Decoding the Gurus - Supplementary Material 18: The Clown Car Cometh
Episode Date: November 16, 2024Still in the land of the free and restocked with important new insights from his US travels, Matt is confronted with the Gurusphere's predictably depressing reaction to the election. And what's that w...e hear in the distance... is it a honking car?Supplementary Material 1800:00 Matt's American Ethnography10:59 Eric Weinstein is waiting for the call14:32 Huberman, Krauss, and MAGA Sycophancy18:39 Boghossian and other would-be Intellectual Clerics of the MAGA regime22:52 Sam Harris criticises Elon Musk, Joe Rogan, and MAGA32:05 The Fifth Column, The Free Press and World Weary Both Sides-ing53:19 Election Reflections: Macro and Micro Causes01:04:40 Longer Term Trends01:10:08 Sarah Haider and the Hip Vibe of the New Right01:24:00 Richard Dawkins Dual Nature01:31:08 A Plea to Sean Carroll and our Listeners01:33:06 An important note on BoulderingThe full episode is available for Patreon subscribers (1hr 36 mins).Join us at: https://www.patreon.com/DecodingTheGurusLinksEric's phone is not ringingHuberman making his pitchKrauss being a sycophant to ElonBoghossian's lack of interest in protests in HungarySam Harris Making Sense 391: The ReckoningA Special Place in Hell: Adios Amigos: The Special Place FinaleThat graph mentioned about the loss of support for incumbent regimesDawkins being a fool on TwitterThe Fifth Column: #234 - Come On and Zoom! (Wagnerian Opera Edition)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Decoding the Guru's supplementary material edition where the psychologist Matthew
Brown and the anthropologist Christopher Kavanaugh, that's me, are able to cut loose, let our locks
down, kick back and relax and gaze upon the mysteries of the
Guru's sphere as they swirl around us. Swirl Matt, swirl
around us. And as usual, for the coming months, Matt is in good
old US of A. Howdy, partner.
Howdy, howdy, howdy. I'm here in St. Louis, Chris. I'm in the
throbbing, beating heart of the American Midwest.
It's a groovy town.
It's a groovy town.
I've only just got in here this evening, but we went and had some food.
I'm going to get some.
Do you have some grits?
I've had grits elsewhere, Chris. I've had grits elsewhere, but I'm going to get some jazz and blues, meet up with
some patrons here in St. Louis.
It's going to be good.
Everyone seems calm.
The post-election thing, everyone seems a little bit depressed.
I don't know if that's normal.
Maybe it's got something to do with the election.
Who knows?
Oh, well, that's good to hear because everyone online is losing their
collective shit in various different ways.
It's nice to hear that the people in the actual real world are carrying on
listening to jazz music and whatnot. You know, good to hear that the people in the actual real world are carrying on listening to jazz music and whatnot.
You know, good to hear.
Well, this particular time in real time, we're hearing like one Trump nominee for positions after another.
And never has the clowns emerging from the clown car before been more apt.
Oh, there's, there's both of them.
Oh, it's a chuckle.
I tell you what, when I saw Matt gets his beaming face being nominated for something
or other department of justice or education, who knows, is he a tiny general?
I think, I think so.
So I think it. Something involving justice.
Now we know, Chris, how the Romans felt when Caligula appointed his horse as a member of the Senate.
Now we know.
Yeah, well, I do appreciate a certain Schadenfreude for the various heterodox and, you know, the kind of
mage-apologist side, right? But not pure mage-cultists, right? They're kind of
like just always saying, oh, the liberal media is misrepresenting Trump or whatnot.
A few of them have noticed the honks coming from the car and the people puking their head out the window and they're saying, wait a minute, is that car full of clowns? Is this clown approaching? But I do feel this is what Trump
promised, right? Like he promised a bunch of f***ing morons and he's delivering it. And like,
I imagine Jordan Peterson is ecstatic. He's probably just disappointed at how moderate the people are in their
imagine because Tulsi Gabbard being, at least some of them are not, they have
to go through a Senate confirmation.
Now it's the Republicans that are the majority in the Senate.
So we'll see how that goes.
But Tulsi is, I think the director of intelligence in the Senate. So we'll see how that goes. But Tulsi is, I think, the director of intelligence
is the position.
And notably, this is a concerning appointment,
given that Tulsi has a long and decorated history
as an apologist for various totalitarian regimes.
Assad, most notably.
I saw today, my people were sharing a clip,
where three days after the invasion of Ukraine by Russia, Tosy made a tweet urging Zelensky to respond with
the spirit of Aloha to the Russian preference.
So great news.
Yeah.
Great news.
Great news.
Great news.
I, as we hear more and more of atrocities and executions by Russian soldiers, I mean, that's
a very reasonable thing to ask of the Ukrainians while they're being invaded.
Absolutely.
Yeah, yeah.
It's not a great time.
It's not a great time for Americans.
But you know, I mean, I don't know, they soldier on.
It's easy to let politics overwhelm your life.
But you know, I'm out here.
I'm in the real America.
I'm in the heartland. Yeah, you're eating
burgers. I'm eating a lot of burgers. I'm walking here. I'm
walking. I'm walking here. That's what I'm saying to Bill.
I'm walking here. And they go Yep. You go ahead. Yeah, no,
Chris. I mean, look, I have many, many reflections on the
United States, probably too much to fit in here. But have I already said that there's just two things that Americans really do well.
And that is hamburgers, the hamburger and the second one, fried chicken.
Yeah.
They do other things as well.
They make F 35 self jets and things, but mainly it's the fried chicken, the
burgers that I, you just cannot help but respect how much effort goes into it.
It's really good. It's better.
Like you think you know what burgers
I know good chicken. What the hell are you talking about? So
one of our patrons was like, this is karaoke erasure that Matt is
clearly not good. And it is you know, Japan has its very good
fried chicken as well. So I'm just saying don't be an American imperialist about this.
Okay.
Oh, Chris remind me what's the addictive, um, convene chicken called in Japan again.
What's it called?
Famichiki.
Famichiki.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So an Australian chef that I really like, I've forgotten his name, but he cooks
everything and he cooked Famichiki.
He cooked Famichiki.
I saw it.
I'll send you the link.
It seemed a bit elaborate. There's a lot of, like, there was a lot. cooks everything and he cooked family chicken. He cooked family chicken. I saw it. I sent you the link.
Did you watch it?
It seemed a bit elaborate.
There was a lot of ingredients.
You sent it to me and I was expecting like, you know,
a 30 second TikTok where he's like, you know,
you put this in and you fry, but he,
but it was like a 20 minute like, you know,
measuring art, all these things.
I was like, is there that much that cooks it?
Dude, I can't see. You think it's to make? Cause it's sold in a convenience store. You think the
process is simple, but it's like, this is factory processed food, Chris, as many steps
in seemingly seemingly so. So yeah, well, uh, Matt, look, okay. So we've established,
you know, people continue on in the real world.
America's food has some culinary specialties which you're enjoying.
And we know about the wildlife, right?
We know squirrels are good.
What other insights have you got for us?
Anything?
You know, what kind of things?
Things that maybe the Americans don't see.
You're like, you know, the anthropologist of the 21st century.
You're there.
What are you bringing back to the world that the Americans don't see about
themselves that the rest of the world needs to know?
I know I've been, I've been keeping my mind open for these sorts of hot tricks to sort
of reveal something to them that they don't know already.
Yeah.
But there's very, there's very little, to be honest.
Like it is pretty much everything is on the tin.
Like they're much like Australians, except a bit weirder.
That's it.
That's pretty much how I would describe them.
I mean, one thing that did strike me, Chris, is like, what a big place America is.
Like we were at Kansas City yesterday.
Kansas City.
Do you know Kansas City?
I know that Dorothy was not there anymore.
At one point.
You're thinking of Kansas, the state.
I was aware of Kansas.
The state.
Wow.
I didn't even, I didn't even know there was such a place as Kansas City.
They didn't even know it existed.
It's a big city, Chris.
It's a big city and it's an impressive city actually.
Yeah.
It's a big deal.
And so I feel like I've got a feeling of what a
behemoth the United States is. Like it is actually a pretty big deal. Like it is huge. Like there are
cities you've never heard of that are bigger and better than the city that you're from. So, you know,
I think- What? Bigger and better than Belfast? Yes, much, very much so.
Are you fucking kidding me?
Now I'm sort of getting a visceral feeling of why America is such a big deal on the geopolitical
stage. Yeah.
I get that.
Well done. Well done, America. Good job. They had a whole continent to run around in and
make their playthings. So, you know, they had an easy run. They're playing on easy mode.
But, you know, still well done easy run. They're playing on easy mode, but still well
done nevertheless. That's my take. Well, I'm still finding it hard to conceive of a city that could
be more advanced culturally and technologically than Belfast. That blows my mind, just that idea,
the very concept. We were just talking before the podcast started about potential taglines for the cities.
And I think Belfast could be, it's not as bad as people say. It's got a lot better.
That would be good ways to advertise it. So yeah, I should be on the tourist board for Belfast. I could give them
some good slogans. Well, it's not known as a big tourist destination Belfast. It's true.
But I've been to... It is! What is it? Yeah, yeah. You have tourists at Belfast? Really?
We've got so many tourists we can't deal with them. Come on, come on. Be honest.
It's true. It's a popular tourist location.
Who's going to go to Belfast when Paris is right there?
Look, there's many famous... Where was the Titanic made, Matt? There's a Titanic museum.
There's the Game of Thrones tour, where you can tour sites that were on the Game of Thrones
protection.
You can take the Troubles tour.
You can take a bus around and see the bullet holes and the bomb places and the sectarian
murals.
There's tons of things to see.
That sounds like a fun family holiday.
Yeah.
I'm shocked you don't understand.
Like Belfast is a premier destination for all the kids.
It is.
Don't laugh.
There's okay.
There's Bush Mills distillery.
How about that?
Oh, okay.
That's not in Belfast.
Is it?
Oh, well, or the dance course way, which is also I mean, it's not in Belfast, but you can
all get to them early, straightforwardly from Belfast.
No, no, I get it. I get the picture. Belfast is near some places the tourists might want to visit.
Okay. All right. That's right. Yeah. So don't be smart, Matt. But yeah. So can I tell you as well
something amusing? It's not amusing. It's depressing.
But it comes with a sliver of amusement on the side.
So do you remember we had Eric offering his pre-election pitch
for being in the administration?
And then he was getting slammed by Mike Cernovich
for not being properly MAGA enough.
Right.
Do you remember this?
I remember the pitch.
I remember the pitch.
Now it's the post-election period, Matt.
The phone still isn't ringing.
It's still not ringing.
Oh no, poor Eric.
Eric has released a tweet lamenting this fact.
It's impossible to parody Eric because he just does it better himself.
So listen to this.
For whatever reason, the campaign doesn't reach out much.
I don't know why, but that is an observation.
So I don't want to take crap for observing that.
I think that's the Sernovich rejoinder. There are many dissident experts out here. Their phones are not ringing.
And when you point this out, it is treated the wrong way. Boo hoo. Everyone has a handout. It's
so dumb. It's funny because these are exactly the people who have stood up for three, for 30 plus
years. Just effing call, they proceed maga.
Bottom line, there aren't enough hardcore maga among the experts who know where
the bodies are buried to run and fix the government.
But there are dissident experts everywhere who will work even better in these
positions, people who are aligned with the idea of clearing out the rot and who aren't
are aligned with the idea of clearing out the rot and who aren't famously aligned with ideology, patriots, if you will. And he goes on. And he's referring to other people, of course, Chris. He's
not referring to himself. No. No, well, he does mention, he goes far to try and like find, you
know, other experts that he might recommend. He's not so gauche to speak about himself, but he is quite fixated
on how the phone isn't ringing with these non-MAGA dissidents.
And he says, the transition team doesn't understand the dissident expert
landscape and doesn't seem to care to either.
It's about loyalty.
I don't know if that is true because I've never spoken to anyone in the campaign.
If it is wrong, then just play some calls out here.
But I'm not hearing from anyone.
I know the heterodox experts.
Hey, I just got a call from the incoming administration.
I hear those calls coming to other people, but not the quiet folk.
Oh, I know.
I feel like they could just give him a position.
Like, come on, there must be some random government position.
They're giving positions to basically any idiot at this point.
They're even inventing positions at the Doge Department.
Government efficiency. So they're inventing positions at the Doge Department. Department of Over-efficiency.
Government efficiency. So they're inventing positions really nilly.
I think they could invent one for Eric. Come on.
He's already got the jacket.
They don't need that. No budget's required for a jacket.
He's sleeping in the jacket just in case he gets the call.
Just in case the helicopter lands on the front lawn.
Oh, dear.
I know. Poor Eric.
I mean, Eric would be doing this if it was the Kamala cabinet
or whatever, right? This was always what he was going to do. And similarly, I've been
appalled, not surprised, but like impressively appalled at the sycophancy in the heterodox
folk. Now there are of course, part of, you know, like Red Scare, whatever, of
course, they're going to be excited about this, but I'm talking about people like
Huberman or Huberman, you know, science advocate, Matt, podcaster who
likes to stay out of politics.
Hey, he was tweeting out about how the structure of federal health and science institutions is about
to change and how he believes, you know, that this could be a transformative moment and that people
should buckle up for the changes. And somebody was saying, you know, that they support him as a voice
in the new administration for health policy. And he says, the person's name was Nicole Rusty.
Thank you, Nicole.
I care very much about what happens to NIH funding for research and the allocation
within that bracket, especially the need for more and larger modular R01s.
And I do believe it can happen with the
current funding margins if certain reorg takes place.
This is one of 14 items listed thus far. Right. So this is Huberman making this, but you know that, you know,
we shouldn't be out here prejudging what the Trump administration is going to do for science. You know,
we should be open to these changes. And I'm, I'm here. I've got ideas or Lawrence Krauss, the physicist, he tweeted out, get the
DEI out of science funding, Elon Musk, my newest piece in national post.
Then he quote tweeted and said, very pleased that Elon Musk emailed me back
to say definitely exclamation mark, happy to support his efforts in this regard.
And somebody responded noting that his friend Sean Carroll
should take his attitude and he said, yup, definitely. But Matt, that's it. They're all
fawning, you know, like casting out their lines to try and say, I could have a role here. I'm
on board with reorganizations. I'm non-ideologically aligned about that. And you look at Trump's incoming
cabinet, imagine trying to be a climate scientist under the Trump regime. I strongly anticipate
that you won't be allowed to talk about climate science, at least in terms of emphasizing
global warming. You know, there's going to be so many things that are anti-science. And
you can see that from the simple fact of the attention and praise given
to RFK Jr., a noted anti-vaccine advocate.
But none of these science advocates seem to be that concerned about that.
It's just, yes, the DEI, it's gotten out of hand.
That's the real issue here.
So, yeah.
Yeah.
I know.
That's the real issue here. So yeah.
Yeah.
And I've seen Sabine Hassenfelder make similar kinds of comments there.
I mean, actually Sean Carroll does stand out as someone that they don't particularly like
because he doesn't follow along with this particular anti-institutional vibe.
And I've been listening to a fair bit of Sean since we covered
him just for fun because I've been doing a lot of traveling and I've got a lot of time to kill.
And Chris, he's good. He is a rare case of someone who is actually ethical about these things and not
self-aggrandizing and not tapping into this conspiratorial, paranoid, anti-institutional line that others do.
But, you know, it is, it is sad and weird that he, he's unusual.
He's a unicorn, Chris.
And, you know, like when we started this podcast, we weren't picking
gurus to cover based on how much they were part of this MAGA Trump train.
You know, in fact, my mental model was that they were these, you know,
eccentric iconoclastic kind of individualistic type people who might be
frauds and might be dodging all kinds of ways, but it wasn't, I wasn't picking
them based on their propensity to be political toadies.
And what's really interesting to me is, is how much that is the case.
Like they have all moved together in this one direction.
And I guess the answer is, is that these people are opportunists.
They have frauds and they're opportunists very much like, um, uh, Applebaum talks
about these, these todies in the Eastern European context, um, with new
dictatorships coming online.
These are people like Eric says very explicitly he's waiting in the Eastern European context with new dictatorships coming online. These are people, like Eric
says very explicitly, he's waiting in the wings, he's got his jacket on, he's ready to do what's
required and sing from the hymn sheet if only someone will please give him a nice comfy job.
Right? Well, similarly, a good illustration of that exact character, Peter Bogossian, someone
who styles himself as a heterodox intellectual philosopher who was forced out of academia
because of his out there opinions and his willingness to challenge orthodoxies.
But he has for quite a few years been going on these page speaking tours in Hungary, right?
And not just going to Hungary and talking about the problems in the West and how important,
you know, Orban's regime and whatnot is, but actually in America, going on podcasts
and kind of promoting Orban's regime, right?
And I remember, for example, he was complaining about some topic about
speech restrictions or whatnot. And I pointed out to him a large protest that had taken
place because of Hungary's repressive policies around education, where loads of teachers
all had come out, like there was a big protest about urban government restrictions on the
media and education systems and whatnot. And Boghossian responded to it saying,
oh yeah, this looks concerning, you know, I'll look into that and maybe need to talk about it.
And of course, never did Matt, right? Never did. But Boghossian now as well, has now moved to presenting himself
as a candidate for the Secretary of Education. He's tweeting out and getting retweeted by
various idiots, Rob Schneider and whatnot, saying that he could reform the education
system in the US. So it is what you say that like the main thing
is kind of this desire to get attention and power.
And yeah, like it's the level of sycophancy
cannot be overstated and also the willingness
to kind of abuse yourself to like meet yourself
appealing to these political or business leaders. Yeah. So yeah,
it's characteristic for renegade intellectuals to be so
sycophantic.
Indeed, indeed. Yeah, like it is contradictory and like I think I'm influenced a little bit
by these history books I've been reading about the 14th and 15th centuries, but it is like
a pre-democratic, a pre-modern kind of state of mind. This worship of these sort of leaders,
whether it's Joe Rogan or Donald Trump and this whole ecosystem of sycophants and flatterers who suck up to
them, hoping for a favor in the court.
And this is probably the wrong thing to say, but like in the Middle Ages, the peasants,
the rabble, us slobs, we would worship these people, these people at the very top.
They thought the king was ordained by God, that he loved his people,
that he was there to guide us all to some sort of beautiful future. And we see the same kind of
thing with this populism. And like, I know it's a long boat of draw, but I just feel that there is
something fundamentally unmodern, undemocratic about this entire ecosystem. It feels pre-modern. It feels futile in the way
they operate. And maybe that's just a way to understand what's going on. Yeah. Anyway.
Yeah. And, you know, I also, Matt, will point out that, you know, we are critical of Sam Harris at
various times and for various reasons. And he did a podcast episode in the aftermath
of the election result.
And as you might anticipate, the kind of first half of it
is him talking about his bug burrs, the progressive left,
the mochism and trans ideology
that led to the alienation, right?
He does warn at the start about people
in the post-election period,
pegging everything to their pet issues.
But then he does go on to do it.
But nonetheless, I think it gets credit
at least for flagging up at the start.
But then in the second half,
unlike the people that we're talking about,
he does go on to criticize people like Joe Rogan, Andy Lamusk,
and all of the alternative podcast set, Lex Friedman, as well. So I have a clip of that
that I will play to illustrate what I mean.
And I have something that I really must say to Joe Rogan and the other podcasters who
interviewed Trump.
You can't have it both ways.
You don't get to say that this was the podcast election and that these long-form conversations
are incredibly important for people to hear so that they can make up their mind about
who to vote for and then take no journalistic responsibility whatsoever
to get your facts straight, or to expose obvious lies
when you're talking to the most prolific liar on earth.
You don't get to spout endless conspiracy theories
about how our election system is dangerously broken
and vulnerable to fraud.
And then when your candidate wins,
say, oh, well, Trump's victory was just too big for
them to rig the election.
No.
How about realizing that there was nothing significantly wrong with our election system
in the first place, and that all these concerns about fraud were lies coming from your candidate
and his surrogates, and they were telling these lies in preparation for not accepting the results of the election
had he lost.
And you let your platform be used for that purpose by people who were willing to shatter
our politics and even risk provoking a civil war out of personal self-interest.
Every podcaster who interviewed Trump managed to make it seem like all the bad things that
have ever been said about him were the result of some left-wing, elite media conspiracy.
To interview Trump or his surrogates responsibly would have required that you put them on the
spot for any number of odious things he has said and done, and for things he said he intends
to do in his second term,
all of which are well documented and many of which should be totally disqualifying in a
presidential candidate. It's not enough to just turn on the microphones and have a conversation,
and it doesn't matter that it's three hours long. If all you're going to do is launder the man's
lies by ignoring them in the interests of maintaining good vibes.
There is a complacency and an amorality to the way you approach this that was actively harmful.
Well said.
Well, that's well said, Chris. That's well said. Yeah, I think that's a good illustration. You and
me, our bones of contention and disagreements with Sam are as well documented. Well documented. Well documented. But he's in a different
category from the sorts of people we're alluding to just previously. Likewise,
with Destiny, I don't condone Destiny's behavior. I don't endorse Destiny, but I
don't put him in the same opportunistic lickspittle category.
So, you know, I respect that.
I know that you've probably got another clip there of Sam saying something
that's going to make me rub my forehead.
Oh, no.
No. Well, yeah, I mean, there is no shortage of clips that you can do that
with Sam, but I I feel like in this case,
the important distinction is that he is not in that category of sycophantically praising,
you know, Musk and Trump now that they have believers of power. And that is a distinction
worth highlighting. But there's another category, Chris, and I think you've mentioned it before.
Um, you've been listening to the fifth column recently, and these are people
that aren't necessarily gagging to, um, perform lickspittle services, but they
do have a kind of ambivalent, both-siders.
They present themselves as being above the fray, you know, ironically
commenting on these things, but they probably don't equip themselves as being above the fray. Yeah, no, ironically commenting on these things,
but they probably don't equate themselves as well as Sam Harris in
relation to these kinds of political events.
Is that fair?
That is fair.
I did have some clips that speak to that in that set.
But so just before we go to there, I will play one more clip of sound, but it will make
you regret saying something nice, because I think this is a similar kind of sticking
the boot in where it's correctly deserved.
What is so frustrating about Trump supporters is that they refuse to acknowledge any of
this.
They simply refuse to acknowledge how pathological our situation is and how
pathological Trump himself has made it. Whatever story you have in your head about all the
good Trump might do in a second term, he's a disrupter. He's got all the tech bros in
there with him. He's just crazy enough to scare our enemies or he's just a bullshitter
and he won't do half of what he claims he'll do, so don't worry about it.
Whatever story you're telling yourself, here is what is true now.
We are returning a man to the Oval Office who, as a sitting president, would not commit
to a peaceful transfer of power and who tried to steal the 2020 election, all the while
claiming it was being stolen from him.
And he has lied about this ever since,
knowing that these lies stand as a continuous provocation to violence.
And there are court cases pending, seeking to hold him accountable for all of this,
cases which, now that he'll be in control of the Justice Justice Department will be dismissed. We're putting Trump back in power when we know
that he can't honestly discharge his oath of office because he has no respect
for the Constitution and half of our society is not only willing to run this
risk, they're positively jubilant about it. At a minimum, you should acknowledge that these events have seriously injured our politics,
again, whatever happens over the next four years.
Yeah, well said again.
Well said again.
Yeah, I think he's at his best at times like this, really, when what he's saying there
is quite—it should be obvious.
It is quite simple, and it is entirely true.
Yeah, it's a low bar.
It's a low bar, but he's willing to say it clearly and explicitly and forcefully. And
that is the odd situation that America finds itself at this point in time. Like I'm not
one of those people that thinks that everyone who's voted for Trump is totally irredeemable and totally evil or, you know,
are they recapitulating whiteness or is they trying to usher in a fascist dictatorship or
whatever. I think a lot of people are voting for much more prosaic and not necessarily very clever,
but not necessarily very dastardly reasons. But what it does exemplify is that there is at the very least a great deal of complacency
about the democratic process and
I don't know. I think
it is worrying and look, I think there will be a clown show over the next four years.
It seems unlikely that things will go well for the MAGA administration, that
they'll either do the things that they said they're going to do, in which case it's
going to be a car crash, or they are not going to do the things that they said they'll
do, but very much like Trump's wall that was only ever partially built.
And, you know, and Trump is just going to enjoy himself in his dotage,
have an enjoyable retirement, being the king of the world,
and nothing of substance will happen.
Either way, it's a great shame
for the United States of America
for that to happen for four years.
And Sam there is just calling it as it is.
Yes, correct.
I agree.
And like I say, there are a bunch of people doing that
currently, like who were critical beforehand
and are critical now.
But the self-styled, independent, non-aligned,
heterodox sphere, that willingness is rare.
That is actually less common than you would anticipate.
So we mentioned the fifth column and I have listened to a bunch of the fifth column stuff.
I find they're libertarian, frustrating, we'll be putting it mildly, but I kind of
like them for the reasons that you've highlighted, Matt, about, you know, the kind of cynical approach.
Weary journalists that are annoyed with other journalists.
That's something I can get on board with.
In the same way I like Private Eye in the UK, right?
Yeah.
I like the boozy, hard-bitten, you know, cynical approach.
It's a vibe that I endorse. And I listen to them semi-regularly for a
while as well, Chris, but I haven't listened to them recently, but you have.
Yeah. So the thing that undermines that, however, is the more that they are kind of unwilling to criticize certain groups because of their
interests or ideological alignment.
Hard to tell.
Like we covered Moynihan doing the very softball interview with Megyn Kelly.
And it just so happens that the Fifth Column guys appear on
Megyn Kelly's show regularly.
And, um,
Chris, Chris, this wouldn't be, this wouldn't be another case of people in the infosphere scratching each other's
back.
This wouldn't be going on with these guys.
Surely not.
That's not possible.
In a recent bonus episode or subscriber episode, they were talking about various issues, but
they're mostly drinking in the liberal tiers, the overreactions in the wake of the
Trump victory.
That's mostly what they're currently focused on.
With nods that, you know, they will criticize the new administration, you know, when it
becomes relevant, but they're not focused on that yet.
They're currently just enjoying the liberal meltdown.
But Moynihan was talking about the free press and it's, you know, your
campaign has the success of a runaway free trade. How do you do this with certain efforts?
So one of their listeners called in asking about how successful the free press has been.
And this is Moynihan's response to this point.
No, it just seems like they've kind of grown really, really fast.
Really fast. And I am privy to those numbers because despite the fact that I don't work there on staff,
I do, I have a contract.
So I can do other stuff for other people, but basically beyond the fifth column, I mean,
if I'm on camera and doing stuff like that, I do it for them, which is fine.
And it's a limited thing and we'll revisit it soon.
But yeah, the numbers are really good,
astonishingly good.
And what I'm really interested in is that if you look at the comments on the free press, it's like, you know, it tends to like seem a bit MAGA sometimes.
The commenters are very active there.
And then what you look at, much, much, much more,
much, much more. And then if you look at the people who actually subscribe and,
you know, when you have
this many subscribers you do surveys of this stuff. I mean it's the number one it's the number one
full stop website on on Substack. Number one. That's a lot. That's a lot of people. And so
there is obviously internal conversations about you know keeping the content fresh and making
sure we have like diverse points of view and not getting stuck in some kind of echo chamber, which, you know, people who criticize the free press, and I'm not here as a as an advocate of free press in any way.
But I just say this from my own personal experience is that there are people out there that have decided that Barry and the free press are the enemy. And like, oh, you know, this is such a free book. Like if you actually look at the content and you don't pick and choose,
there's like an incredible weird variety of stuff.
I mean, Douglas, for instance, writes a column on Sunday about poetry,
which is one of the most popular things on the website, which is totally wild.
He'll be like, write a thousand, two thousand words on a Wilfred Owen poem
from World War One. I mean, Douglas is a very
interesting guy who has a deep reservoir of knowledge
and a huge number of subjects,
but it does do exceptionally well. So Moynihan works for the free press,
but the review is at the contract soon, so it's not like he's unable to speak his mind, but
Gwen countering. And yes, the comments may look like they trend roller maga under everything that the free press posts.
And yes, the free press might have
had some softball interviews with almost everyone
that is now appearing on the Trump cabinet.
Not entirely.
Matt Gaetz wasn't there, but Vivek Ramaswamy and whatnot.
But there's a lot of diversity.
There's a wide range. There's
things that you wouldn't expect there. With a right leaning outlet with a bias, would
it host columns by Douglas Murray on World War I poetry? What else do you need to see
the wide array of ideological point of views that the free press regularly represents as a Douglas Murray column
about British history. Donald Trump. I raised $50 million for the Democrats. If you'd like to continue listening to this conversation,
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