisma would be a Russian hack
and leak operation and spreading disinformation in advance, programming people and then demanding
censorship on the basis of it.
And I think we're going to find out a lot more about January 6th as well as a kind of
construction rather than something organic.
A clear decision was made at a minimum to not provide adequate security.
We know that for sure because the Capitol Police Chief has written a whole book on it. And so you look at that series of events and you also look at what the US Security
State had done in places like Brazil and the Philippines and other parts of the
world and of course this goes back decades and it's a clear
counter-populous effort run by these deep state organizations run by people
who had lost their minds, you know, who have all the rational abilities,
but they had lost, they had Trump Derangement Syndrome
and turned their enormous powers,
their incredible psychological, sociological,
political, technological powers against their own people
to undermine democracy and attack free speech.
Oh, fuck me, Matt.
It's chilling, right? Like it's up. This is absolute propaganda. Like
it's yeah. Oh, it is. It is insane, isn't it? Taking the January 6th Capitol attack,
a thing which is quite obviously orchestrated by Trump in plain sight.
Trump and his supporters. And it's been documented in a whole bunch of investigations, a whole
bunch of detailed legal cases that he's only able to get out of because of becoming president
again and because the Supreme Court granted them immunity in essence.
Yeah.
And now he's in the process of punishing the law firms that were involved in those cases
and extracting hundreds of millions of dollars
from them in punishment. Like it is chilling and this is classic conspiratorial logic, isn't it?
Where you take the thing that is the main fly in the ointment, like the main thing that doesn't fit
your narrative nicely, which is that Trump did encourage an attack on the Capitol and the rabid right-wingers, people that love
Jordan Peterson and people like him, did this thing.
No, no, no, no, no.
It might seem like that.
Actually, it was a construction by the deep state, USAID of all instruments.
Who would have guessed, right?
But USAID.
Yeah.
Well, if you'd known about it, Matt, if you'd known that like,
the deep and dirty tricks that they were up to, it would have
been obvious. But, you know, we didn't know. No one knew. No one
knew what USA was.
I do find it chilling, like this degree of, yeah, just rampant
conspiracism. And, you know, basically, in the service of
the regime. Yeah, that, right in service of the current
Regime is a good word for it. And then it becomes a straight-up propaganda, right?
It becomes like the conspiracy theories that
Well, you know authoritarian regimes have always used to garner popular support. Yeah, it's a worry
Even with the buzzwords, right you got trump Trump derangement syndrome thrown in there. And you also had this, you know, these these deep state actors
who were able, you know, with their enormous powers,
incredible psychological, sociological, political,
technological prowess, right?
They wielded that and they got Biden in the power.
Then they had four years to build in deeper, you know,
to set everything up more strongly,
to entrench deeper and deeper and prevent it.
Funnily, they failed despite Trump saying in advance that they would stitch up
the election results, that the media, you know, would never allow him to win again.
All of that. So they they had even longer to do it.
And despite all this power that they had amassed, they weren even longer to do it. And despite all this power that they had amassed,
it's probably because Elon Musk bought Twitter and was able to free speech.
There's always reasons, Chris. Always reasons. You can't stop the will
of the American people. Their love of freedom, even the deep state can't do that.
they can't do that. Yeah.
Yeah.
So there you go, Matt.
You know, regime change, being weaponized against people
on January 6, and all this kind of thing, right?
But you know, Jordan Peterson, we heard him compare Tulsi
Gabbard and the collection of Trumpian thunderheads to the greatest superheroes, the X-Men.
They're the champions that we need, but they're the greatest thinkers the world has seen since Socrates.
Let's hear a little bit more about Jordan Peterson's view of Musk.
You know, Musk has now been involved in things with those and whatnot. So has he changed his opinion? You know, has he reassessed that take at all?
And his ability to insert himself into these hidden systems is absolutely revolutionary. You know,
it's a mythological trope, an ancient mythological trope, that it's the evil brother of the rightful
king who is one of the prime enemies of the state.
It's the evil brother of the righteous king and it's the goddess of chaos.
Those are the two enemies.
It's the social structure pathologized or the natural world rebelling.
Right, so historic enemies.
Well the evil brother of the king is camouflage and corruption.
And what happens as a system develops is that it accretes predators and parasites.
That's a biological metaphor.
And if the load gets too heavy,
the system collapses. And the antidote to that, the Egyptians had figured this out,
the ancient Egyptians, the antidote to that was clear, honest speech and careful attention.
The Egyptians actually had a god who specified that, signified that, that was Horus, and he was the
specified that, signified that, that was Horus and he was the
defeater, the eternal enemy of the evil king. And Musk is playing that role with his engineers. He's in there finding
out like, how much of government spending is wasted? Well, you
don't know. Why do you not know? Well, because the government
itself doesn't even have the internal mechanisms to track its
own behavior.
No, no. So I guess, I guess all those audits and things I read,
they don't exist. Well, that's the only exist. That is that
is probably not read them.
classic classic. Yeah. He doesn't look at them. So they
don't exist. Yes, that's classic Jordan in case the rampant
conspiracies of a Schellenberger wasn't convincing enough for you
What you really need is a kind of fairy tale
that encompasses
these
deep Yogi and archetypes of the rightful king the agent of chaos the
Forget who the brother was but I think the brother is the evil brother
You know is evil the evil brother is is is that the deep state or is that...
That's the deep... yeah, I think I was wondering where he was going to put that there, but
yes, it seems the deep state is the evil brother.
I see.
Forget about the Goddess of Chaos.
Or maybe the Goddess of Chaos.
It's both.
Yes.
So, yeah, so we're seeing, you know, maybe Jordan Peterson's fairy story is a kind of whimsical and charming in the context of a self-help book to some degree.
But here it's simply at the service of straight up propaganda.
Right.
So Elon Musk is not an incompetent buffoon barreling around, you know, saying he's going to cut four trillion or whatever, constantly demonstrating that doesn't understand what agencies do or how even
their counting works. Right. It's not that he's actually an instantiation of the Egyptian god
Horus, who is a manifestation of honest speech and careful attention.
Oh, that sounds like that sounds like that sounds like Elon Musk exactly like Elon Musk
and is the eternal enemy of the evil brother, right? Like I'm somewhat dubious of Jordan
Peterson's knowledge of, you know, like he speaks very confidently, but anytime that I've heard him actually describe things, it's often very inaccurate.
But nonetheless, let's accept that Horace is the eternal enemy of the good king's evil
brother, right?
Which is the deep state in this analogy.
Like this is so you've got Schellenberger, as you said, who provides the, you know, conspiratorial drivel with reference to the CIA and all these programs and the kind of investigative reporter sl saying, like, what if we add mythology?
What if we call them like gods amongst men? And then there's even that paper where he
likens the deep state, I think, to predators and parasites, right? Always good, Matt, to
just get that in there, the reference that like your enemies are filthy parasites or like biological things that are attacking the integrity of the system that need to be right there.
And just in case you missed it, he said, that's a biological metaphor.
Yeah, just to make that clear.
That's not at all like, you know, the propaganda that was going on in Rwanda where they were calling tutsis similar things.
No, no, it's a scientific metaphor.
Now, Jordan knows all about that. So he wouldn't be, you know, he's concerned about that trend
towards dehumanization. Right. So he laud Elon Musk as a god man and instantiation of
Horus. I wonder if Hermes was busy. But in any case, Matt, they're not going to focus on this parasite metaphor to focus on the people that they're criticizing because they know where that dehumanization might lead.
Well, if we put more energy and time into reducing efficiency, yeah, but then you wouldn't be running your business anymore, right? So there's like, you can waste time trying to deal with the waste.
Then there's fraud. That's bad. That shows not just a kind of, you know,
I think people tend to think of fraud, like, oh,
well the police haven't done a good enough job or the police are corrupted.
It represents a weakening and corruption of the body of the system that
you're actually, as you said before, it's not, there's always parasites.
There's always viruses,
when the host becomes vulnerable and weakened and old
and prone to disease is when you're prone to fraud.
And then you get the worst of them all by far,
which is abuse, by which is abuse of power.
And we are coming out of a period of extreme abuse of powers. I
mean, we can debate the period of time that's relevant. I think the last 12 years, we should
think of it as a woke reign of terror, meaning a period of great fear, certainly universities,
media, wokeism. I mean, really it starts with Black Lives Matter,
ends with the election of President Trump in 2024.
That was a period of abuse of power.
Every single major institution, medical power,
educational power, media power, political power.
I mean, well, this is all very familiar though, isn't it?
This is the standard mega alternative reality, right?
It is the alternative.
But I mean, it's so obviously an inversion of reality.
Complaining about presidential overreach in the past 12 years.
And I would imagine that's accepting Trump's period there. But their presentation
there is that it's all ended. Like there was overreach, right? The president was overreaching
his power, was not heeding the checks and balances that are in place. And now it's all
being corrected by God leader Trump and his servant,aurus, right? And again, Matt, that thing
that I want to highlight there, the weakening and corruption of the body of the system from
the parasites and viruses, which are always there. They've been corrupting the healthy
body. Where is this imagery from? Where is the imagery where you compare the people that are damaging the state, preventing the glorious leader from enacting his vision to these parasitic entities that are sucking the lifeblood of the nation out?
Does any of that sound familiar? Like, it's so on the nose that I feel like it just, should be incredibly obvious but I don't know like maybe
maybe not maybe like I don't think it is obvious to them certainly not to Jordan he's so delusional
and so I don't think the listeners get get it I think it is I think they believe the
like what it says on the tin, which is this is about freedom,
this is about correcting, you know, this woke reign of terror. And yeah, I mean, yeah, it
is frightening because that is the fascist kind of mindset where, you know, black is
white, white is black. You can say the most outrageous things concoct the most outrageous
fictions and it somehow still works. Yeah.
Well, Matt, you know, you mentioned fascism there, right? I know you left these like the
furoron, these accusations, you know, like the county. Just one man mentions their struggle
in jail and the parasites besetting the nation and you're immediately willing to, you know, draw
parallels. But, you know, what I think is important here is to think about like,
what makes people men? Like, where does economic development and prosperity come
from? And what makes people manly men? Because that's-
Tariffs. It's tariffs, isn't it? Is it tariffs?
Well, let's hear something. I've got two clips that speak to these important things and I'll hear no more
mention of fascism okay okay and what gets revealed when when Elon and Trump
break open the the US government as we see this new way this agency that was
always there in their peripheral vision everybody sort of knew about but you kind of forgot about, USAID, Agency for International
Development. And what opens up is a bunch of, you know, things that you had forgotten but are
important to remember. The first is that human economic development, prosperity growth comes
from within. It comes from the core values of within, namely delayed gratification, hard work,
saving on principal, waiting to get married
until you can afford your own home
and sustain your own family, which means, you know,
healthy sublimation, that those things are the recipe.
Integration, integration, not sublimation.
Integration.
Yes, and Jordan embarks on very enthusiastically on the very important
delineation of integration from sublimation.
But the important thing is Chris, as you know, is that it's, it's really
what, what drives economic growth.
What brings people out of poverty?
What prevents the spread of contagious diseases is being a manly man.
Internal values, Matt. Ask not what the state can do for you. Ask what you can do for the state.
Shouldn't we all be wanting to work for the national effort to build this great nation of ours?
Sure, it might involve sacrifice,
it might involve delaying gratification,
but these are values that have been core to our people
for many, many centuries.
Well, Chris, this is why I said, I think this is straight up
exactly the same as the recent thing with the tariffs
where you had propagandists like this coming up
with all of these post-hub explanations
for why the random fucking thing that the
deal leaders have done makes perfect sense. Right. So here,
he's actually referring to the USAID thing specifically. And so
not only is is USAID a terrible thing, because it's totally
corrupt. And it's so wasteful. You know, it's just wasting all
this money. But not only that, it's actually an insidious force,
which is just they're doing CIA style dirty tricks campaigns,
which have now been turned against the American people.
Not only that, actually, you know, humanitarian aid is a waste of money in and of itself.
Like you think you're helping by preventing the spread of contagious diseases
worldwide, preventing the spread of AIDS, HIV.
No, you're not.
Actually, humanitarian aid is a waste of time.
People need to look deep into their soul
and pull themselves up by their bootstraps.
So that's a waste too.
So it's just that kind of over-explaining.
They're just coming up with reasons why post-hoc,
oh yes, it was a great idea to just
completely dismantle this government program. Well actually, Matt, if you think about it,
these programs that, you know, USC was funding to like reduce malaria in Africa and whatnot,
sure they might be in some sense like strengthening the health in those countries where you could talk
about like history
that involves exploitation
that the US may have been involved with a little bit, right?
Like you could view it as that,
but you can also view it as weakening the US,
like making it parasites leeching off the power of the US
and this kind of thing.
I mean, both views, right?
They're equally just a matter of framing.
It's all in the eye of the beholder. And I mean, manliness man, you know, we like to think about
what it's, you can't even talk about health anymore without being right wing, right. That's,
we've established that we know that's true. But people need to talk a bit more about what it means to be a man.
We don't hear about it enough in these podcasts in A Head of a Dark Sphere.
So let's see if Schellenberger has a take on that.
I mean, I think that that picture that you're describing is the same one that Harvey
Mansfield lays out in his wonderful book, Manliness, where he has three levels of masculinity.
The first is weak men who are incapable of defending themselves and others.
Manly men who are strong men who look down on the weak men but will also abuse their power.
And then the gentleman who has the power of the manly man but keeps it in reserve to protect his family,
you know, his, you know, his, his bride, his children, his family, his nation, civilization,
but he's not going to abuse his power. So we've seen a regression where civilization was created
by gentlemen. As you said, they, gentlemen, they became gentlemen, they came in the process of
creating civilization, they become gentlemen, or in the process of becoming gentlemen, they became gentlemen, they came, in the process of creating civilization, they become gentlemen,
or in the process of becoming gentlemen, they create civilization, which is to say a society based on universal rules,
on the view of humans as all equal under first God and then equal under the law,
and that everybody has these fundamental, inalienable human rights. This is the basis of what we call Western civilization,
and it's a civilization of gentlemen.
Well, we've seen a mass derangement over the last 12 years,
but particularly with the election of Trump,
you saw a derangement occurring in every institution.
And what happens with USAID is, and within the the intelligence communities and the foreign policy establishment
is a massive derangement and abuse of power where the gentlemen stop being gentlemen,
they become aggressive manly men and they decide that they know what's best and they
can't stand all this democracy which they call pop, they dismiss as populism and they describe populism as its opposite.
They project onto populism, totalitarianism.
And in the name of preventing totalitarianism, create a censorship industrial complex, which
was already, we know, was international.
US, UK, US, Brazil, US, Europe, Canada involved in it, particularly the Five Eyes, all run,
all coming out of the intelligence community because they're the ones that had run the
censorship and disinformation operations, again, in Arab Spring and then the color revolutions.
So this is like that's mental, obviously, on multiple levels. But let's just start with
the most concrete level, which you brought up earlier, Chris.
He's saying that the USA people who are not the proper gentlemen, not the good manly men,
but the second tier, now become the manly...
No, they are manly men.
They're not gentlemen.
That's right.
They're gentlemen.
They evolved manly men.
That's right.
They've become the regress to second tier men, bullies, in other words, who have forgotten
about the fundamental principles of equality before the law and
free speech, presumably, and so on. And that's why they are kind
of repressing populist movements, right?
Yes.
Around the world.
But as you pointed out, the USA,
it's done many things.
This is probably a tiny section of the things that it's done,
like politically oriented stuff.
But they were supporting these popular movements,
like color revolutions, the Rose Revolution in Georgia,
Serbia, Euro-Madan and so on.
The Arab Spring thing.
So how does that fit this thing?
Because those like, I mean, that's like that's populism, right?
And that's what they're all for.
I think that's the contrast is like, it's a little,
this is why I interpret, this is why I had an issue with this before, that I think the missing
thing is like basically in Schellenberger and Peterson world, right, the populists can only be
right wing authoritarian type populists, right? So any of the revolutions that were
undermining of that are anti-populist, even if they were apparently popular
artisans, they were actually grass root stuff seeded by the... So it's actually
like the overlap with like, you know, the gray zone view of the world where all of that is inauthentic CIA backed
revolutions against legitimate governments. Yeah. And just to point out the other stupid thing
about this is that in Schellenberg is crazy portrayal there. It's basically USA is
indistinguishable from the CIA. Right? Oh, yeah, he mentioned that earlier. He wanted to say, like,
he actually wants to put the letters.
Yeah. Whereas, you know, when we're talking about those sorts
of politically culturally oriented activities, there are
things like supporting election monitoring groups, like in
Ukrainian elections, or funding investigative journalism or anti-corruption
campaigns.
Like, it's not talking, like they're not assassinating people, right?
It's not a dirty tricks campaign, right?
I think largely.
Well, are they not, Matt?
You know, they probably keep that stuff off the books.
That is what he's implying.
So like the end of that clip, just to make it clear, where he says, you know, all those skills come back after the color revolutions and whatnot, it leads to this.
They turn all that back on the United States, first with the Russiagate conspiracy theory, this idea that Trump is secretly controlled through a sex blackmail operation by Putin. Second, through the, you know, the dismissal of COVID origins,
then you see with the Hunter Biden laptop and elaborate conspiracy theory that the laptop
is a Russian information operation as opposed to which they knew it was not because the
FBI had the laptop seven months earlier.
So it, you know, just to make sure all everything map, right COVID, origins, the Russia gate, that's all that knowledge comes back to,
be put to good use there.
Okay, so let's just point out the obvious here,
which USAID has not interfered with domestic US politics.
It will organize some sort of dirty tricks campaign
to undermine.
Are you, come on, Matt, isn't it behind the Russia conspiracy?
Like, why isn't it giving talking points to Richard Maddow?
How can you speak so confidently?
You don't know what nobody knew what you said was up to, right?
Like it could be behind all of them.
Could be just a front for the CIA.
Yeah, could be different. No evidence. No evidence of that as far as I know.
So yeah, so it's really quite rampant conspiracism, isn't it?
So USAID now been turned into a movement of not gentlemen, but manly men
who are out there doing nefarious things all over the world.
It looks like they're not supporting populist movements or democratic movements or anti-authoritarian regimes
or democratic sort of objectives. No, no, no. They're doing dirty tricks to
suppress that again, against all evidence that I was able to see. And now
also, also without any evidence, they've turned those tools against the American people to make people
think bad things about Donald Trump, like that he encouraged people to storm the Capitol building
or to hide democratic things. That's the rampant conspiracism that's on display here.
And the other logic I want to highlight here, because you know, I am not somebody that has the kind of Hassan Piker view of the West, right?
Like everything that the West has ever done is terrible.
But I'm also not someone with a Pollyannaish view of like the West.
Right. So Schellenberger there says like, you know, the Western civilization, it was created when manly men became gentlemen, right? But you know, if you go back and
you actually read history, the history, the development of, you know, the Western nations
and their power bases and whatnot, that was not people behaving as gentlemen, generally, right?
Like there are movements that you can highlight if you want to, you know.
Oh yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah. Look, you can highlight sort of, I guess, the various political revolutions
and evolutions that happened in Europe where it led to the demise of monarchies and aristocracies
and so on and created a kind of civil culture, you know, basically the middle class and varying
degrees of democracy could actually run the show. And you can talk about
how that is like a culture of mutual respect, as opposed to
domination, right by power, right? That's the sunny side,
right? There's also, as you said, there's a dark side to it
as well. Right? There's an awful like exploit exploitation,
colonialism, a whole bunch of things never go away.
Including, you know, ramp Including rampant mistreatment,
if you don't even want to talk about the colonialists. Talk about poor people and women.
Talk about poor people and women maybe. Yeah, like the notion that, I'm sorry to bring it up guys,
just because I've been reading about it a bit lately, but the potato potato famine if that is an example of like people behaving as gentlemen gentlemen
You know in Western civilization good God, I'd hate to see them when they're behaving
No, you see man. It's because the the evolution towards gentlemen hadn't fully
Hadn't come to its culmination which we're seeing in Donald Trump in Donald Trump. Yes. Yeah
No, you know.
Yeah, it's so, it's farcical.
This is a cartoonish presentation.
Well, I know.
And also, Matt, just to mention, no role for women there.
No, no, they didn't write a mention there.
No, no.
Women, no, Western civilization, sorry ladies.
It's a man.
It's gentlemen.
It's gentlemen that we were responsible for that.
But it is so clearly dumb, right.
And it's in the same vein as Jordan Peterson's incredibly stupid, mystical,
magical fairy tales to understand things.
Like it's on a level of that stupid
trope about, you know, hard times create strong men.
I think that's what it's largely drawing on. Yeah, like this, like
the intellectual level here is one of a bad name. That is the best you can say about it.
Yeah, it's also funny that the author that he mentioned is Harvey Mansfield. It's not
his fault, but he wrote a book about manliness. His name is Mansfield. But it's in any case, again, I just want to look, I'm going to do it without the irony
drenched delivery.
Right.
Yes.
These are two guys offering apologetics for hard right administration in the US, which
is currently going about making challenges to checks and balances on power,
demonizing immigrants and opponents of the regime, all this kind of thing.
And they are invoking these concepts of parasites and viruses invading the nation.
The robust health of the nation is built on love of country, on individual virtue, of real manliness.
Right. And that's right. The overflowing of all these corrupt institutions, which we need to get
rid of, which have been keeping the country in bondage. Does this really not sound familiar?
I'm not saying that they're instigating a fascist steer. But I am saying that the rhetoric that they're using here is exactly in line
with that and stuff that the Trump government is doing, frankly,
is invoking those parallels.
So it's just that these two flatter themselves.
You know, they are essentially doing this thing of studiously
ignoring all of the anti-democratic, authoritarian shit that the Trump regime is
doing and projecting it onto any critic, any opponent, any institution that dares to stand
up to the dear leader and this God manifested helper, Elon Musk.
And it should be obvious that these are rank propagandists for an administration,
but they still style themselves as renegade intellectuals. And it's pathetic.
Yeah, renegade intellectuals and true Democrats. That's how they style themselves. And it's just
incredibly offensive, just personally. And this is a situation where Congress is like
cowed, basically. Oh yeah, but in part because it's made up of people from the party who are
behind the leader. Yeah, there's a lunatic wing and anyone who might disagree with the
dear leader on the Republican side is keeping their mouth shut.
So yeah, like there is absolutely the reality of what's going on, I think, is that there is a
worrying lurch towards authoritarianism and a decrease in democratic institutions in the
United States. That's just, in my opinion, a fact about what's going on. Yeah, it is undeniable.
And these guys sound like proto-fascists. I called Jordan Peterson an accidental fascist
before and I'll call both of them proto-fascists at the moment because whether they have enough
self-awareness to understand what they are or not, that is, as you pointed out, what they are propagandizing for. That's the language
that is the language of fascists. Yeah, yeah, it is. So, okay, now two final clips,
Matt, to finish off, right? One is highlighting Jordan Peterson's approach to psychology and the
way that he uses, like, citations from studies and whatnot,
grinds up our familiar rough.
And the last one, it wouldn't be a proper Jordan Peterson thing if we didn't mention how this
connects to religion.
Right.
So first in regards to the psychology literature citation, listen to this.
So, okay.
So Musk is in there with this incredibly sophisticated technology, rapidly tracking
down spending.
So the first question is like, what the hell are these agencies actually doing?
And it's not like anyone knows, not thoroughly.
Then the next question of course is, how much of it is waste. Okay, so the management literature indicates management
and literature on productivity and creativity. There's two indications from that literature
that are germane. The first is that 65% of managers in private companies add negative
net value to their companies. Wow.
Okay.
That's in profitable, well-run private companies, right?
65%.
Okay.
And then you might ask, well, how can a company survive?
And the answer to that is the square root of the number of people engaged in a given
domain of effort do half the work.
So if you have 10,000 employees, 100 of them do half the work.
And so that means that Musk didn't do what he did with Twitter, let's say, and fire
85% of the people, and all that happens is profit margins go up and everything runs more efficiently.
And so will Elon find a trillion dollars worth of waste in the next four weeks?
It's like, I guess we'll see.
No, the answer is no, Jordan.
He didn't.
But yeah.
Yeah.
That's an interesting proposition, isn't it?
The square root of the number of people do half the work.
That comes from Price's law, apparently.
And it was the idea originally came from scientific research, which is the idea that a small number
of researchers are responsible for a disproportionately large amount of research, which I think that
could be some truth in that, right? Like there is like the distribution of like advancements is very unequally
distributed and you have a, like a, a few people who hit the jackpot, but you know,
this is extrapolating it like Jordan Peterson does, like in any organization,
you can fire three quarters of the people little run just as well.
This is clearly not true.
Apart from the girls, like once you do that,
theoretically, you could do it again, right?
So it's going to be a good people keep winnowing it down.
Make it even more efficient.
There's no downsides.
And I presume Jordan should advocate for that at the organizations he works for.
Like the Daily Wire could probably cut 75%
of its staff or Jordan Peterson's various endeavors. They should cut 75% of their staff.
I think we'd lose 75% of podcasts, Chris.
Yeah, well, we probably could, but you know, it's, this is just Jordan Peterson kind of working backwards, right, from a position that he wants to defend.
looking backwards right from a position that he wants to defend. Yeah, well, this is what I'm saying.
Like these guys, basically, they just cheerlead propagandists for whatever it is that Trump
is doing at the moment.
Or Musk in this case.
Or Musk, yeah, them together.
But sacking people, that's great.
There's no downside.
Getting rid of USA, that's a great idea.
It's a terrible organization for about six different reasons.
Tariffs, if I talk about tariffs, as you found that he has, you know, they're great for always like,
John John could literally Elon Musk could literally do anything
like taking great big fat crap in the middle of the road. And
these guys would stand around praising it and talking about
what a wonderful idea it was.
I know. And it's, as we've talked about, it's the fact that
these people style themselves as these brave men willing to stand up and and fight the battles that nobody else
will and their absolute legs fiddles, their pure legs fiddles.
Everything that so he said, you know, Jordan said, we'll see if Elon finds four
trillion. So I'm sure he's followed up on that.
Right. And I'm sure he will.
He didn't. Yeah, he dramatically reduced the amount that he said he was going to find.
That's an issue.
But no, no, I don't think that will be the key.
And so, yes, it's just the highlight that like the citations to literature and whatever,
they're just purely there to justify whatever the particular thing is that they want to say.
No, like it doesn't. It doesn't matter. there to justify whatever the particular thing is that they want to say now.
Like it doesn't it doesn't matter.
So it's it's window dressing, really,
like Jordan Peterson's reference to world religion and through psychology and any
stuff. And same goes for his his magical poetic fairy tales referencing all of
those things. It is just fantastical just just so-so, it's in service of something else.
So, yeah, it's not fun to listen to a couple of propagandists
for an hour and a half, Chris.
I didn't know.
No, but that's what they are.
And that's part of the reason I wanted to do this episode,
because it's just so clear from this content, right,
that this would build itself as like you said,
you know, an intellectual discussion between two people with, uh, you know, different expertise
talking about contemporary issues and, you know, debating the merits and demerits of blah, blah,
blah. But that's not what it is. It's two propagandists just offering apologetics for
everything that the Trump administration does while constantly preening themselves
as these independent renegade intellectuals.
And in regards tying it into religious stuff, Matt,
here you go, I promise that we'll end on this.
Lovely.
And we're also trying to teach this
at University of Austin,
but it's a picture that a citizen,
it's not just something, yes,
you're a citizen by fact of being born in that nation, yes, but there was this older picture that a citizen, it's not just something, yes, you're a citizen by
fact of being born in that nation, yes, but there is this older idea of the citizen, which
came from older Europe, which was that to be a citizen was something that was a privilege
and an honor and it came with some intense responsibilities.
And you're in service, you know, so you sort of say, what is it the gentleman is in service of civilization,
of peace, of prosperity, of freedom, of reproduction,
continuing the civilization,
continuing there's a picture of evolution
of human consciousness.
As we've talked about before that gets into trouble
when the stories that Christians had told
start to get challenged by Copernicus,
Galileo, Darwin, we get to the crisis of meaning, we get to nihilism, the death of God. We had two
first bad waves of a totalitarian nihilistic response to the death of God in fascism and
communism. They get repressed and we push away, but then we get this thing we call wokeism,
and it develops and develops after the fall of communism, really starting in the early
nineties, and then fully comes to its just deranged, mad power with the woke reign of
terror exercising this just wanton aggression and nihilism.
I think you can make a case, and I think this is the appropriate case, and I think it can
easily be documented historically and mythologically that when the integrating ethos collapses,
that's equivalent to the death of God.
And the reason for that, specifically in the West, is because—well, here's a way of
thinking about it—there's no doubt that the passion of Christ is an archetypal representation
of voluntary self-sacrifice.
I don't think that would come as a shock to anyone to say that.
But when you understand that the ethos of voluntary self-sacrifice is the antidote to power and hedonism, then that takes on
a new light, because then you might say, well, what happens if you kill God, so to speak, in the
Nietzschean sense? And at least in the Christian West, what that means is you remove from the
central place the insistence that the drama of self-sacr sacrifice is the altar of the divine, let's say.
And that has cascading consequences.
Jordan Peterson in full flow there. It's like after all of that, God knows what he meant.
It's easy to forget the
just the weird stuff from Schellenberger at the beginning.
I'm struggling to remember because Jordan's thing is like a
washed over.
Maybe I can exercise the Jordan part because it's very,
you know, Jordan Peterson.
It's just him taking the chance to riff on something that he always says, which is like, Jesus is the best archetype of sacrifice. Him and Peugeot have this thing that now everything
in society is based on sacrifice. You know, you everything in relationships, it's all sacrifice.
The worst is and Jesus is the ultimate sacrifice. Right. So you remove that piece at the bottom of the Jenga tower and then everything starts
to fall apart because the society doesn't properly revere sacrifice and our values
corrupt. And so like he's riffing on wokeism is a manifestation of the failure
to centralize the Jesus myth in Western civilization anymore.
I see.
Yeah.
So, and you were going to say, Matt, the, by the Schellenberger section.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Cause I almost forgot because when Jordan Peterson gets going with his
magical mystery tour of allegories, it turns my, it's like a Jedi mind trick.
My mind goes blank, but we mustn't pass over the fact that Schellenberger
there is listing the great
tribulations of the last hundred years. We had the fascism, we had communism, two terrible,
terrible things. And number three, up on the same level, and maybe worse, wokeism.
From the 90s onward. So, you know, there's a slight discrepancy in the dev tools attributable. There is those movements, you know, like just a slight a few millions in in the ledgers that are missing for the the work is in.
But wasn't it really a tyranny of the mind, Matt?
But, you know, wasn't that on a similar level?
Yeah, that's you could try to make that argument that you would struggle.
Yeah.
Yeah, so there, yeah, we shouldn't let that pass by.
It reminds me of the people online
that really love that movie 300,
because they just love the idea of the sort of citizen army,
you know, the citizen soldier in ancient Rome
or ancient Greece, right?
And a citizen wasn't just anyone. Right. First of all.
No, you have to have a privilege.
Yeah. You have to be a man. You've got to be contributing to the fertility.
Yeah. Reproduction. That's important.
That's important. And, you know, I suppose you've got to be willing to sacrifice. Right.
You've got to be sacrificing your your nation state and nation.
Yeah, you did mention that. You got to be sacrificing for the nation. That's yeah.
Yeah. Now they don't really make it explicit, but implicit in it is kind of goes against what they
were saying at the beginning about, you know, democracy and equality and fairness and so on.
It kind of implies there is there is a tiered social system.
There's citizens and non-citizens. But Matt, if citizens are the gentlemen who are the ones that
create the civilization, who protect it and who are, you know, the driving engine, isn't it only
fair that they have a little bit more say over how it runs. And, you know, if you have
manifestations of God in the administration, you know, who are the mere mortals that stand
in their way but parasites, you know, preventing the Uberman.
Yeah. Like the 75% of employees who really should be sacked.
Yeah. Who cares about them? Presumably they're not working class, right? Because, you know,
Schellenberger and Jordan and Trump, of course, champions of the working class. So those 75%
that you cut out of the companies, you know, the deep state or whatever, they're, you know,
they're like enemies of the people.
Well, they're parasites, Chris, I think.
Yeah, that's, yeah. Anyway. It's dark shit. It's
dark shit. I've seen residences of this in various stupid dark places on the internet.
Yeah it's not particularly pretty. They're like they sort of surrounded with some highfalutin
kind of language but when you strip it back it's's, uh, no, it's not a, it's not actually
something that is the best part of, to use their words, Western civilization.
Whatever is good, whatever the good part of, of the democratic traditions and liberalism
and so on, the stuff that they cherish so much about Europe, whatever the good part
is the bit that they like is not
that. It's some prehistoric shit. Yes, I am inclined to agree. So this was like a two for one
episode, right, Matt? We had Schellenberger, we had Peterson, but they're essentially performing
the same role just with like different flavors. And Schellenberger is a conspiracy theorist.
That's primarily what it is. It actually runs through all of his previous coverage. He's like
Eric Weinstein in that sense, that that's his beating heart. He's now, you know, found an
administration which is conspiracist at its heart and also appeals to other things that he's found
about, you know, the issues besetting society
are really down the individual failure and not having enough individual willpower. So,
yeah, he's, I mean, he's interesting case, I guess, of the malability of someone like that,
who, who seems to exist at that intersection of the horseshoe, where they can drift backwards and forwards, you know, have to have this early career
supporting progressive things. Probably the arguments and stuff that we're proposing for stuff that may well have been good
were pretty bad at that time, pretty much like our favorite Englishman. What's his name? Russell Brand.
And it's so easy for them to drift over to
to the extreme right. And I think the fundamental thing is
that conspiracism where, you know, they don't. Yeah, I know
they're sort of untethered. They can adjust themselves to any,
any kind of regime. So yeah, it's disturbing. I did not enjoy
this. Chris, but yes, that's all right I did not enjoy this Chris books.
Yes. That's all right. That's all right.
Well, Matt, any board takeaways?
I mean, I think I already offered my overview of them a couple of clips back, so I won't rehash it.
Do you have any general takeaways or are you just eager to leave them behind?
Are they secular gurus? I think the answer is like, yes, because of all the dressing up shit they do.
I think so too. I think I've given most of my takes along the way and I totally concur with what you said.
I think they are. I think Schellenberg is a guru like Jordan Peterson.
There's stylistic differences, but he's very much representing himself as an providing intellectual analysis and so on when he's doing exactly the opposite.
It's either you could call it conspiracism, you can call it propaganda, you can call it rank partisanship.
But yeah, it is very, very stupid.
It's masquerading with some degree of plausibility to their audience as something else.
But I, yeah, there's a lot of it going about these days.
Yeah, that's true.
That's true. Well,
that's that Schellenberger and Peterson done again.
We're not fond of them.
They're part of my league. But now, Matt,. We're not fond of them. They put it mildly.
But now I'm at people that we are fond of our patrons.
It's a good good trip, right?
A bit of a hard left there.
But, you know, I think I think I did it nicely.
So I'm going to mention some conspiracy
hypothesizers, then I'm going to mention some revolutionary thinkers., then I'm going to mention some revolutionary
thinkers, and then I'm going to mention some galaxy being gurus.
And you're not going to stop me, Matt, no matter how much you try.
These people are all gentle men and gentle women.
Okay?
They are.
These are people that all, they'd love Western civilization to a man and woman. They would sacrifice everything to preserve it.
And I'm sure they're all fertile.
And reproduce.
They reproduce.
Yeah, that's it.
They are protecting the nation with the reproduction.
All of our patrons are incredibly fertile.
And I just know this.
Go ahead.
That's it.
Urgh.
Urgh.
Perfect rhetoric.
But okay.
So conspiracy hypothesizers. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Perfect rhetoric. But OK, so.
Conspiracy hypothesizers, we have Leo Will,
Borja Daguerre, Scott, Ivan Castaneda,
Barrientos, Adam Tate Haworth, Samuel Phillips, Nathan Head,
Hedden, Nick Hallowes, Christian Owens, Elfron Licht, Nicholas Harding, Everything
Important, Mark Morabito, Cathy Murphy, Richie Wunderlich, Josue Arias, Ryan Vyblit, Peter
Michalak, Jonas Shea Nolan, Amy T, Suzanne Andrew Barron, Mark Steffie, Shane Nolan, Amy T, Suzanne, Andrew, Baron, Mark, Steffi, Matthew Griffin, Dean
Russell, Pedestrian 101, Richard Moyes, Tim, Colin Brown, Ryan, Sarah Imruzik and Ankom
Andy.
Okay.
Wonderful.
Thank you all.
Go forth and reproduce.
I feel like there was a conference that none of us were invited to that came to some very
strong conclusions and they've all circulated this list of correct answers.
I wasn't at this conference.
This kind of shit makes me think, man.
It's almost like someone is being paid.
Like when you hear these George Soros stories, he's trying to destroy the country from within.
We are not going to advance conspiracy theories. We will advance conspiracy hypotheses.
Good job, sir. Okay. Revolutionary geniuses.
I enjoyed laughing at these conspiratorial freaks a lot more when they weren't running
the American nation. I gotta say, the current environment just adds a dark aspect to it.
I know.
I know.
There is that.
But these revolutionary geniuses aren't responsible for that.
No.
So yeah.
Don't believe them, man.
They're on the side of good.
Every one of them.
That's right.
That's not parasocial cultishness at all.
No.
No.
And they can hear the Decoding Academia series, whichcial cultists at all. No, no, no. And they can hear the decoding academia series,
which is most important of all, they will hear the review of car that God bless them all.
They include Matthew Pritham, Nestor Kohler, Peter Sheebel, LBBS, David Hine, Arne Alsbic Sizz the World Elephant Gun
Paul Herrick Adam Brady
Lord M2K Tommy Lepsoi
Hippopotamusaurus Rex RCT 45011
Erin Coller JT
Gal Rye Tony Finch
Mike Auzenhauer Forrest Green
Drake Marcus Segell, Alexander Fanner, Her
Kay, Morrison McQueen, Cole, Paula Brighton, Rodrigo Borges, Logan Moore, KB and Eric Vaughan.
All revolutionary geniuses.
That's fantastic. Play the clips.
I'm usually running, I don't know, 70 or 90 distinct paradigms simultaneously all the time.
And it is not to try to collapse them down to a single master paradigm.
I'm someone who's a true polymath. I'm all over the place.
But my main claim to fame, if you'd like,
in academia is that I founded the field of evolutionary consumption.
Now that's just a guess and it could easily be wrong,
but it also could not be wrong.
The fact that it's even plausible is stunning.
Okay. Okay. Yeah, that was Jordan Hall, Matt. You remember him?
I do remember Jordan Hall. And you know, Chris, hot off the
presses. Just tweeted by Jordan Hall just a couple of hours ago.
You ready for this? Okay. Because yeah, because because you know, contemporary wisdom, contemporary was a couple of hours ago. You ready for this? Oh God. Cause he, cause it, cause you know, contemporary wisdom, contemporary
was a lot of stuff going on.
Uh, but Jordan Hall understands what's happening.
A lot of it.
A lot of it.
Yeah.
You're ready for this.
That's, that's him now.
I'm reading it.
You're ready for this one.
Neo liberalism is imploding.
It had to happen sometime.
Liberalism is intrinsically unstable and it seems like it's happening now.
Agreed, Chris?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, fine.
Two. As the neoliberal global order unravels, we will see the bursting forth of older, more
fundamental lineages, sometimes called civilization states. Okay with him so far?
Yeah, I'm okay with this, yeah.
Number three. Here is a real surprise. Civilization states are also intrinsically unstable and we are
rapidly approaching a point where they will also begin to dissolve.
Yes.
Even old and integrated ones like China.
Oh, okay.
But you didn't see that one coming.
But four, Jordan Hall knows what's going to happen.
He knows what's coming.
What will emerge is a very, very decentralized set of nations
without states closer to indigenous nations
than civilizations slash empires brought
into coherent coordination by a complex of hyperstructures.
Yeah, no, that's clear.
Yep.
That's pretty.
So, you know, maybe everything will be okay.
There's going to be a set of indigenous hyper structures.
Yeah, decentralized indigenous states brought to coherent coordination by complex of hyper structures. So that's a relief. Yeah.
Yeah, that's a well, yeah, that's I probably wasn't going to justify those outlandish games until I heard about the hyper structures. Now I
realize I was foolish to doubt him. So that's, at Jordan Hall, some people have suggested we
return to him. Maybe, maybe we should, we should. But I suspect he's going to be doing all the same
whitewashing of the Trump regime that the rest of them are. But, um, in any case, Matt, people that wouldn't be whitewashing the Trump
regime, that would include galaxy brain gurus, right?
Of which I have a few, uh, a handful to provide, uh, you with.
Okay.
So these are the top people in the Decoding the Guru's sky.
And they are Dave Alastair Forbes,
Oversealist, euphemist, Lewis Kahn, Mr.
Tasbian Lander, Brian Palmer, Jeremy David Urtego, Alexander Kabanow,
Olin, Leanne Jidani, Foggers, Jeff Hackert, Nick, Unkel, Fullmetal T-shirt,
Robbie Lalibert, Jubjub, Joanna Scanlon, Epic Backflip, Briley Hull, Jacob Folkman, Spaza,
Hugh Dogg, Parminder Singh, No Body, W. Stella Licht and Lou Ellen.
That's all Galaxy Brain gurus.
Galaxy Brain, top tier. Thank you very much, guys. And just a hand tip to
Colo Revived who DMed me that tweet from Jordan Hall. Just giving credit where it's due.
Oh, yeah. Yeah. And I also did happen to meet a Patreon member in Japan, Matt. We had a drink.
I shan't reveal their identity lest they want to be anonymous.
But it was someone I also met in America.
That's right. Yeah, they've also met you. They've completed that.
Well, they just need to meet editor Andy now. But yeah, so I
enjoyed that. Had nice chicken, nice beers and a good stimulating
conversation. So thank you to the anonymous Patreon member.
This is unfair. You're getting far too much like the parasocial turned real social interactions.
You've also paid for my own beers.
No, I know, but you're just getting the social contact.
You also got to go out for sushi with Josh.
Just Josh steps.
I mean, what do I get?
No one's coming to, to bud the book to meet me.
No one's coming here.
Right.
We talked about Bundaberg, Bundaberg quite a lot during that lunch. So don't worry. It was
like you were there. Yeah. In spirit. I was there in spirit. That's it. Galaxy bring gurus so much.
They need their clip. That's what they're all waiting on. They're not going to be satisfied
until they hear it. They'll hold this like ghosts unless you play it. Go ahead.
Yeah.
We tried to warn people.
Yeah.
Like what was coming, how it was going to come in, the fact that it was
everywhere and in everything.
Considering me tribal just doesn't make any sense.
I have no tribe.
I'm in exile.
Think again, sunshine.
Yeah.
Think again, Sunshine. Yeah.
I wonder if Michael O'Fallon would also be apologetic for Trump.
I mean, you wouldn't imagine that. It's not something like, you know, all those darn warnings and whatnot.
These are all heterodox thinkers, Chris. They think outside the box.
Unpredictable.
They go their own way.
Yes, they're firebrands. Yes, they're sometimes controversial, but they're all going in their different
directions, wherever their logical trains of thought don't, I'm sure, I'm sure
you're wrong in predicting that he would be doing the same kind of whitewashing
for Donald Trump as the rest of them.
Can I, can I just mention about the fetish?
I thought that's quite funny.
I've got my notifications set up so that, well, they're not notifications, but it goes to my email, you know, when we get YouTube comments.
I should turn that off. But somebody commented on the Flint Dibble video, which was called Flint Dibble on the underground pyramids debunking Joe Rogan again.
And the commenter said, Delay or returns.
In reference to Flint. returns and reference the fled he's trying to conceal the truth about those
massive skyscraper style rock constructions tunneled out of the rock
and then they built the core constructions back in the rock I do
they up to they he's just he doesn't he's hiding the truth he doesn't want
people to know about that.
They're beyond our Ken, Matt, the ancients.
They're beyond our Ken.
What was it?
The power plant?
Was it a big divining rod?
Tesla coil.
There's Tesla coils involved somehow.
I just know that.
I've got a feeling.
Well, that's a good job, Matt.
You did well today.
It's, we'll be out of Schellenberger. I can't remember who's next, but it's good job, Matt. You did well today. It's a. It will be out of Schellenberger.
I can't remember who's next, but it's something great and exciting.
So don't worry about it.
Yeah. Yeah.
Give me credit for what? Oh, it's Gary's economics.
Isaac, look forward to that.
Oh, yeah. That's going to be.
People will welcome that because they really love it.
I know.
That's going to be a lot of fun.
It seems untrue.
We'll be punished by both sides of American politics at the same time.
Oh my, bro, we must stand alone.
Like Lex Friedman, you know, the slings and arrows will come.
The subreddit will make its little friends and they can discuss it amongst themselves.
So look forward to that, everyone.
Very funny. All right, thanks Chris. See ya. Bye. they can discuss it amongst themselves. So look forward to that everyone.
Very funny. All right, thanks Chris.
See ya.
Bye. I'm going to be a little bit of a little bit of a
little bit of a
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