Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2217: Dr. Jordan B. Peterson
Episode Date: November 30, 2023The goal and reason why he created the ARC (Alliance for Responsible Citizenship) conference. (1:41) The hierarchy of values. (14:12) Why narratives/stories are important to humans. (19:47) Ho...w biblical stories are at the core of the shared story we all see the world. (32:20) The basic flaw in diversity and multicultural theory. (39:25) The frightening trend of childlessness among women. (47:28) What drives his natural curiosity? (54:15) Which reality are we going to choose? (1:01:40) The importance of ‘play’ with our children. (1:04:20) The differences between the genders when it comes to poking and pranks. (1:17:14) Producing a virtual world that’s overlayed on the actual world. (1:20:57) Why Twitter is a snake pit. (1:25:30) Dealing with the pressure and stress of saying what he thinks. (1:29:29) The value of having a partner who has your back. (1:36:24) The difference between being a father and a grandfather. (1:39:05) The impact of the birth control pill. (1:44:30) The small/difficult window for women to find a partner. (1:52:19) Don’t let your children do anything that makes you dislike them. (2:00:28) Why he appreciates comedy. (2:06:53) Related Links/Products Mentioned CYBER MONDAY SPECIAL: ALL MAPS Fitness Products & Bundles 60% off! **Promo code CYBERMONDAY at checkout** (Code expires Sunday Dec. 3rd) Limited time offer exclusively for Mind Pump Listeners ONLY: 50% off the Stress, Mood & Metabolism At-Home Lab Test + Health Coaching Call – Reserve yours today here 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos Earth Now Has 8 Billion Humans. This Man Wishes There Were None. Jonathan Pageau encourages World Leaders to pursue the supreme Good The Genius Neuroscientist Who Might Hold the Key to True AI Maps of Meaning: The Architecture of Belief – Book by Jordan B. Peterson Frans de Waal: Moral behavior in animals | TED Talk The Wilder Shores of Marx: Journeys in a Vanishing World - Theodore Dalrymple Core Beliefs and Mindsets for Success with Dr. Jordan Peterson Mind Pump #872: Dr. Warren Farrell- The Boy Crisis What is a Woman? | The Daily Wire Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Featured Guest/People Mentioned Jordan Peterson (@jordan.b.peterson) Instagram Jordan B. Peterson (@JordanBPeterson) Twitter Jonathan Pageau (@jonathan.pageau) Instagram Jon Haidt (@jonhaidt) Twitter Dave Ramsey (@daveramsey) Instagram Warren Farrell, PhD (@drwarrenfarrell) Twitter Theo Von (@theovon) Instagram Joe Rogan (@joerogan) InstagramÂ
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All right, here comes Jordan Peterson and Mind Pump.
Jordan, thank you so much for coming on the show.
Hey, I'm happy to be here.
Warm air is so enough.
So we got, you invited us to the ARC event,
which is a massive honor.
And it was incredible.
We didn't know quite what to expect.
We knew that we had watched your video on why you had created it.
But listening to the talks, they were so impactful.
I would like for you to explain a little bit of why did you create this?
What's the goal and the reason behind the organization and what's the future goals of
doing this?
Well, the fundamental goal is to help people understand that we need to confront the
future with faith, encourage, and optimism, not because we're naive about problems, because that's
foolish, but because the way that you turn the future into the best place that it can be
is to face it with faith and courage optimistically.
And young people have been fed two pathological stories for about 60 years, and one is a hedonistic story, which is the
idea that it's really all about you, but in the narrowest sense of you, is that you should
be, you should define yourself, you should pursue your pleasure wherever it takes you.
The libertarian's tiltness direction a little bit.
It's one of the flaws of Anne Rand's philosophy that we all define ourselves and that society
emerges properly out of the harmonious balance of narrow self-interest.
The problem with that is that people confuse their narrow self-interest with hedonic desire.
And that's a big mistake.
You're not just your bloody whims.
And if you pursue your whims, first of all, you're immature because that's literally
the definition of immaturity is to pursue what you want right now and damn the consequences.
And then the other story that young people have been forced, I would say, to swallow, is that the future is going to be an apocalyptic nightmare.
And that's a consequence of the evil, power, mad pathology of human beings, and that the best we is you know limit ourselves in all directions and try not to
scar the surface of mother earth. It's like it's so pathological and what we would like to
suggest to people instead is that if human beings
sort their identity out properly which means to accept responsibility for themselves, and then in step
more and more people across a broader and broader time span that we can organize our society so that we can literally make the desert bloom. There's no
necessary intrinsic limit to abundance and opportunity, and it depends on how people organize themselves. So I was just
I'm writing a new book called
We Who Ressa With God, and I was writing a section
this week looking at something called
the Curse of Natural Resources.
So we have this idea in our culture
that's a materialist and an atheist idea
at, and even a Marxist idea at core
that there is such a thing as natural resources.
There's, so there's just the wealth of the earth
and it's laying around waiting to be picked up
and then the people who pick it up and and hoard it are the evil capitalists and know they're
oppressing everyone else and every bit of that's a lie. There's no relationship between the amount
of natural resources that a country has and its wealth. Like literally no relationship. In fact,
there might even be a slight negative relationship.
It's called the curse of natural resources in that if wealth is lying around in the form of fossil fuels,
for example, abundant fossil fuels, the countries tend to become extremely corrupt and greedy.
A small number of people do take the wealth as a consequence of the resources and there's no economic development and then there are other countries like Japan
Japan has no natural resources to speak of yet. It's extremely rich and the reason for that is that Japan is a very disciplined
conscientious
Economy and people the Japanese are that way and they can trade with each other without
Without complication as part of the reason the US is so rich,
like the default economic transaction in the United States
is honest.
If people are honest and they organize themselves responsibly,
there's absolutely nothing they can't do.
And so we're trying to put forward a notion of identity
that is technically, it's a subsidiary identity. It's predicated on the idea
that you're not in your head. You're not subjectively defined. You exist in relationship to other
people necessarily. Like, you have to take care of yourself and that's an integrative act
because you have to get your whims under control. You have to treat yourself responsibly and well
over the long run, not only in the moment.
And then if you're mature enough to do that,
maybe you can join with someone else,
wife or husband, optimally, for a long-term relationship,
and you can build something out of that.
And then that's part of your identity.
It's not subjective.
Like your relationship with your wife is not subjective.
Right, it's negotiated.
And then if you can manage that properly, well,
then maybe you can have a family and you can extend yourself out into your community.
And that gives you identity at multiple levels of what inclusion. That's a good way of
thinking about it. Something the lefties might be happy about. And as you get better and
better at that, you can bring more people together across longer and longer spans of time.
If you do that properly, then there's no limit to abundance.
Now, there's a biblical narrative that describes the subsidiary structure.
It emerges in the story of Exodus, and Moses is presented with the idea of subsidiary
structure as an alternative to tyranny and slavery.
You imagine that if it's just about you
and you're not responsible,
you're just pursuing your hedonistic whims,
you know, you're like a two-year-old.
And a room full of two-year-olds needs a ruler
and a state full of immature individuals needs a tyrant.
And so what happens if everyone becomes hedonic,
hedonistically oriented,
then you need a tyrant to control
them. And the alternative to that is to build a structure of governance at all these multiple levels
of social interaction, where every level takes responsibility for what's appropriate to it.
And then you don't need a government technically technically or that is the government that actually becomes the proper government.
If I, let me interrupt you for a second because I'm going to back you up here.
I years ago I watched Free to Choose.
This was a Milton Friedman documentary that done in the late 70s and he used the example
of Hong Kong.
Hong Kong was a third world country and very, very rapidly became extremely wealthy and they
have almost no resources.
All they have is a port, essentially.
Right.
And they freed up their markets and used allowed people to trade freely and became extremely
wealthy.
And then to back up your other point about our hedonistic whims, you know, I'm a huge
market supporter, but markets give us what we want.
And so if all we want is like in our space
when health and fitness,
if all we want are convenient, tasty,
hyper-palatable foods,
well that's what we're gonna get.
That's what we have.
So it's like you need a responsible society
who can make the right choices
when the choices are so free.
Otherwise, you just end up in a bad place.
Yeah, well, a consumer,
like a free market consumer society
can feed hedonistic whims, right?
And you'll end up eating nothing but sugar and carbohydrates, for example.
And you can understand why people would want to do that because the immediate gratification
is very high, but the medium to long-term consequences are negative.
And this is part of the problem with the strict libertarian philosophy.
And even as a branch,
let's say, of classical liberalism, is that it reduces people to what they want, but then
even more to what they want right now. And the thing is, you're not. You shouldn't be just
what you want right now. But you can just, all you have to think about this, like,
intelligently for a few seconds. You know. There's going to be times in your relationship, say, with your wife or your husband, where
you're going to be angry, maybe even enraged.
And rage wants defeat of the opponent and victory now.
And it wants it at all cost.
And if you give into that rage, then you're going to rampage around like a brute and you're going to do something stupid. And it's stupid because it'll compromise
you and your relationship in the medium to long term. Like you'll come out of your little
rage fit and you'll be embarrassed about how short term you were. And there's a neurological
component to this. So when you're very young, when you're an infant, say up to about the
age of two, your behavior is basically controlled by instinctual systems that govern motivation
and emotion. And so the basic motivations are thirst and hunger and temperature regulation
and aggression. And the basic motivations are pain and surprise and joy and anxiety, et cetera.
And those systems are more or less in place when you're first born.
And up till about the age of two, you're basically just rotating from domination by one of those
systems to another.
There's an exploratory system, too, by the way.
These are very, very deeply seated in the brain,
like extremely old from an evolutionary perspective.
And that's only about maybe 5% to 10% of your brain.
The rest of your brain is there to integrate
all those emotions and motivations
across longer and longer spans of time
so that more and more people are included.
And as we're socialized, what happens
is that control of our behavior
moves from these low-order motivational and emotional systems up into more evolutionarily recent
cornical areas. And that parallels maturation, but it also parallels a more inclusive view of
identity and operation over longer and longer time spans. So we all know this, right?
Because one of the things that you try to teach your children is, is to delay gratification.
Now that sounds like inhibition, like don't be impulsive.
But it isn't just inhibition.
It's just, it's not just that you're stopping your kids.
What you're doing is helping them develop a more sophisticated form of adaptation that makes the lower order
impulses unnecessary.
So for example, if you have a very aggressive kid and you socialize them properly, you don't
just inhibit their aggression.
What you do is you teach them how to play competitively, but fairly, right?
And then you get a real optimal kid that way because you'll get a kid who's got tremendous
drive for victory and who makes a great teammate, that way because you'll get a kid who's got tremendous drive for victory
And who makes a great teammate, but who will play by the rules and who will also foster the development of other kids and you know
Be that someone who could be a great team captain because he wants to win
But he wants to bring everyone along and build them at the same time and that's not just in a vision of aggression
Right, that's
Substitution of a better game for the aggressive game.
And so part of what we want to do at ARCH is to make all this clear to people is that
there's no difference between responsibility and maturation, let's say.
And there's no difference between responsibility and abundance and productivity.
And there's also no difference between responsibility and meaning.
And that's another one of our major emphasis is that arc is that
And this is something that young people are not taught properly is that and you guys know this I mean you're discipline people
The deep meaning in your life comes from adopting voluntary responsibility, right?
I mean that's how you build yourself. That's how you build a family and a community and a business. And that's, it doesn't gratify your whims, but it's better. And that parallels,
this is something Jonathan Pazzo talked about at Ark, and he's quite the genius. You know,
that there's a hierarchy of good. And what's at the pinnacle? Well, classically, that's defined as
God, the spirit that's at the pinnacle of the hierarchy of good.
But good is a progression towards more and more desirable modes of sophisticated being. It's not some arbitrary,
like, relativistic, everybody can have an opinion about it.
What do you call it? It's not arbitrary. It's not arbitrary. There's a morality that's built into the structure of human social existence, and we're trying to explain that to people and to get them to understand what it means.
He said something brilliant in that, and you've said this before in other words, where your value, your top value, will...
It will tyranny all the other values to bend and twist themselves to serve this other value.
Absolutely.
Now, he used a few examples, but one of the examples that I think of, you know, there was,
I can't remember the person who was on the cover of Time Magazine, but it was a gentleman
who was a climate activist.
And literally the quote was, Google executive.
It would be, I think it was, it was, it was, it was, it was, it was, it was, it was
Google executive.
And he said, it would be better off if there were no humans at all.
Yeah, right. And, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and at all. Yeah, right. And I mean, not what statement to do.
Yeah, that's for sure, man.
You gotta wear one.
Where's God, his tongue.
Oh, all right.
We should just kill everybody.
Yeah.
Well, the two things that surprised me about that is one,
had he said we should just kill this group of people.
No way he would have been on the cover,
but because he's killing everybody's,
it's a problem with the opportunity.
Yeah, that's right.
He was there.
But the second part was, you know, here we have somebody
that has made the climate his God.
Yeah, well, it's nature worship, essentially.
Right, and so of course killing people makes sense.
Everything makes sense if you worship it.
And it's sacrifice, well, it's the sacrifice of,
it's, this is one of the things that's so uncanny
about the natural world.
So in the Judeo-Christian tradition, part of
what happens among with the Israelites is that there's an idea of God that's not nature.
And so there's a prophet, Elijah, who really establishes this for the first time. Elijah
has a showdown between the prophets of Baal and Baal is a nature god and Yahwa, who's the Abrahamic God
and Abraham wins. But the, and its Elijah is the first person who posits that the God of Abraham
is the voice of conscience. Like it's a massive psychological transformation, you know, because
people, modern people, especially the more atheistic and materialist, irrationalist types,
they have a parody vision of God, and that's that God is an old man with a beard hiding in the clouds,
halfway between here and outer space. Their basic response is, well, we've been to the moon,
and we didn't pass through the heavenly domain, and so therefore there's no God. And you can understand that
objection to some degree, partly because people haven't been instructed properly about
what a more appropriate alternative view is. And one of the more appropriate views, and this is
a classic argument for the existence of God, is the voice of conscience. You know, you wake up at
three in the morning and you call yourself out
on some stupid thing you've done. Now, this is a real mystery because, look, maybe you
took advantage of someone for sexual purposes. There's, that happens to people all the
time. You know, maybe you got somebody drunk and took advantage over. And so in you wake
up at three in the morning and you're pretty disgusted with yourself, conscience comes
calling.
Well, it's a mystery, right?
Because you perform the act.
And so why are you holding yourself responsible now?
And what is it in you that's holding you responsible?
Especially because maybe you'd rather not be held responsible
because you just assume why can't you just reprogram yourself
so you could just do it again with no guilt,
with no shame, with no disgust, you know, without a second thought. But you can't. And it was Elijah who first
posited that the God of Abraham was the same as the voice of conscience. And so, and that's a very,
well, that's a very useful thing to know. And it helps people, zero modern people, zero in on,
what's at the top? Now, you might say, why would the voice of conscience be associated
with what's at the top of a hierarchy of value? And the answer is, when you transgress against what's
intrinsically good, the voice of what is intrinsically good will call you on it. And that happens
all the time. That's why you feel guilty. And there's what's interesting about that many things, but one of the things that's interesting
about that is that there's a kind of autonomy about it.
This is why God is represented in the biblical corpus as a spiritual force.
Is that this thing that calls you on your own behavior isn't under your control, and yet
it's something that seems to be somewhat internal, right?
Because like a sense of shame is something that happens to you, it's something internal,
but you can't control it. Okay, so what do you make of a spirit, so to speak, a being?
That's another way of thinking about it, that calls you on your misbehavior,
subjectively, that you can't control. We have to define it as something, and Elijah defined,
he said, oh, that's the same thing as the God of Abraham. It's the same thing that you can't control. We have to define it as something and Elijah defined. He said, oh, that's the same thing as the God of Abraham. It's the same thing that you make sacrifices to.
And what's the logic and not? Well, to sacrifice something is to give something up that you value.
It's the same as work because what you're doing when you work is you give up your time
for some future gain. It's like the definition of work. Okay. So you sacrifice.
And what do you sacrifice? Well, if you're smart, you sacrifice the lower to the higher, because
it would be a kind of stupid sacrifice to give up what's great and get what's lesser as
a consequence. So in principle, when you're making a sacrifice, the sacrifice is towards
something better. Then you might say, well, what's the ultimate sacrifice and what's the ultimate point of the sacrifice? And that would be the ultimate good. And it's
also the ultimate good that calls you out on your misbehavior. And as far as I can tell,
like I just don't see a way around that argument. Now you might say, well, that's not God. It's
like, well, have it your way, man. Like you, you come up with a better explanation. If
you're welcome to, you're welcome you come up with a better explanation. If you're welcome to, you're welcome to come up
with a better explanation.
Well, this makes me ask it.
So something we kept hearing at ARC was
that we need a better story, right, or a narrative.
Why are narratives and stories so important to humans?
Like, why do we need a narrative?
It's a great question.
Yeah, what is it?
Well, you know, the rationalists
and the, okay, so the empiricists believe that you learn, you're socialized, you gather
information, you're educated because of incoming sense data, right? Everything that you have
in your mind, in your psyche is a consequence of your sensory experience. Okay, well, there's
a big problem with that theory.
The theory's wrong.
The advanced cognitive neuroscience is no 100% that that theory's wrong.
And the reason for that is that, well,
there's an infinite number of facts.
There's one fact per object,
but then there's facts for any number of combinations of objects too.
And so, you drown in facts.
Now, you can, people experience this actually at times.
So one of the things that psychedelic experience does is what would you say?
It plunges you more into the world of pure fact and everything becomes
miraculous.
And there's way too much to pay attention to.
And the problem with that is you can't orient yourself. Like if you're paying attention to everything,
you're just gonna die.
You have to have a hierarchy of intentional prioritization.
So for example, you can notice this while we're talking,
we're looking at it, all we're doing
is looking at each other's eyes.
That's even though there's all this.
Right, and even if there's many things
we could be paying attention to.
The big gorilla back there. Yeah, yeah, that's right. There's there's all this. Right. And even if there's many things we could be paying attention to. The big gorilla back there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's right.
There's a big gorilla back there.
Yeah.
You wouldn't even notice it.
Well, that's right.
So with every move of your eyes, you're inhabiting a pyramid of attentional prioritization.
Something's at the pinnacle.
And the thing that's at the pinnacle is the thing that's dominating your attention.
Okay.
So that's at the pinnacle is the thing that's dominating your attention. Okay, so that's with every glance.
And this is another problem with the empirical view.
Like, the empiricists think we're just passive observers of the factual world, but we're
not passive.
Like when you're using your eyes, there's like four different kinds of eye movements that
are going on all the time when you're looking at something.
There's these little movements called saccades that move your eyes back and forth. If your eyes stop moving, even for an instant, you
instantly go blind, because the cells at the back of your retina will exhaust themselves.
So your eyes move so that the visual image moves across cells so they don't exhaust themselves.
But then you're also, you know, you can voluntarily move your eyes. There's eye fields in the
front of your brain that allow you to do that. And then if something unexpected occurs, you'll automatically move your eyes towards it.
And when you're seeing, imagine you closed your eyes and you hadn't seen this microphone,
you wanted to get a picture of it.
You could touch the microphone multiple times with your fingertips and you could build a
picture of the microphone in your imagination.
That's what blind people do. When you can feel your way around, or, um, you can even feel someone's face and get a picture of the microphone in your imagination. That's what blind people do.
When you can feel your way around,
or when you can even feel someone's face
and get a picture of it,
you're doing exactly the same thing with your eyes,
even though you don't know it,
is you're, it's like throwing a basketball at a statue
trying to get a picture of it.
You're hitting the world with your eyes constantly
and you're making choices about what to aim
your eyes out and to direct your attention.
You do that in a pyramidal structure that puts something at the top.
Now what we're doing here, why are we attending to each other's eyes?
Because we want to see what each person is looking at.
That'll help us determine if our attention is shared.
And if we're having a genuine conversation
like kids playing a game,
our attention is gonna be focused on the same thing.
Okay, what is our attention focused on in this situation?
Well, if we're having an honest conversation,
then what our attention is focused on
is the transformation of our psyches
as the conversation proceeds.
Right? And so each of us, in principle, is willing to give up our stupid ideas. And so far as they
can be modified by someone else. So it's a sacrificial offering. It's like I'm talking to you because
you know, I could be talking to you to dominate you or to look impressive or to do something narcissistic
or I could be listening to you to see if you know
something that will modify something I know which will like kill it and force it to regrow.
And so we're participating in this process of sacrifice and regeneration and our attention
is focused on that. Okay, what's the story? A story is a description of someone's hierarchy
of attention. So if you go to a movie, for example,
you see the hero that you'll watch the hero
and you'll see what he's attending to,
and that'll give you some insight into his hierarchy of values.
And then there'll be consequences
to implying out that hierarchy of values in the world,
and you'll evaluate the consequences.
And so, if he ends up in prison, for example,
or being beat to death, or ends up in
some state of abject misery, what you're going to conclude is that that's a hierarchy of
attentional prioritization that you don't want to emulate. And so, and even more broadly,
you could say that there's two patterns of attentional prioritization that are archetypal.
You see that played out in
the hero and the anti-hero. Now it's archetypal, that would be Canaan Abel, it's Christen Satan,
it's Batman and the Joker, it's Superman and Lex Luthor. The whole idea of a supervillain is a
variant of the idea of Satan. You see that permeating, for example, the Harry Potter stories,
because Voldemort obviously is a variant of Satan. I mean, he's a serpent
for Christ's sake. But how obvious does it have to be? And you could say that there's the
most beneficial possible hierarchy of attention. And then there's the most destructive possible
hierarchy of attention. And great stories dramatize the conflict between those two things and that's the conflict
between that's the eternal battle between good and evil fundamentally. And you know, if
you have any sense, you want to be on the right side of that. So in essence, where does
Klaus Schwab fit in the hole? Yeah, well, we're all trying to figure that out. Yeah. Yeah,
well, Schwab and the WF types, they're basically rational technocrats, right? And so there is a biblical theme
of rational, the rational technocrats build the Tower of Babel all the time. And so what they're
doing is building the Tower of Babel is the Ziggurat. And the Ziggurat is a pyramid. It's steppered.
Okay, and it's a very ancient form of architectural design. And in Babylon, that's Babylon. In Babylon, in ancient times, the kings
had competitions in the different city states that existed at that time to see who could build
the highest ziggurat. And the idea was, you know, the guy with the biggest ziggurat is closest
to God. Right. And so what happens in the Tower of Babel's story is that people are building these
ziggurats trying to replace God with technological accomplishment, right? Trying to put happens in the Tower of Babel's story is that people are building these cigarettes, trying to replace God with technological accomplishment, right?
Trying to put themselves in the place of God, and God gets irritated about that, and he makes
it unable for people to communicate.
And well, we're in that situation now, because, or I can give you an example of that, is that
because we're worshiping the wrong things, we're building the wrong towers, we can't even agree on what a man and a woman is anymore.
That's how fragmented our speech has become.
Is it safe to say then that stories and narratives essentially orient us to the world?
Exactly.
And help us.
It's exactly the thing.
We see the world.
You can't, you have to see the world through a story.
I was talking to this guy named Carl Friston while back and he's one of the, he's the world's
most cited neuroscientist at the moment.
He invented the technology that enables people to interpret MRIs.
And so Friston is like a majorly scientist and I asked him, is an object perception a
micro narrative?
It's a very specific question, it's an odd question, because you wouldn't think that that would necessarily be the case. And he said, he said something
like, like, necessarily and inevitably. And so, you know, and this is something that we
don't, this is another reason why the empiricists are wrong. It's like, when you see something
like this bottle, say, you're not seeing an object. You're seeing something of functional significance.
It's a tool.
It's not an object.
There's a difference between an object and a tool.
A tool can be used.
And essentially what you're doing when you look at the world
is you're looking for pathways, tools, and obstacles.
And the story that you inhabit is the pathway and it lays out the tools and the obstacles.
And there's no way out of that.
It's not like there's some basic level of perception underneath that that you overlay
tools and obstacles on.
Quite the contrary, it's primary.
So I can give you an example of that, too.
There's a form of brain damage that produces a behavior called utilization behavior
And so if you have prefrontal damage, that's very advanced part of your brain the prefrontal cortex
It's the part that's responsible for abstract thought if it's damaged
You can develop a condition called utilization behavior and if you're dealing with a patient who has utilization behavior
And you put a cup in front of them
They have to pick it up and drink it and they can't walk down a hallway with an open door
without turning through the door.
And it's because you see,
you literally see the world as a place
they're called affordances of offerings for action.
And the reason for that is we're navigators.
We're not people who lay a,
what would you call a film of meaning over a meaningless world.
That isn't how it works.
What we perceive is meaning.
Yes, we perceive meaning.
You know, the AI scientists that run into this problem when they initially thought,
or they initially thought that they could just have the cameras look at things and identify
chair, couch, and they kept running into problems because how do you teach this computer
that that's a chair and this is a table?
Yeah.
You know, because,
Or that a beanbag and a stump are both chairs.
Right.
Given that they don't look the same in any way.
Yeah, and this is exactly what they said.
Huge problem.
Oh yeah, they hit that in the 1960s.
About the same time,
it was about the same time that the postmodernists
figured out that we saw the world through a story.
And it was the same discovery.
And that's a very astute observation.
It took a long time to build machines that could operate in the world, not because action
itself was difficult, but because perception was so difficult, it's so difficult really
that it seems impossible.
It's virtually impossible to see for it.
This goes back to our debate about the robot
and not being able to decide for the robot.
So we have this ongoing debate and on the podcast
on whether we'll have robots in our house doing the dishes
or not, or we'll actually be traveling in space.
And I say that we're going to be traveling space first.
Commercial moon flight.
And the reason why I say that is because they cannot figure out
how to teach the a
I to know if the plate is cleaner dirty. Yeah, it can move a plate all day long
But to be able to decipher it before you get it being cleaner. Yeah, well, I see I have our chapter in my new book called
Postmodernism and dishwasher robots
Because because you think you know like an entry-level job is dishwasher right?
It's like yeah fine, that's easy.
Is it build a machine that can wash dishes?
Oh, great.
Because you think about what a dishwasher has to do.
It's like, not only do you have to get the dishes clean, whatever that means, you know,
when I worked as a dishwasher, I had some trouble to begin with because these, the cooks would
bring me these old pots, you know, these huge pots that they, and they were covered with like varnish essentially from being used
so often.
And I had no idea.
It's like they wanted me to clean it.
Well, how clean?
And that's actually an unbelievable clean enough, okay, clean enough for what?
Yeah.
Because that's where the story comes in, right?
Clean enough to make delicious food safely
with no risk of contamination for your clients, but not so clean that you spend all day
taking every bit of varnish off that pot
so that you can't clean any other pots, right?
And then at the same time,
while you're getting along with the cooks,
while you're getting along with the waitresses, right?
While you're trying not to be a pain in the neck,
while you're trying to have a bit of a sense of humor,
it's unbelievably complicated,
and it's because as a dishwasher,
you're nested in a very, very complex story,
and it's not something that's easy to substitute
with the whole-
I feel so valid.
Well, well, well, well, well, well, well, well,
I'm getting it back.
I wanna stay in this talking about the importance of stories,
because I had a question I wanted to ask,
and I wasn't sure if it was gonna come up in this conversation,
but this is perfect for it because one of my favorite talks
you did, you actually didn't sound all day,
and it was actually the Q&A portion at the end.
And you were asked a question about what you would do
differently with raising your kids.
And your answer actually was,
you would have took them to church.
Yeah.
And I thought that was, I don't think any of us thought that answer was coming.
And so I have a feeling that has to do with the story.
He tells it does.
Okay, so elaborate on that a little bit.
I taught this course at Harvard and at the University of Toronto called Maps of Meaning,
which is online and in various forms.
And some of it was an explanationication of some biblical stories. I
concentrated on Adam and Eve and
Cain and Abel and Exodus, mostly in
those courses. And that was fine when
I started teaching in the 1990s, let's
say, because everyone of my students
knew the stories. But by the time
2015 rolled around, there were lots of kids in the class who didn't know the biblical stories. But by the time 2015 rolled around,
there were lots of kids in the class
who didn't know the biblical stories,
and so it was very difficult to make reference to them.
And so whether we know it or not,
the biblical stories are at the core of the shared story
through which we all see the world.
And when you lose the basic stories,
you lose the reference points for the story as such.
Now, people are really starting to figure this out.
You know, I talk to at our conference.
I talk to Ian Hershey Ali and Ian escaped from a very fundamentalist form of Islam.
And her and her husband, Neil, were both very much attracted to the new atheist doctrines
and Douglas Murray's in exactly the same camp,
and they've come to understand that there's no secularizing morality. It has to be based on stories.
Carl Jung talked about stories, so imagine this is another way of thinking about the necessity of
stories, is that there are things you know that you can say, and then there are things that you don't
even know you don't know. And so then imagine there's a gap between the things you know that you can say. And then there are things that you don't even know you don't know.
And so then imagine there's a gap between the things you're just absolutely ignorant about.
They're far beyond your comprehension.
You don't even know that they exist.
And the things that you know well enough to talk about.
Well, there has to be a buffer between those.
You can't just move from the absolutely unknown to the completely spoken in one fell swoop.
The dream, the dream is on the edge of the unknown, right?
And because a dream, when you have a dream, you think, what the hell was that all about?
Which is a weird thing to think because you dreamt it up. It's like, I wouldn't need it.
No, that, well, it's so strange, isn't it? That, you know, Freud said,
while you're trying to disguise the meaning of the dream from yourself,
because it points to repressed content.
Sometimes that happens, but Jung's take on that was no, no, no.
The dream is where the mind meets the mystery of the world, and the dream is the first transformation
of what's absolutely mysterious into what's partially known.
So it's the first mapping.
And so, well, you can imagine this.
Imagine that you go on a date and you're pretty happy with the girl that you're with
and then you start to fantasize about her.
And what you're doing is building a model
of what she might be like, right?
And maybe it's a naive model
and it's wish fulfillment
because you build her into something that she's not
or maybe you saw something in her
that will blossom into love,
which is actually a representation of her true character.
But in any case, the fantasy actually a representation of her true character.
But in any case, the fantasy is the first foray of knowledge.
And that's the dream.
And well, a description of a dream is the story.
And so we have our propositional knowledge, the philosophy and the explicit knowledge we
have.
But that's nested inside a story.
It has to be.
And then the story is nested inside a story. It has to be. Then the story is
nested inside a dream, and the dream gets stranger and stranger at its edges until it fades out into
what we don't understand at all. Now part of what the biblical narrative is is the dream in which
our culture is embedded. And you might say, well, it's the dream true. It's like, well, it's a funny
question because the truth of a dream isn't the same as the
truth of an explicit philosophical argument. It's a different kind of knowledge. It's imaginative
knowledge. Like, look, I can give you an example of the complexity of this truth. So one of the,
there's an insistence in the Old Testament that the proper relationship between man and God is one of sacrifice.
Okay, because they take the sacrifice is just a constant theme, right? As soon as
as Adam and Evert kicked out of Paradise, they have to work and work as a form of sacrifice.
And the story of Cain and Abel is a story of two patterns of sacrifice. Like genuine sacrifice,
that's Abel and false sacrifice, that's Cain, and false sacrifice
is what you engage in when you're trying to get away with something.
Okay, so, but why is the relationship sacrificial?
Well, it's because that's how we establish our relationship to the future, right?
Is we don't just live in the present, we live now, and we live tomorrow, and we live
next week and next year, and five years years from now and we have to govern our
behavior in the present
Because of our knowledge of the future and that makes the way that we interact with the world
sacrificial we're always giving up the immediate now for
Something more comprehensive. Okay, so the biblical narrative is trying to take that apart
How do you best give something up?
And what's the ultimate target of the sacrifice?
That's really the question that's being asked.
And so the sacrifices get more and more extreme.
So, for example, Abraham is called upon to sacrifice his son.
And that's really something, right?
I think most people who have a child would rather die than have their child put to death, right? So the sacrifice of a son, it's the ultimate sacrifice. Now,
you might say, well, why do you have to make the ultimate sacrifice? Now, what happens
in the story is God calls on Abraham to sacrifice his son, and then he doesn't have to. And
so the moral there is that if you will not be deprived of anything you're willing to give up, right?
Right.
This is a very, it's a very strange, it's a very strange idea, right?
And then you can think about that very practically.
It's like, well, life is going to call on you.
It's going to call on you to go through some very difficult times.
And if you're going to adapt to those difficult times, you have to give up everything
that would stop you from adapting. And God only knows what that might be. There's a motif that
emerges as the biblical corpus develops that calls for a higher and higher form of sacrifice. And
so by the time you get to Christ, and so Christ's story is the ultimate sacrifice. That's a good way of thinking about it technically. The moral is, you have to confront everything, everything about life, everything about
malevolence, and you have to give up everything.
And if you're willing to do that, then everything is returned to you.
And I think that's, I actually think that's just right.
I think that's the case.
That's a great, that's also awesome.
It's absolutely.
Yeah, absolutely. Two things come to mind when you talk about the importance of stories, you know,
if we were to talk, for example, about, let's say, the environment.
Okay.
One story is that we're a cancer on this planet.
And we're just, we're destroying everything.
And so if that's your story, well, then you're hopeless.
And the answer is, well, by all means necessary, protecting environment, including allowing people
who are unfortunate to die away
because they can't afford these new energy sources,
or whatever, right?
So sacrifice everything for this.
The other story could be the environment's important,
most important thing though, in this story is people,
that's what we want to clean environment.
So let's innovate.
Let's have more people, whereas the other story might be like, don't have people, they're
cancer. Yeah. The other story might say, we need more people because that's who solves
these problems. Yeah, including environmental problems. That's right. Right. And then
the second part that reminded me, my grandfather came here a long time ago. He passed away,
but he came here as an immigrant and, you know, he loved this country so much. He was
a poor Sicilian and he came here and I remember him telling me he goes
You know it was different back then I said what do you mean he goes well when I came here
You had people from all these different countries and you know
Just we didn't speak the same language and there were I was a tie-in and you had Jewish people
He had Irish people he had German people and and he goes but we all had the same story
We all came here for the same
reason. I said, what do you mean? He goes, well, we all came here for opportunities. So we all
work together. The story seems to have changed to where you have lots of different people, but it's
not this, they don't share that same story. And so now we have all this conflict. Whereas,
well, that's what that's what you have when people don't share the same story. You have conflict,
and that's the basic flaw in diversity theory and multicultural theory.
It's like the world's multicultural,
and obviously there's tremendous benefits to that.
I mean, the fact that we have all these different cultures
means that we have repositories of wisdom and knowledge
that we can all draw on and share.
And anyone with any sense would think of that
as a wonderful opportunity, But the flip side is,
well, wherever there's multiculturalism, there's conflict between cultures,
and there's war.
And so the price you pay for a fragmented narrative is war.
And you might think, well, we can just import all those cultures into our own culture.
But how are you going to do that without importing the war?
It's like, is someone's going to wave a magic wand and only the
Positiv aspects of the diversity are going to remain and so the postmodernists
One of the core claims of postmodernism is that there's no uniting narrative
Okay, no uniting metin narrative and this it's a preposterous claim partly because
Every action you undertake is a consequence
of a uniting narrative.
So for example, if I reach to pick up this bottle,
I'm doing like 100,000 insanely complicated things
to move my hand voluntarily.
Like I don't even know what they are.
I can feel that I have voluntary control over my muscles,
but I can't control the cellular activity.
That's all happening automatically.
But this smooth movement to produce this outcome is that's a uniting narrative.
The uniting narrative is it's good to drink some water.
You know, and it's a relative of a lower narrative, but it's still a uniting narrative.
Otherwise my behavior would just be completely incoherent. And the narratives, we have narratives that unite our perceptions and our actions
at every level all the way up to the top. That's what happens in a society that is functioning
well. And the American dream was the uniting narrative. And it was something like the it was something like the search for abundance and opportunity
in one nation under God. Yes, with something like that and
the modern
insistence is that's all power and oppression and that we don't need a uniting narrative
It's like well fine then we have conflict and that's just not
The criticism is that that uniting narrative was nothing but a manifestation
of power.
And that's just not, just not right.
It's so naive to think that way.
Anybody who's ever been on a successful sport team or ran a successful business, imagine
doing that without a narrative, without having a common goal that we're all moving towards.
Yeah, or imagine doing that on the basis of power.
You know, it's like you're going to be the team captain and you're what are you gonna do?
You're gonna beat everybody up
when they don't perform properly.
I mean, you can pound people into shape.
It's a stupid way of leading.
Totally.
And it's gonna produce all sorts of counterproductive.
And you're gonna lose.
You're not gonna win.
That's right.
And you're gonna get taken out.
You know, friends to wall,
a great primatologist.
He's been studying chimpanzees forever. You know, and we have this notion, a great primatologist. He's been studying chimpanzees
forever. You know, and we have this notion that it's the roughest, toughest, power mad
chimp that rules the damn roost. And DeWal is showing that that's not the case for chimps,
even for chimps because the broods, they can dominate for a while. But as soon as they
have an off day, two or three of the board, absolutely, and take them out right in the most brutal
possible way.
That's generally how dictatorial tyrants end.
They're tearing apart, like Mussolini was torn apart, or they end up like Hitler in a
burning bunker put a gun to his head.
Power, the leftists, and this came out of postmodernism to some degree, the leftists insist
that the narrative that has united
us in the past at every social level is one of power.
And that's, it's unbelievably cynical, that viewpoint.
It's not true.
It justifies the use of power, which I think is its fundamental motivation, like if it's
nothing but power, man.
And I've got some power.
Of course I can use it because there's no other narrative.
And it's just naive
to think so. It's like everybody's just after power, you know. Yeah. It's like, really,
that's your theory of the world, is it? Everybody's after, and why would you even want it? Yeah.
And so the idea with arc was get all these people together who have some sort of influence
to help shift and change the narrative. Because the one we currently have, definitely,
I was gonna say seems, but I think it's pretty clear
is producing despair, anxiety, hopelessness.
Hopelessness.
You know, cynicism.
During the time when we have more,
I mean, abundance than we've ever had.
I mean, for all intents and purposes,
almost doesn't make sense.
Well, this is the thing that Pazzo put his finger on at the art conference. He said, you know,
along with the material abundance that we've produced, we have an abundance of despair. You know,
and Jonathan Height has really documented this as the topic for his next book. I think his data
now suggests that the median liberal female is more likely than not to be diagnosed with a mental
illness.
Right.
And he thinks most of those women in particular, because he's been focusing mostly on women,
they're, most of them won't be married, most of them won't have children.
And you might say, well, that's fine if they don't want to have children.
It's like, it's not so simple.
So this is what the data show right now.
This is brutal, it's brutal.
50% of women who are 30 don't have a child.
Okay.
Half of them will never have a child.
Half, so that's 25% of women.
90% of them will regret it.
So imagine now, now we have 90% of 25%.
So let's say that's 20%.
20% of women are gonna end up voluntarily childless.
In, sorry, involuntarily childless.
Well, think about the trajectory of their life.
You know, it's fine to be single when you're maybe,
when you're, say, between 20 and 35 and you're young
and you're fit and you're beautiful and you're attractive
and you have the possibility of multiple relationships, say, maybe with the proper relationship
as the goal, but that's not so fun by the time you're 45.
And it's downright dreadful by the time you're 60 and the typical woman now who's 60 can
expect to live to 90.
It's like, what the hell are you going to do with those 30 years?
No family, no long-term
relationship? Well, this is what we're talking about. This is what we're talking about stories.
Let's talk about the narrative around being parents, you know, growing up in this culture,
like fathers were always presented as bumbling idiots or, or, oh my gosh, I married life is over.
And the guy who wasn't married, he's got the fast cars, all the girls. That's the way you should go.
He has Andrew Tate.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Every single man has Andrew Tate.
Oh, okay, that's probably the scariest part about him.
Because there's a lot of things that we've talked
about Andrew before.
And there's a lot of things that he says that I agree with.
But it's dangerous that that's the guy
that all these young men are looking to do.
Yeah, well, it's not much different
than rap culture in the 90s.
I don't, you know what I mean?
Look, if you're, if you're
demoralized and dependent and neurotic and afraid, and you see a tough guy who basically says,
you know, up yours to the world, I'm going to get what I want. You can see that as a developmental
progression, right? And maybe that's something like the attraction of the shadow, those,
those boys that are so dependent, they're nowhere near aggressive enough.
And then Tate comes along and like he's genuinely,
he's a tough guy, he's a real fighter.
So you've got to give the devil his due.
You know, but he's putting forward a vision of maturity
that's quite short-term and hedonistic.
And I think that's best exemplified by the fact
that he got tangled up with, you know,
the whole only fans
Yeah, how he made his money is
Like there's no excuse for that. There's zero excuse for that
Yeah, and that's that's and maybe he has enough sense to regret it, but you know I doubt it because
You don't do that sort of thing to begin with unless you've strayed pretty far into the dark side of the world.
Well, this is evidence of the narrative going wrong where it used to be a source of pride
for a man, you know, two men meet each other.
How many children do you have?
Six kids.
Wow.
Well, that's amazing.
You could support.
And it turned into how many kids you have?
Six kids.
Oh, man.
Sorry about that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And for women, the narrative completely changed to where it was
oppressive and burdensome and they lost a freedom. Yeah, and that narrative is what's causing this? It's it's only got to ask yourself too like
Okay, freedom what what do you mean by that freedom?
For what yeah, okay, let's say it's freedom for sequential short-term sexual affairs. Okay, so
That doesn't work for women. There's no evidence at all that that works for women.
Like, it works for a higher proportion of men,
but it works for virtually no women.
And so the situation that women find themselves in
is that that form of sexual misbehavior
just dooms them to a kind of shame. And I think the reason for that is
sex is costly for women and for obvious reasons, Jesus, you don't have to be a genius to figure out why that is.
And so,
what is this freedom? It's this heat. It's not freedom. It's
it's the elevation of the hedonistic whim to the highest place in in that pinnacle.
It's like, well, I can sleep with whoever I want whenever I want. It's like elevation of the hedonistic whim to the highest place in the pinnacle.
It's like, well, I can sleep with whoever I want whenever I want.
It's like, well, here's another frightening thing about that.
So, there's two broad mating strategies, reproductive strategies you might say among human
beings.
And they echo broader strategies that are part and parcel of the animal kingdom.
There's like the long-term investment strategy, and there's the short-term sexual strategy. And so mosquitoes famously are on the short-term end of the
reproductive spectrum. So their bet is, well, we'll lay a million eggs and we won't pay
any attention to them in like 999,999. But one will live and that's good enough because
it keeps us, you know, in this video.
Right, it's a numbers game.
Absolutely, it's a numbers game.
And the other, other reproductive strategy is high investment.
And human beings are the highest investment animals by a huge margin.
Right.
I mean, like raccoons, I think they take care of their young for like three years.
And there's a fair number of animals who have a lengthy dependency period, but in humans, it's like 18 years. Yeah, we can take care of their young for like three years and there's a fair number of animals who have a
Lengthy dependency period, but in humans it's like 18 years. Yeah, we can take care of ourselves for a long time
Yeah, right till you're 40
Right and even after that it's still communal and familial, right? And so okay, so
Human beings tilt to the long-term investment side of things and the better people do that better. Okay, so now why do I know that? Well, imagine that you look among people who are pursuing
partners for, who are pursuing partners, partly for sex.
You could imagine there's two strategies.
There are people who are looking for a sexual partner
within the context of a long-term intimate relationship
and then there are people just want to sleep around.
Right? They want as many partners as they can in the shortest possible period of time.
And that's the player mentality. Okay, then you say, well, what personality characteristics predict short-term mating preference?
Well, we know it's dark tetrad features. So the people who prefer
One night stands preferentially are this is fun. Narcissistic
psychopathic
Machiavellian so they're manipulative and
To cap it all off
Sadistic well so that so that's not to
To have the opportunity to become someone like that, that's not freedom, right?
That's elevation of the lowest possible desire to the highest possible place.
It's a myth of freedom.
And what we do with health, people sometimes will say,
I just want to be able to eat whatever I want.
I want to be able to not exercise.
It's too much structure.
That's not much structure.
That's not enough freedom.
To which I say, you know, it's chaos.
Not freedom.
Well, the fact that if you're state fit and healthy,
you have more freedom.
I can run out of stairs.
I can play with my kids.
I don't lose mobility.
I don't get so sick that I need all these medications.
So it's really a myth.
It's not a trade.
You know, I, we position it as like a,
oh, you sacrifice all this freedom for it. In reality, it's your far more free. Yeah, right. By doing it the right way. Well, that's not a trade. We position it as like, oh, you sacrifice all this freedom.
And reality is, you're far more free.
Yeah, right.
By doing it the right way.
Well, that's the thing about, that's the thing about,
like what would you call it, a genuine discipline.
Like you can think of discipline as you shouldn't do that.
But that isn't what discipline is.
Discipline is the integration into a higher form of freedom
That's that's much better way of thinking about it's like yeah
You're a lot freer if when you're 50 you basically have the physique of someone who's 30
Right, and if if you if the price you pay for that is that you have to give up gluttony
Which is exactly what I want to eat whatever I want to eat whenever I want to eat it
That's that's not freedom. That means you're completely subordinate to your hunger, right? That's not freedom. Unless you think
you're your hunger, which is a pretty dismal way of thinking.
They're heavy chains. Heavy chains that carry around.
Absolutely.
Yeah. When I, you know, I've been wanting to ask you this question. Every time I watch
you talk, your, in my opinion, my strong opinion, you're incredibly just brilliant and intelligent in terms of human
behavior and what drives us, and I know from my space some of the best coaches and trainers
are good because we struggled internally with a lot of these things ourselves.
And that just drove us to learn more and more.
So I can't help but wonder, are you so hungry for understanding humans
because you've had internal struggles? Is this what drove you and what continues to drive
you to learn as much as you do and just to dive into these subjects?
Well, I think some of it's just natural curiosity. I'm curious about everything, but I also
had a very specific target that emerged for me back when I was in my early 20s. I was bit earlier than that, even probably first when I was about 13 or 12 when I first
became aware of what happened in Nazi Germany.
I was very interested in concentration camps and how a very specific interest, which was
how could you be a garden of concentration. Or how could you enjoy being a garden concentration camp?
Which is an even darker question.
And that's, you know, that's, that sort of thing fascinates virtually everyone.
Because you see all these movies we have about serial killers and about psychopaths,
about, you know, people who are extremely criminal.
There's a real fascination with evil.
But I couldn't find a more pure manifestation of evil than concentration camp
guard at Auschwitz, who's happy with his job.
And so then that brings up two questions.
It's like, well, is that person just a monster, like the Nazi monster of a relatively simple
minded movie who's completely unlike you, or is that someone who's like you?
And the evidence, unfortunately,
suggests quite strongly that many of the people
who committed brutal atrocities in Nazi Germany
were, they're absolutely indistinguishable
from the typical person.
Was that terrifying to realize?
Like, oh my gosh, this is potential.
We all have this potential.
Oh, it's abs, there isn't anything more, look,
there's two
things you can confront that terrify you. Really. Like there's the domain of mortality, right?
Illness and death and physical and psychological degeneration. I mean, that's pretty damn terrifying.
But what's more terrifying than that, I think, is malevolence. Like, and to confront that, there
isn't anything more terrifying than that. You see, so in the Christian story, for example,
like, so Christ's story is the story of ultimate confrontation with existence.
That's a good way of thinking about it.
And so Christ's death is the worst possible death, right?
Because it's the most painful death, and it's a consequence of betrayal and of tyranny.
And it's in front of the people he loves and he's young and he's innocent and not only
innocent but good.
So it's the worst form of brutal death.
And so he confronts that voluntarily.
But that's not all because part of the mythological tradition is that once Christ is crucified,
he descends to hell itself.
And so you might ask, well, what does that mean?
And what it means is that if you're going to hell itself. And so you might ask, well, what does that mean? And what
it means is that if you're going to confront life fully, you have to confront the reality of
unjust suffering. That would be the realm of unjust death. And you have to confront the reality
of malevolence. And then as you yourself, well, that's the thing is first of all, first of all,
you sort of confront evil as an external reality, right? It's the bad guys, it's the Nazis, it's the communists.
It's who ever is convenient for you not to like, let's say.
But as you look into that more and more deeply,
what happens is that it pulls inside of you.
It starts to become something that's personal and psychological,
spiritual, and not something that's external.
That's why Sosha Nitsyn said that the line between good and evil runs down the heart of every single
person. And so one of the things, for example, I learned about totalitarian states. You
see, we have this idea that a totalitarian state is like a bunch of freedom-loving people
oppressed by, like, Hitler or Stalin. And that's just not, it's not the case at all.
There's nothing about that model that's true.
In a totalitarian state, every person lies about absolutely everything to themselves all the time
and to everyone they love. And it's the grip of the lie that's the totalitarian state. I'll give you an
example. So I was just reading this book by a guy named Theodore Dale Rimple, and it's called The
Wider Shores of Marxism.
I think that's the name of the book.
And he went to North Korea and went to Pyongyang, which is the capital, which is sort of a
showcase capital.
And there's a department store there that's many stores high.
And it's full of the best consumer goods that North Korea can produce.
And believe me, those aren't very good.
But even the communists have to show,
despite the fact that they're contemptuous of modern capitalism,
they have to show that they're perfectly capable
of producing the workers' paradise.
So there's this big store.
There's hundreds or thousands of North Koreans in it,
and they're acting out buying.
And so what Del Rimple did, he's brilliant SES,
he followed some of them around to see what exactly they were up to because you can't pull
your the wool over his eyes.
He's a smart guy.
And he saw that a bunch of them would just go up an escalator around a block inside
the department store down the escalator and then back up.
And they were doing that like 10 hours a day.
That was their job.
And nothing in the department store was for sale.
It was all for show.
So, and then he did something really funny, which was, he decided to buy something, which
no one ever does, including the foreigners.
So he went and bought a pen, and he picked up the box of the pen and said it was encased
in really cheap cardboard and the ink that on the cover or the box had bled through everywhere
because the cardboard was so cheap.
And you know, in the modern West, I don't know, you guys, you buy things from Amazon.
The packaging is just a bloody miracle.
It looks like he's just being sent something from heaven.
The packaging is so perfect.
Anyway, he took the pen out and the rubber was too hard to erase the pen and the ink was
dry and like the little metal clip on it snapped off right away.
It's like, so the reason I'm telling you this is because in a totalitarian state,
absolutely everything is a lie. The pen is a lie. It's not a pen. It's a
simulacrum of a pen that you use to produce some theater to deceive dim-witted
Westerners into presuming that North Korea is the communist paradise. And people can't even buy the non-existent pen.
They have to act out the fact that they're shopping, even though they're not, and they don't
have any money.
And even if they did have money, nothing they bought would work.
It's just lies, lies.
Like far Hollywood.
Yeah.
Well, you said something a while ago that blew me away years ago.
I heard you say, you think that if you went back in time in Nazi Germany,
that you would be Schindler.
The odds already would have.
You would be a Nazi.
And I, that, that, that, that, that, right.
Completely blew my mind because as a kid,
you say, all those evil I would have been,
and then you think about it, you really think about it go.
Most people that have gone right along.
Well, look what happened during COVID.
I mean, I really saw this in Toronto.
My conclusion in Toronto was that 70% of Canadians would have worn a mask for the rest of their life
happily with not with no complaint. And 30% of them would have been thrilled to do that because it
gave them an opportunity to inform on their neighbors. Brutal. So, you know, with the importance of
narratives and stories, and we now have, I mean, when the printing press
was invented, that was just incredible.
Like the first time the average person now had access
to stories, there were no gatekeepers,
or at least there were less gatekeepers than there were before.
Now we have the internet, now we have all this media.
I mean, we started our podcast, nobody got in our way.
We didn't even need sponsors, we just put it on air.
So the potential for both good and bad are almost endless.
How do you feel about the, do you feel?
Well, I think that's a good way of putting it.
I think what distinguishes the time we're in
is that the battle between good and evil
has been going on forever.
But slowly, well, it's not slow now. It's really fast.
And it's going to get faster and faster. It's not going to look like it's just a fast
look. You'll see what you can see it unfolding right in front of us. I mean, what part of it'll be
a rate of technological change so rapid that we won't even know what's happening. Like how closely
have you been able to follow the advances in AI? No, oh, yeah.
You just can't, right?
First of all, there was chat GPT.
And then like the next week, there were 10 ridiculously
sophisticated new artificial intelligence technologies
that no one had ever dreamed of.
You can't even keep track of them.
And so we are in a situation where I think we
can see the starkness of the choice before us more clearly that at that at any other time in history
We could enter into a period of
Unbelievable abundance and opportunity or we could make a hell so complete that everything we've done so far would just look like
Practice and I think I
Part of the reason I'm touring around and doing these sorts of podcasts and so forth is to and this is part of the purpose of arc
It's like well, which of those two yeah, realities are we going to choose and the answer is well, what are you gonna choose?
Because that's the answer. It's like no, it's not up to close Schwab in the WEF buddy
It's up to you and that's a terrifying proposition, but I think it's true
And you you can just think about that practically too.
Like you guys, you just started this podcast, how long ago?
9.6, 7.9 years ago.
And so you didn't have any institutional backing,
you just decided to do it.
You get 10 million downloads a month.
Okay, so you have this immense influence.
It's like, yeah, that's right.
That's what you have.
And that's the case for everyone.
And people think, I don't have any influence.
Like, you're hiding your bushel under a light.
You have a lot more bloody influence than you think.
In fact, you have more than you want.
That's what's so terrifying.
It's that the things you do, man, they echo.
So there's definitely a strong sense of urgency.
The scariest part of all this for me.
And it reminds me of the talk you did at Dave Ramsey.
Yeah.
So Dave Ramsey was one of the favorite things
I ever heard you talk about.
When you talked about the importance of what's
going on with our children between the ages of like two
and five and with play and that role that it has.
And we're finally seeing a generation,
the iPhone generation grow up into be...
To drive deprived of play.
And that's, it scares the shit out of me
because I have, I have a four year old right now
and I have friends that have kids my same age
and I see how easily they adopt these behaviors
of allowing the iPad to babysit their child.
And having for a bit is another parent, you say anything.
So it's like you don't wanna step in and say,
you shouldn't be doing that,
because that's like the worst thing you could ever do
to another parent, right?
And so, but I'm watching this unfold,
and I really think that a lot of the stuff
that we're talking about that we're fearful of
is starting with these kids
and what this content they're consuming
and completely social integrated.
And what they're not doing socially,
like talk about that,
because that talk I think is one of the most important talks
I've ever heard you do.
Well, kids learn between the ages of two and four,
they learn to integrate beyond the confines
of their own psyche, right?
So a two-year-old basically is still self-obsessed,
and they can't play with other kids. Now, what
does it mean to play with someone else? It means that you negotiate a shared space of
attention. That's what it means. So if a boy wants to play house with a girl, then he
has to propose the game. Do you want to play house? Do you want to play tag?
Like, there'll be some offerings on the table.
And the first rule is the other person has to want to play.
And that's a good rule for social conduct in general.
You know, the narrative in our culture is that it's power
that dominates everything.
But the alternative to that, as far as I can tell,
is something like voluntary agreement. Yeah.
Right? Okay. So if the boy has a bit of sophistication, he'll make some offerings to the girl about
different games and she'll pick one or vice versa because the girl can make the offering
too. But the crucial issues, they both have to want to play. Okay. So now they've decided
they've shrunk their world. We're going to play house. Okay. The next thing to do is to
assign something like a role. So you can see that they're acting on a story, right? The story is long term committed
relationship, something like that. That's what it means to play house, establishing a household.
And so then they have to accept a role, could be mother, could be father, maybe they
reverse the roles for the sake of the game, but they both have to agree on that. And then
they're concentrating on the same
thing, and that brings them into emotional alignment. Because if you and I are pursuing
the same goal, our emotions go into sync. Because our positive emotions say we're progressing
towards the goal, and our negative emotions say obstacles are in the way. And so if we
have the same goal, we can now understand each other because our emotions align. That's
how it works.
So the kids construct a shared space and then they play and to play is to experiment.
Well, what if I act like this?
Maybe I've seen my dad raise this voice or I've seen my dad tease and then their kids will
act that out and see what happens to watch how the girl reacts.
They want the girl to continue
the game. But more than that, they want the girl to continue the game across multiple games.
That's what happens when you have a friend. And so that's like a friend is a meta game because
a friend is someone you play multiple games with. And the basic rule of a friendship is don't
mock up the friendship, right? And you do certainly not to win any particular game.
You can see kids will hurt each other's feelings
if one of them cheats to win an immediate game.
And the cost of that is, well, it can be the friendship.
Well, that's a stupid sacrifice.
You're gonna win one game and forego the opportunity
to play 100 games.
That's a stupid, obviously, that's counterproductive.
Well, between the age of two and four,
kids learn to play more and more sophisticated games
and to bring more and more kids into the game.
And that just expands out into being socialized.
And the kids who don't manage that by four,
they never manage it, they're alienated.
Is that because of the plasticity of the brain and
no it's because the other kids ratchet up ahead of them. Oh, so so what kids will do
When two kids meet each other in a playground they'll sort of engage in small talk like adults do
This is what you do at a party you engage in small talk. Why? Well, you want to see if the person you're talking to can play a
Primitive game at your level, right?
Well, at some level, at least, you say, well, how are you doing?
Well, if that stumps the person, you think, well, really, okay, there's something.
If they're awkward and they can't manage that, you think, okay, you're not very
sophisticated.
And maybe you might interact with them a bit, but you'll go find someone else to play
with, right?
And so, or maybe you introduce yourself,
and you see if the person can say their name in shake hands.
Guy had clients who couldn't do that.
They'd been so not attended to.
They had no friends, no friends.
Never say, well, how do you introduce yourself?
Well, you know, they put their head down,
they mumble their name, and they put their handouts
like shaking a dead fish.
And like, so what, the first thing we would do
is just practice the introduction.
It's like, no, stand up, watch the other person, match their tempo, grab their hand, but not too hard,
but not like a dead fish, say your name loud enough so they can hear it. And like we practiced that,
some of the people I was with, we practiced that like 50 times till they got expert at it. But
you imagine if you're 30, you haven't had any friends your whole bloody
life and you don't even know how to introduce yourself like how are you going to
get out of that. Jordan we yeah we we have had an opportunity to meet a lot of
people that are Instagram or YouTube famous that have millions of followers they
have all this personality on the YouTube channel and then you meet them in
person. It's that and they can't look us in we meet them. We're excited
Those person looks like they got great person now and they get in a room like this
Right, and they do exactly what you said don't make eye contact. Don't even really interchange the completely different
Right, so they were completely socialized for social media. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Well the other thing that happens
This is what fathers can do for kids too, is a lot of that's embodied knowledge.
So, one of the things that young mammals really like, especially males, but females as well, is rough and tumble play.
And that's embodied play, right? And so, and it's something you get better at if you work out too, because it integrates you, but embodied play isn't just a matter of abstract knowledge, right?
It's so, for example, when I meet people after my lectures, I meet and greet, I meet about
150 people.
And I did something of a study about how to make people comfortable when I first meet
them because you guys would know this from being coaches.
You know, when someone first comes to for help, they're on edge.
They don't like admitting they need help or want it.
They're embarrassed to be there. They're skeptical and they're looking for an excuse to run the
hell away. So you have to make them comfortable as fast as you possibly can. And one of the things
you can do is when I've learned this, I've really watched this because I've met like, I don't know,
150,000 people in the last six years, like a lot of people.
Everybody who walks up to you will have a different tempo,
right?
And so one of the things you do when you're reaching out
to shake their hands is you match their tempo.
And then you mirror it.
Yeah, and then they know, they know right away
that you're integrated enough not to be obsessing
about yourself when you're meeting them and that gives them
some confidence in you.
And that might not have been a conscious thought.
It's not conscious.
It's all demonstrated in the gesture, right?
So you reach out and then they'll grip your hand in a particular way and some people very
firmly and then you return that.
Some people less so and generally then you use a more firm handshake, but you
know, you watch the person and you do what you can to make them put them at ease. And
that's embodied. And part of the way that we develop that ability is by engaging in
rough and tumble play when we're little. And fathers play a huge role in that because
they, when you're playing with a kid in rough and tumble play,
you're stretching them out,
you're pushing them to the limits of their pain.
Yeah.
They're trying to, like,
because the place where wrestling is fun,
is right on the edge of disaster.
Yes.
It's gotta be intense.
Oh, I was born.
You gotta find that fine line.
You find that fine line,
and that's where you play.
You play on that fine line, and every game is like that. You play on the fine line. You find that fine line. And that's where you play. You play on that fine line. And every game is like that. You play on the fine line. What kids want when
they're checking each other out. And this is what you do to cocktail party too, is you
find someone you start with small talk and you ratchet yourself up. You engage in more
and more sophisticated interaction. If you find someone that you can play with, then
you'll talk to them, you know. The conversation gets interesting right away.
And so, and you're playing, you're playing to push yourself further along the pathway
of development.
That's the right kind of game.
Very important, especially, I mean, both with your boys and girls, but even with your
girls, it teaches them what safe touch is from a man and what unsafe and you have the
way they end up. How to defend themselves?
Girls with brothers are much less likely to be raped,
not because they have brothers,
but because they've learned from a very right exactly.
Well, they've, look, I had clients in my practice
who were always getting into sexual trouble.
Girls, always.
Like you couldn't put them anywhere
without something untoward happening to them.
And I watched to see and the reason for that is they didn't
know how to say no.
And like sophisticated girls say no so subtly that it goes
unnoticed.
It's just that nothing happens.
Right.
So that's unnoticed.
Whereas these are giving an example.
I had one client who,
she was very low on some,
and a reasonably attractive girl, but very, very troubled,
and a delivery man came to her door.
It's the plot of 3,000 pornography and movie straights,
like pizza delivery guy shows up,
the hot girl's gone for you.
Right, exactly, exactly.
So that sort of fantasy is lurking in the back delivery guy shows up to hot girls. That's something for you. Yeah, right exactly. Exactly.
So that sort of fantasy is lurking in the back of the minds of like delivery men all the
time.
And she invited this guy in, which is like, that's a mistake right away because, you know,
I'm not ragging on delivery men.
It's an important job.
And now he comes to the door and this girl's being real friendly to him and invite some
in and like, things didn't go well.
Put it that way.
Well, why? Well, maybe she shouldn't have even opened the bloody door.
Like she should have known how to say no,
but she had no idea, she had no idea how to act out.
No, and she'd been hyper sheltered, right?
So.
And they learn that from older brothers, from their fathers.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, from their boy,
from their brothers, friends, from playing,
from playing with boys.
So I think at the beginning of time,
I mean, I think that we've always had parents
that probably missed this a little bit, right?
That maybe the dad was so busy at work
and the mom was busy doing her thing.
And so the kids, but at least, you know,
say 25 plus years ago,
the kids would have to probably,
with their imagination,
create things with rocks and toys
and figured out, where now we're replacing that.
So I feel like it's not the contrary.
It's the replacement.
Yeah.
So I feel like it's far more because that's had to happen, right?
There had to be a kid who didn't get the right play 25 years ago too.
But more than likely that kid didn't get an iPad or some of that.
It was probably probably.
Well, they were also, they were also much more likely to have siblings to play with.
And also much more likely to have opportunities to play with other kids without the screens.
Like when I had my kids, it wasn't uncommon.
I had the, Tammy and I were the youngest parents with the oldest kids among the group that
I associated with at Harvard.
And we weren't that young. We were like 30. You know, that's not that young to start a family.
But we would bring our kids over to the houses of other people with kids. And the first thing they would do is put on a movie.
It's like, no, throw the kids in the basement and leave them alone because they'll, after they're, let them figure it out.
That's right. There has to be some deprivation
so that they can start using their imagination and play.
And what they're doing is producing social microcosms, right?
It's and learning how to get along with other people,
they don't know, learning how to play together.
And I see a lot of the pathology
that we see on university campuses, looks to me,
like all this identity confusion.
It looks to me like delayed fantasy play.
Wow.
You know, well, the cause, play and all that sort of thing that's become a person.
Yeah, yeah, it's delayed play.
Timber, can't you?
You know, talk a little bit about, so I'll tell you a story first to kind of illustrate
where I'm going here, but years ago I had a friend of mine who opened some restaurants
and he was giving me a tour around them.
And so he's taking me around and he's introducing me to everybody.
And this is John, this is Mike, this is whatever.
And he goes, and this is, this is nine.
And then he's going through that and said, nine, that's kind of an interesting name.
So I go back and I looked at the guy and I said, he's not look German.
I think that's a German.
I said, are you German?
And he goes, no, so your name is nine.
And so then my buddy goes, Hey, nine, show him why we call you nine.
He lifted his hands and he was missing a finger.
Okay. So that's his nickname. Yeah. And, and, show him why we call you nine. He lifted his hands and he was missing a finger. Okay.
So that's his nickname.
Yeah.
And I heard you talk about this with men.
Like the friendships that men have,
like the way we tease each other,
is such a different level with what girls tend to do.
We tend to be very mean.
We tend to check each other,
but there's something important there.
And I've heard you talk about this before.
I think you told the story of somebody showing up
to a construction job with a paper bag, you know, paper lunch. His nickname became, I don't remember,
it was paper lunch. Lunch pocket. Yeah, well, you had a lunch. He didn't have a paper bag. That's
what he was supposed to have. He had nicely packed lunch that his mother had made for him. Which is
fine. You have to accept that. Yeah, and then you have to accept the joke. And he didn't accept the
joke and things didn't go well for him.
Yeah, well, what men do quickly,
and especially working men groups,
especially if it's a high stress environment,
is they check the other people out
to see if they have any capacity for play
and for emotional resilience.
It's like a poke you.
And why?
Well, I want to see what happens if you're stressed a bit.
Well, why?
Well, because we might encounter a stressful situation,
and I want to see if like,
are you gonna be there or not?
Can you handle it?
Can you handle it?
Exactly, exactly.
And if that's done well, it's rough, but it's fun.
And if it's not done well, then it just goes sideways
and no time flat.
And the way to make it go sideways
is for someone to come up and make a joke
at your expense that's a bit rough
and then to get all peved about it.
And then you're just screwed because someone else will say you like irritate
Irritate the onlookers and they'll think oh, yeah, is that right? How about this?
There's a there's a bit of a gender difference that right because
Like if you look at like
Pranks that boys will do versus I told my daughter my daughter. She's 14 and
She just got this boyfriend and and you, they were gonna do these pranks
I said don't get in a prank war with a boy because they go to the 15th level, you know
So it what's the different is is there a difference between the genders when it comes to what we just talked about the nicknames and the
Poking or is that the same?
There's not a lot of difference before puberty, okay, but there's a substantial difference after that
You know and we probably understand more about how boys play than about how girls play really difference before puberty. Okay. But there's a substantial difference after that.
You know, and we probably understand more about how boys play
than about how girls play.
Really?
You know, well, yes, girls are more,
they're more covert in their interactions.
They're certainly more covert in their aggression.
Boys aggression tends to be pretty obvious
and it tends to be physical
or the kind of rough joking that we're describing.
Women, Women are brutal
in terms of the aggressive tactics they use. They're much more likely to use reputation
savaging and exclusion. Yeah, definitely, definitely. And one of the advantages to being a
boy is that you can just have a fight and that's the end of it, you know, and that happens
fairly regularly among boys and among teenagers as well.
It gets less and less frequent as men get older and older.
But, girls don't have that advantage.
There's often no limit to the amount of psychological torment they can employ with
one another.
Part of what's happening in the modern world, too, is that that feminine pattern of aggression,
which is reputation, savaging, and exclusion, and denigration, marbing, that scales brilliantly on social media.
I was just going to ask.
Yeah, yeah.
Where's the other kindness?
Well, you can't punch someone on Twitter, even though you're desperately making.
So what are the consequences of not having that?
Justin always jokes around.
He makes us joke that we need to bring bullies back.
And he makes a joke about it.
He says not enough people who
the most popular campaign but yeah.
Well the Simpsons did a great job of that because Nelson months he was a very complicated bully and
he was definitely an agent of social order.
Oh yeah.
When we're in quite a few.
Correct. That's right. He was a corrective.
That's right and disagreeable men are correctives.
You know they set limits
They set limits on a kind of what kind of stupidity do they kind of a blind
Dependent they set a real limit on dependent stupidity right because the more aggressive guys
You can remember this from high school have nothing but contempt for for boys who are dependent
Right, it's like, grow up.
Yeah, the problem is going.
You know, you have to go run to the teacher, do you?
Right.
And that's a perfectly reasonable objection.
Yeah.
You know, can you settle this yourself or do you have to run to the teacher?
Well, if you run to the teacher, you're a mama's boy, which is exactly right, because
you can't handle your own disputes.
And so, you know, that rough bullying behavior can go too far and frequently does, and the more bully-like boys don't do that well as they mature.
It becomes less and less productive as a strategy as they get older and older. feel like the not the action is much but the threat of potential physical action is a check.
You need, I mean I remember once being in the car of my girlfriend, somebody cut me off,
when she decided to flip the guy off and I remember thinking, if you get set of the car,
I'm the one that's going get you to design it out here. I had to have the explanation with her. It's like, I don't flip someone off,
unless I'm okay with what might potentially happen.
Right, right, absolutely.
And social media is eliminated that way.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, and I think we don't know exactly
what keeps the psychopathic bullies at bay,
but one of the things that keeps them at bay
is definitely like tough men who will give them a slap.
And so out in the real world where that's a real thing, that keeps them at bay is definitely like tough men who will give them a slap.
And so out in the real world where that's a real thing, the psychopathic narcissistic
cowards tend to shut the hell up.
Online, zero constraint.
And I think this is a real problem because we're producing a virtual world that's overlaid
on the actual world.
But the rules in the virtual world aren't the same. And that means the virtual world is's overlaid on the actual world, but the rules in the virtual world aren't
the same, and that means the virtual world is delusional. And because if you have a representation
of the world in your imagination that doesn't correspond to the actual world, then you're delusional.
Okay, one of the delusions that saturated the social media, the virtual space, is that you can get away with being a dependent narcissistic psychopath.
And the problem with that is that historically, when those people have got the upper hand,
everything collapses, because they're like they're the burn it all to the ground,
sorts of resentful creatures.
It's not good that they have free reign on on social media.
It's really not good. And the virtual world
seems to enable, I think virtual world's enable psychopaths. And that's not good.
I feel like the best check for that in the social media world is just open debate and discussion.
You gotta let them at least get checked by ideas, but we've seen that get censored so often. Yeah.
Shut down.
Yeah, well, and shut down by the same sort of people who scream and yell and have temper tantrums
and claim to be compassionate while they're being nothing but narcissistic and who can't
tolerate.
You shouldn't offend anyone.
It's like, well, no one vote anything ever.
Do you have any worries about like what you're trying to do with getting silenced along the way like okay
Well, maybe YouTube doesn't want us to say this and maybe the do you think about that like YouTube has mostly left me alone they censored
Talk I did with Helen Joyce on the transgender phenomenon and also one with Robert F. Kennedy which was shocking to me because he's in the midst of a presidential election
That's right. I believe YouTube would shut down a discussion with a presidential contender.
And that that's not a scandal.
I got kicked off Twitter by Joel Roth
and his team of absolute bloody narcissistic psychopaths.
And so that was annoying.
And there's been no shortage of journalists
who attempted to savage my reputation,
most of them female, but not always, and with some success, but no long-term success,
luckily for me.
And that's partly because I didn't apologize.
What's the prediction?
What do you think is going to happen with Elon and Twitter?
Do you think this is going to be a great rival or are you going to see?
Do you think something's going to happen?
What do you think is going to unfold with Twitter? Well you're going to see do you think something's going to happen? What do you think is an unfold with Twitter?
Well, Twitter is such a snake pet.
It isn't obvious to me that it's salvageable.
Now Elon is an extraordinarily intelligent and able person.
I think he's made Twitter better than it was, but Twitter might be an unplayable game.
Right?
We don't know.
You set up a, it's a new social, it's a new form of social organization.
It has weird, untested rules, like everybody gets to talk to everybody no matter what.
Well, look, part of the reason that you have a house is so that it has walls and it has
a door.
And the reason you have a door is so that any lunatic on the street can't come in and yell at you
And Twitter is a place where any lunatic can come in off the street and not only yell at you
But yell simultaneously at you to everyone you know
Well, it's not obvious at all that that's a playable game
It might just partly because it enables such an interesting
thought. Yeah. It enables people who have no social power to have social power. Now, generally,
there's a reason you don't have social power. Like if no one's listening to you, if no one at all
is listening to you when you're 30, you're either very, very unlucky and that does happen to people. Or there's a reason no one's listening to you.
And then you can go on Twitter and a million people can listen to you.
And it's probably the case that a million people shouldn't be listening to those people
that couldn't get anyone to listen to them.
Right.
It's not good.
It's a, you know, we thought we'd democratize the public square.
It's like, well, have we democratized the public square or have we turned it over to the mob? And I
would say we've turned it over to the mob. That's a really interesting thought. Yeah, and
that's something we never thought of it like that. Yeah, how do we figure that out? It's,
uh, it's never existed in human history. No, well, it doesn't just cannibalize. We don't
have a block. It could easily, there are, there have been online games where that happened,
right?
Huge multiplayer games that just collapsed because they're, you could say because their
constitutional framework wasn't sufficient or you could say because the story they were
inhabiting wasn't self-sustaining.
And so they just, they just turn into chaos.
And there's no reason to assume that Twitter won't do that or Facebook won't do that.
Like we have no idea.
And Twitter is also weird because of the way it started.
Had that 140 character limit.
Right.
Okay, so what would humans be like if they could only speak in 140 character bursts and
they had no social hierarchy?
Because that's what the experiment is.
And well, what happens is, well, I think what happens is it
enables the psychopaths.
That's what happens.
And you don't want a platform, and anonymity does that too.
Yeah.
And I've been culminating against anonymity online for quite a
long time, because I think you should have the courage of
your convictions.
I think that the worst in people is brought out
by anonymity.
You know, and the anonymous people say,
well, I can't say what I really think
because I'd have to suffer the repercussions.
It's like, yeah, maybe you're morally obligated
to suffer the repercussions of what you say.
Maybe that's part of being a citizen,
is that you have to take,
I know that people
can pay a disproportionate price for their opinion, but I would say, if you utter an opinion
that you believe to be valid and true, and you pay a disproportionate price for it, then
that's evidence that your culture has become corrupted in a way that you should do something
about. Well, you shouldn't be able to just hide and get around that somehow.
You have to face it.
Yeah.
See, someone listening right now, you're the perfect person to say this because you have
suffered tremendous pressure and consequences for voicing what you believe to be, what
I largely agree with, to be true.
How have you dealt with that?
Because I can't imagine the stress
that you've had, since day one,
like you went from professor to all over the place
and although you've had a tremendous amount of support,
I've been to your events and it's all extremely positive.
I've never seen single negative person.
No, no, no, well, most of the negativity is online.
Like almost all of it.
It's just ignore it.
It's like our experience. No, no, no, You meet people in person and you get the people that change their
life. Right. Right. What's that? How much of it is artificial, do you think?
I think that's a good question. I think virtually all of it is artificial. I think that the people
who are opposed me, so to speak, actively are a tiny tiny tiny minority like maybe maybe one in a hundred something like that and they're disproportionately
overrepresented online and the reason I think that is because I just don't ever have any trouble in the actual world like
right sometimes and I have security people and there's a reason for that, but it's very, very rare.
And so, and in terms of paying a price, well, when things first blew up around me in relationship
to the first political act I took, I suppose, which was opposing the, the, the,
Bill C-16, right, that made it mandatory to use someone's preferred pronouns, right?
Compel speech.
Compel speech, yes.
That wasn't pleasant because certainly my university job was immediately threatened and had
I not maneuvered extremely carefully, I would have been fired.
You could have lost everything. Well, I would have lost fired. You could have lost everything.
Well, I would have lost that,
and my clinical practice was threatened.
And at the time too, when all that happened,
the Canadian revenue agency was also on my back
for a mistake they had made.
Yeah, so I had the goddamn government,
IRS equivalent in Canada on my back.
In a quite a major way, they eventually apologized
and realized it was a mistake they'd made.
It's like, thanks guys
That was six months of bloody hell right when I needed it the least and my university job was under siege and
my reputation was on the line and my clinical practice was
Threatened well permanently threatened. I mean, I had to close up my clinical practice and I'd stop being a professor
Fundamentally and so yeah, that was a lot, no doubt about it.
But look, man, maybe there is no way
I was gonna continue to be a professor
and not say what I thought.
Like why would you wanna be a professor
and not say what you, the only reason to be a professor
is because you can teach people
what you believe to be true. It's a fool's game
otherwise. Like if you're smart, you can make a lot more money than you can being a professor. Like
if it's just a matter of, you know, career success. And while it was the same with being a therapist,
is the only thing you have to offer your clients as a therapist is the truth. And so once that's
compromised, the game's over fundamentally. And you might
as well just admit it. Now, I was fortunate. I had three sources of income and two of them were
threatened. The third wasn't, you know, and you might say, well, that puts you in a unique position.
But I would say about that is no, no, I put myself in that position. You know, I'm like, I had dealt
with people who'd been in trouble a lot
in my clinical practice, and I saw what you do to make sure that you're standing on firm
ground. And one of the things you do is make sure that you're standing on firm ground.
You know, so when the university came after me, I could think, I knew this from doing negotiations,
helping my clients through tricky negotiations. Like the first thing you do, if you're negotiating in a difficult situation,
is you make sure that the person that opposes you can't take anything away from you
that you wouldn't give up.
Because they'll threaten you, I'll take away this.
It's like, fuck you.
Yeah, yeah.
Here it is.
Well, then what do they do?
You know, if you're willing to give it up, the power that the other party has over you immediately
disappears.
And you might say in favor of what, and the answer is, well, in favor of whatever happens
next, the upside is that it's been crazily interesting.
And I would say this is something I've been trying to teach people to is that why tell
the truth?
Well, it's a really good long-term strategy. It's the only good long-term strategy,
but the other advantage is the more you tell the truth,
the more crazy and interesting things will happen to you.
Oh, wow. That's dangerous.
It is, it is.
And it's partly because you have to give things up.
Like, if you're talking to someone
and you want to impress them,
then there's all sorts of places you won't go
and things you won't say because you don't want to sacrifice that, right?
But and then maybe you'll impress them to get whatever the hell it is that you want, but then that's what you get it if you're fortunate and it works.
The problem with that is well, maybe that's not the best thing you could have got.
Maybe the best thing you could have got was whatever would have happened if you would have just said what you thought.
And that's that's a very interesting game to play. It's like, oh, I'll just tell you what I think.
And we'll see what happens. I love it when it's way more interesting. I love it.
Way more interesting. I love it when you say, and what the hell do you know? I've heard you say that so many times.
And I remind myself it's true. I don't know. Yeah.
Whatever that's the, that's the basis of a genuine humility. It's like, don't be thinking that you got this.
Maybe you do, like possibly,
and maybe better than you did yesterday,
but a better theory is, let's see what happens.
And this is also an article of faith,
but one article of faith is that you should abide by the truth.
And then the question is, well, why?
If you can get what you want by lying,
so you can get out of a responsibility or you can gain something you didn't earn, why
not do it? It's a question every child faces. Well, the right answer to that is, well,
what the hell do you know about what you want? It's like, maybe you will get what you want,
but then you're staking yourself on the claim that you knew what would be best for you
The alternative is to say no
And I do believe this to be right
Whatever happens to you if you tell the truth is the best thing that could have happened. Doesn't matter how it looks
That's that that's an article of faith
It's like because maybe you tell the truth to your wife and it's really rough, right?
You have a big fight, maybe you're Christ,
you're not getting along for two months
and the whole bloody relationship is shaking,
you think, well, I was a big mistake.
It's like, but then maybe a year later, you think,
yeah, that was the best thing that could have possibly happened.
Because things play out over different timescales, you know?
And the truth is a long-term game.
It's not a short-term game.
Speaking of wives, your wife has got to be incredible support
for what you do.
What was that like when you were going through that
and you were going home and you're like,
hey, I said this and now I'm getting all this heat.
What's that like at home for you?
My family's been like rock solid.
And I've had some trouble with some of the people I know,
but my close friends and my extended family,
they've been like a hundred percent behind me right from the beginning. Well, those videos that I first launched against Bill, say, 16,
I'd been putting videos online on YouTube, my lectures and so on, starting to experiment with it. This was back.
I started about 2013 when YouTube was just, you know, a new thing and no one knew what the hell it was.
And I'd been talking to, I had more and more clients in my clinical practice who were there
because they were being bullied by social justice warriors.
At one point, it was like 25% of my clinical practice thought something weird is going
on here.
And then the university, well, the Bill C-16 came out at the same time the university was
imposing these idiot DEI restrictions and and trying to educate
clinicians and psychologists about
psychological realities and everybody was just swallowing it
It was like really starting to great on me and I came downstairs my wife and my son were sitting at the kitchen table
And I said I've been really thinking about making a video about this new bill and about what's happening at the university
What do you think and they, I think my wife said, go ahead, you've been talking about it long enough.
She said, I'm sure she said, what could happen?
What could happen?
What's the worst?
Yeah.
But my wife is very adventurous, you know, and which is part of the reason I was attracted
to her to begin with is like, she's, she's in for an adventure that woman.
And, you know, when some absolutely absurd an adventure that woman and you know when some
absolutely absurd offer comes our way you know like we were invited to Israel
now like to go in the next month to go visit various cultural groups and so
forth in Israel and you know her attitude was yes now I don't think I'm going to do it because I have to
finish a book I'm writing at the moment but when an adventure presents itself to my wife who's a
very sensible person her attitude is almost invariably yes the only thing that ever interferes with
that I would say is that the adventures take her away from her grandkids and and her kids and
you know that that and that's something that has to be managed, right?
Because we don't want to never see her kids or grandkids,
but she's behind me and vice versa.
You know, like we've got each other's backs
and we always did when we had kids too.
We have a very solid relationship.
And it's a playful relationship too. What's the difference between
Being a father and being a grandfather because now you have grandkids. What's that? What's the difference?
My mom when I had my kids my mom said, you know, I loved my kids, but I love my grandkids
More almost she's like it's almost like I get to redo this again, and I feel so much more wise
And it's just so much more wise and it's just so much
more joyful and you know, I give them back on the hard times.
Yeah, there's always that joke. Right, right, right. What's the difference been like for
you, you know, being a grandfather versus a father? Well, one of the things that, well, Tammy,
and I were very sick when our grandkids were little. And so that was rough because we didn't
get to know them as much as we could have. But, but, but, but, it is, it is like a chance to revisit the best of having kids again.
And so that's, and it's very fun to watch your kids turn into parents too, you know.
That's gonna be great.
Well, it's good to see them mature because it is the case that children mature people.
It's very hard to become mature without having a child.
And I think the reason for that is you're not mature until someone else matters more than you,
like unquestioningly. And maybe you've got that with your wife and there might be some other
special people in your life that are more important than you are, but for sure that happens with
your kids. If it doesn't, you're a narcissist, obviously. And so it's very good to see, it's good to see my kids put that cap on their maturity
and to see my son turn into a very competent father
and my daughter too, they've done very good job
with their kids.
And then, like I love being around little kids,
I'm really good at playing with them.
And so it's fun having my grandkids around
because I can torture them and torment them
when they're ploughing them around and tease them. And I've always, my dad was very good with little kids and I think I learned
what my mother was as well, but it was my dad's kind of a rough guy. He's a tough guy,
but he has a real soft spot for little kids and he was really good with little kids.
And so I learned to be comfortable with little kids very early on and I really like having them around and so it's great
And when I had my own little kids like I would rather spend time with my family
This is another thing about being tied down. It's like whenever I had a choice
By the time I was like 30 when when we first had our kids if it if I had a choice between going to a social event or going hanging out with my kids
It's like there's no question. Yeah, They're fun. Why the hell wouldn't it? Well, if you're smart enough not to let them be annoying,
you know, well, really, it's like if you're annoyed by your kids, then stop them. It's not good
for them for you to be annoyed with them. They need you. And this is, you see this sort of tension
off between mothers and fathers, because fathers
are more likely to set limits and boundaries, and that intimidates women, especially if
they don't trust men.
And the price of that is if your children aren't well regulated in their behavior, they're
annoying.
And if they're annoying, then you sort of, you're sort of with them grudgingly.
And then they pick that up.
It's awful.
It's awful. It's way better just to just like quit that. You know, go sit on the steps till you're
civilized, come back and play. You know, and that's way better. And it's not that hard. You have to
put up with some momentary emotional disruption, but it's usually a relief to the kids too. You know,
they'd, kids push you because they want to see where the boundary is, and they want to see where
the boundary is, so they're not terrified. Right? Because they don't want to see where the boundary is and they want to see where the boundary is so they're not terrified.
Right?
Because they don't want to have the whole world in front of them now.
They want to have this much space that they can master.
And so you put a limit on and they're like, okay, got it.
Play inside those walls.
Yeah.
That's great.
How often do you and your, I guess, your kids and grandkids, how often do you guys get
together? Oh, let's see. How often are you, you and your, I guess, your kids and grandkids, how often do you guys get together?
Oh, let's see. How often are we getting together now? Well, I'm here. I'm visiting Michaela now and we'll be here for about two months. So I'll get to see my granddaughter, her daughter for much of that time. We already had a very good time this morning.
I was throwing her up in the air in the pool, as high as I can throw her, which she really likes.
And she's my favorite meme that was at the arc.
Was the, who put that?
Oh yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We're all seeing this.
We're all acting.
Yeah, he'd be a good guy for you guys to interview.
We have.
Yeah.
It's a funny story.
He was on the same plane.
We were talking about the event and he hears us and he turns around.
And he goes, oh, you're going darned?
We're like, Warren?
Yeah.
He was on our show years ago.
And we were talking about how,
by the, he has such an important message,
but he's soft-spoken.
I wish he had a little more authority and more.
Well, he's a good guy to deliver the message though,
because he has impeccable, leftist progressive.
He comes from the background of that.
Yeah, he does, he does.
And so he's a very good person to be talking about, what he's talking about, because it's
hard for the progressive types to shunt him off into a corner as, you know, like a right-wing
fascist.
Right.
He's led the film, right?
Yeah.
Warren Farrell is not a right-wing fascist.
So, and he's very, and he's an impressive person, too, because he wouldn't have got involved
with the national
organization of women if his temperament didn't tilt him into the sort of progressive camp.
But he looked at the data, you know, and that's what put him on the pathway that he's on
now.
He looked at the facts in a manner that was truly scientific and decided that no, there
was something going on that was wrong.
And so he's a very effective advocate for men and boys, and that's extremely important.
You guys were saying earlier, as the decades have progressed, especially on television,
we went from father to nose best in my three sons, where the father was like the...
And leave it to be, where the father was the admirable head of the household to, you know, the absolutely bumbling stupidity of virtually every man on an ad or in a sitcom.
And, you know, it's fine to satirize and to poke fun, but in a manner that's contemptuous,
that starts to become pathological.
And a lot of that shift was shift in the direction of contempt.
And you don't want to be contemptuous of men who are striving to do their best logical and a lot of that shift was shift in the direction of contempt.
And you don't want to be contemptuous of men who are striving to do their best by the
family.
That's stupid.
That's a terrible thing.
That's a terrible thing.
Yeah, terrible thing.
It's a terrible thing.
Do you think this is the result of just, I guess, terrible narratives?
Or do you think there's something a little bit more, I don't know, how you would put it.
Do you think there's someone's driving this?
Well, we need to get this.
We can't underestimate the impact of the birth control pill.
Because the birth control pill,
the best way to think of the birth control pill
is that it's equivalent to a species altering genetic mutation.
It's a major transformation because for the first time
in history women had voluntary control
over the reproductive function.
And that's just not something that any
females had ever managed in the history of life. Like it's a big deal. And so, you know,
the daily wire put out that
documentary, what is a woman? Think, well, why are we asking that? How preposterous? But
the reason we're asking that is because
once the birth control pill exists,
the question of what is a woman actually becomes the question. It's like because now a woman before
the birth control pill and a woman after, they're not the same creature. And so now the question is,
well, what is this new creature? And one answer is, well, they're just the same as men.
You know, they can have sex the same way men can. They can pursue careers the same way men can. All the temperamental differences between men and women can vanish
because they're just socialized, they're just constructs, they're not real. Women are just
men for all intents and purposes. Well, that's, it's possible that that was true, but it
isn't true because women differ from men in all sorts of ways. They're more interested
in people and less interested in things.
They differ in temperament. They're more agreeable.
And they're higher negative emotion. They're physically smaller.
There's all sorts of patterns of perception and inclination that
make women differ from men.
But we don't understand them very well.
For example, we don't understand, it's like,
well, if a woman is free to choose, what will she choose?
Does she choose family? Does she choose career?
Well, it's only been three generations
since the birth control pill hit the streets.
It's not surprising we're still sorting this out.
Women don't exactly know because they never needed to know. Life just unfolded and now it's a matter of voluntary
choice. And here's a question like, now that you can decide to have children or not,
do you decide to have children or do you just not do it? And if you have children, well,
how many? And when? Well, that answer to that question is, no one knows.
Now, and so we're stumbling along trying to figure it out. Now, my sense is, my observation
is being, and I think I just watched. I've worked in female-dominated professions my whole life.
And so, and by the time I entered the workforce, women were overrepresented in my field of endeavor,
so there was no male domination of psychology, like that's just never been a thing.
And so I've watched women, and my observation has been, it's a rare woman who doesn't have relationship
and family at the center of her attentional focus by the time she's 30.
And in an increasingly insistent manner.
And that, it doesn't matter how stellar their career.
And I can give you a good example of this.
So I saw this in academia.
But the place I saw it most clearly, I spent 10 years working as a consultant to law firms
in Toronto.
So our deal was, we went out to the big law firms
and Canada, Toronto has Bay Street,
which is the Canadian equivalent of Wall Street,
and it's where the biggest law firms in Canada sit.
And Canada has a big financial economy,
financial services economy.
And so the lawyers in Toronto compete at the same level
as some of the lawyers in New York and Chicago, let's say. So it's a high end enterprise. Now
great lawyers are rare because to be a great lawyer you have to be a master of the details, but you have to be able to go out and sell. So those are called those rain makers and that's what how they're known in the high-end firms.
And if you have a rain maker, you want to keep them because they make you a fortune.
They go out and drum up business.
Plus, they can do the legal work.
Most lawyers can do the legal work.
A small subset of them who can do the legal work can sell.
And those are like, those people are like hyper-valuable.
And so if a law firm has someone like that, they do everything they can to keep them.
Okay, and so half of them are women.
Well, so what happens, well, what happens is that
the big law firms lose all their women
around between 28 and 32, all of them.
Because the women decide, so if you're at the top of your game
as a lawyer, you're gonna be working
like working 60 hours a week.
Anybody at the top end of their profession,
they're not working 40 hours,
they're working like 60 or 80 hours,
and they're working too.
It isn't like I'm at work.
It's like every, I had a woman who,
one of my clients, she was a consultant for Deloitte.
She bought a microwave so she could shave 15 seconds off the time it took her to heat up her coffee in the morning
Like that's how that's how attentive she was to the details of her schedule
She had three kids and a husband and she was managing that plus this incredibly intense career
All the women bailed out between 28 and 32 and the reason for that was
They kept climbing the corporate hierarchy till they got to be full partners at these big firms and then they were working like these 60 to 80 hour weeks and they were looking
around thinking, why am I doing this?
Now men will do it partly because status for men and socioeconomic status, it's a huge
part of the game.
There's nothing that makes a man more attractive to women than productive generosity like socioeconomic status
It is the biggest predictor of male attractiveness by a huge margin
It's correlated at zero with female attractiveness like men don't care and women care about almost nothing else
That's not that cut and dried, but it's close
So men have this additional
Motivational driver to be hyper competitive, but the's close. So men have this additional motivational driver to be hyper
competitive, but the women, they hit 30 and they think, why in the world am I working 80
hours a week? They're often married to men who make plenty of money, so the money doesn't
matter, not really. And so they all quit and they go find a nine to five job or even a
part-time job. And then they want to pursue family and children.
And why wouldn't they?
Because like who said that career is the defining goal of your life, a corporate career.
And it's so weird that it's the bloody progressives that push this.
It's like, okay guys, I thought you thought capitalism was like a power mad oppressive
endeavor. And you're pushing this.
Yeah, it's like, but, but women should do nothing but have a career.
Really, that's your theory.
Like I don't get, I don't understand that at all, but I also don't think that that,
it doesn't work out for women.
It, it just, that isn't how that isn't how the world lays itself out.
Not at all. And the sad part about it is, and I've watched this unfold in my own family.
Um, my wives, they, basically the, my mother-in-law is like the matriarch of the family.
They, she married a terrible man, alcohol, adhesive, and so, and she's done an incredible job
of keeping everyone together. But part of their story or narrative of these girls
all coming up is you don't need a man. Right. You can do this yourself.
Yeah. And they saw that firsthand how strong their mother was. And so, you know, and that was an attractive quality that
I saw in my wife that she was independent and strong. But it was such a strong narrative
that you see even the the nieces that are grew up in that. And now I'm watching them very,
very successful. They have their masters degree and they they're making $200,000 a year,
but they're landing that 30 thirty two years old now and
just starting to play the dating serious game
and then it's like this and there is a short window it's like it's like the
cool is it's not well it's too well here's what happens to women in that
situation it's awful it's awful first of all
the number of men they'll find accessible, acceptable, drops to virtually zero.
Because you need, here's what you need,
you're 30, you're a 30 year old woman,
let's say you're attractive and you're smart
and you're career oriented
and you're making lots of money.
Okay, so what sort of manner are you after?
Well, you're after a man who's likely little older than you,
say 34, who isn't already in a permanent relationship,
which is like, well, why is that? And who is that?
Because that guy's gonna get snapped up,
who's just as educated as you or more so,
who's making just as much money as you or more so.
It's like, well, there aren't any guys like that.
There's two guys.
There's two guys.
There's two guys.
You've got your pants syndrome, right?
The rest is settled.
Right, but it's worse than that,
because the man, let's say, you are that 32-year-old man.
Okay. Now, you've got your choice. You've got 30-year-old woman who's like spectacularly attractive and smart and independent and all that, but she's 30.
And you've got 25-year-old woman who's the same, except she's 25.
Well, all the tilt is going to be towards the 25-year- old, not least, especially if you're not ready to
adopt responsibility, because the 25 year old woman gives you a seven year, what would you call it?
It's a seven year span of flexibility. Whereas the 30 year old woman is going to be
you're a daydre, you marry, you have a child, like now, right? Well,
You have a child right now, right? Well, no, that's not gonna work.
It's not gonna work.
Partly you have to ask, well, why would the guys do that?
Because they could go for the 25 year old, which they will.
And also the 25 year olds in easier target, so to speak,
not as intimidating.
A lot of the women that I worked with,
they never even got asked out.
Because they were so intimidating. The guys would look at them and think, well, I don't have a chance with her. And even if that wasn't true, that's what they thought. Very triggering for some
people to hear this, but you're literally like, this is just how it is. There's no doubt about it.
I watched this for 10 years. And you know, the women, everybody knows, this women listening,
know this, They know this.
They don't want a data man that makes less,
you typically makes less of them is lower status,
less education.
They want someone above them,
it's typically.
Oh yes.
And that's cross culturally the case.
Yes.
Well, I know wonder, like why,
if you're a high resource woman,
why wouldn't you look for a higher resource man?
Right.
Like that's a better deal.
Yeah. So of, you do that.
It's being done.
It's partly because why do you know, gold diggers, it's like, no, the woman's going to put
herself in a vulnerable position by having kids.
Fact.
So, she's going to be looking for someone who can tolerate the fact that she's going
to be in a vulnerable position.
So obviously, she's going to look for someone who can bring more to the table
than she can. Obviously. So yeah, it's so pathetic. We're so dumb. It's so hard on young women too.
And I mean, they do have a difficult needle to thread because if you're going to be educated
as a woman and have a family and kids, you really have to get your act together fast
You're about an eight year span of time. That's not that long. You know, the other thing people don't really understand is that
You know, let's say you're young and attractive and you think well, I'll eventually find a partner. It's like
You're probably only going to really be able to try out about five people in your life
Right because you imagine it takes a year to get to know someone.
You know, maybe it's six months, but six months and then engage. That's pretty fast, especially
if you didn't know the person at all. So let's say a year, well, how many people are going to come
along at the right time who check off all your boxes exactly when you need it over the eight-year
period? You'll be lucky if you. That's period. You'll be lucky if you have five.
And if the relationship is intimate, you're going to be pretty damn battered after the fourth
one if they shattered.
So you don't have that many chances to find the right person in your life.
And this is why women are just naturally more choosy. They have to be, they should be.
Of course they should.
Absolutely.
This goes back to what your original point to.
It's just sad that we don't celebrate the family unit.
Motherhood, fatherhood, the discipline around it and what that means.
Well, and the great advantages of it, like I had a great career, really.
Like I got my first academic job was at Harvard.
And that's like that's impossible, right? That's like that's the NBA. It was ridiculous that that
happened. And so and I went there and Harvard was just doing fine in the 1990s. It was a great place
to be. So I had a stellar career and I had excellent graduate students and I was popular with my
undergraduates. It was fun.
And still the best part of my life was my wife
and my little kids.
Oh, that's great.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, I loved my job,
but when I came home and I had my little kids around
and my wife, that was just, that was just fine.
More men need to communicate that.
We talk about our kids on the show and family life
and we get so many comments from young man.
I mean, we're mainly a fitness and health podcast.
But we get so many comments from young man who say,
God, listen to you guys, makes me,
I didn't wanna have kids, no I do.
Yeah, well think about it this way.
You're gonna have these little kids,
say you're gonna know them better than you knew
anybody in your life.
That's open to you.
Okay, now in these little kids, you're gonna see your life. That's open to you. Okay. Now in
these little kids, you're going to see your relatives because they're related to you. So
you're going to see echoes of your father or your echoes of your mother, your sister, your
brother. You have the opportunity to have without person the best relationship with anyone
you've ever had in your life. Like, and that's what that person wants more than anything
else. That's what you're being offered. Amazing.
Yeah, so why would you?
Plus, little kids, if they're reasonably well-behaved,
are ridiculously entertaining.
They're fun.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, and they're clowny and comical and playful,
and they really want your attention
and they want to be around you.
It's like, you got a problem with that?
What's the problem you've got with that?
No, and nobody said, the point I'm making
is that's not communicated enough.
But that's for sure.
Because when you experience it, like the joy,
you know, I just recently talked about this,
I work out regularly in the morning
and I just change my schedule so I could wake up earlier,
work out in the garage with my wife.
We get interrupted by the little ones, try to keep them
the same, but they wake up.
So I have four kids.
I have an 18 to 14, and then I have a big gap.
I have a three year old and a one year old.
Right, so you got to do it twice.
Yeah, I did.
So the little ones, you know, they often will interrupt us.
We can't play the music loud on the garage.
I don't have the same hardcore, whatever,
when I'm doing my thing, I normally would.
But then I get to have breakfast with the kids.
Sometimes they interrupt us. they come in and watch us
where I play with them in between sets.
And then every day now when I go off to work,
they greet me at the door.
The joy that I get from that is so superior
to the best workouts or hitting the new weight
or the focus that I used to,
I would trade that any day of the week.
But it's not communicated enough.
Yeah, you know.
Jordan, how would you characterize the type of parent
that we need to be in, like say, zero to four,
four to eight, eight to 12, and then like 18 and beyond.
Like, what's the most important role we play?
Cause I know that as they change,
almost our role changes too. like, what's the most important role we play? Because I know that as they change,
almost our role changes too.
Well, there's no difference between attention and love.
So pay attention, listen, watch.
I would say, and also pay attention to when you're happy
to be around your kids and when you're not.
Like one of the chapters in my first book was don't let your children do anything that
makes you just like them.
So I take that seriously.
If your kids are annoying you, go talk to your wife.
These kids are bugging me.
And maybe she's going to say, well that's because you're a selfish tyrant.
Okay, well sort that out because maybe that is why.
But maybe it's not.
Maybe it's because they're annoying.
And so maybe your wife says, yeah, they're kind of bugging me too. But maybe it's not. Maybe it's because they're annoying. And so maybe your wife says,
yeah, they're kind of bugging me too. It's like, okay, let's put a stop to it so that the kids
are delightful to be around. And you know, you think, well, you're interfering with the flowering
of your child's freedom. It's like, no, you're not. You're helping guide them down a path that makes
everyone in the world want to be around them. There's nothing you can do for your child that's better. That's your job. Your job is to make
your child is to encourage your child to be maximally socially attractive and not in the narcissistic
self. That doesn't work anyways. Like in I'm a great teammate sort of way, right? Or I'm a great
team captain, the kind of kid that everyone wants to play with,
and that people will listen to,
the kind of kid that's honest,
and that helps his fellow players develop.
And that's a wonderful thing to see in your son or daughter too,
when that starts to flourish.
And so it's like, pay attention to your kids,
play with your kids, and then,
don't let them, the rule of thumb is something like this. don't let them,
the rule of thumb is something like this.
Don't let them do anything that brings shame to them.
You know, we used to take our little kids to restaurants
when they were very little.
And only for about 45 minutes,
because when they're under three,
that's about what they can tolerate.
But the rule was like, you sit there and behave
for 45 minutes, you know, you eat what's what's in front
of you and you act like a civilized human being. And the consequence of that now and then
I used to have to take the kids. I know I used to stand out with my daughter in the winter
in Boston. She misbehaved in the restaurant. We go outside. It's like, you know, 10
below. It's like, what are we doing out here, dad? It's like, well, we're standing here
until you decide whether you want to be out here in the cold or in the restaurants. Like, take your choice. I'll stand here until mum and
Julian are done eating or we can go in there and have a good time. Decide. She'd stand
there for like a minute or two and then she'd think, okay, we can go inside now and then
she'd behave. Okay. So the disciplinary routine had to be imposed, but then we'd have a fine time
and we weren't annoyed at our kids
because we got to go out now and then,
but the upshot of that was almost inevitably
at the end of meals.
There would be other families come over,
often older people,
and give the kids a pat on the head and compliment them.
And do you think how nice that is for the kids?
Because they go out and all they get
from other people is positive feedback. And so imagine how nice that is for the kids because they go out and all they get from other
people is positive feedback. And so imagine you want to set up your kids so that the way they present
themselves to the world does nothing but invite positive feedback. And you do that by certainly by
letting them know when they're being annoying. It's like you're not being funny. That's not funny.
That's not amusing. That's annoying. Sort yourself out.
And the kids, they demand that from you, as they want to know the rules. That's why they'll
desperately torture you, even. They need to know the rules, because they're trying to
figure out how to adapt to the social world. And it's your job to to to encourage them to be the best at that that they can possibly be and then
You just prevent like a myriad of problems because once your kids
If your kids start to have good friends at four they're set
Fundamentally well because they're they're in the social world and it just starts to expand then you're there as a resource
You know and their kids can come over to your house and play and you can regulate that.
We had our kids came over to our house a lot when they were teenagers.
My wife was very good about that because the kids used to come over when they were teenagers.
They were afraid of me to begin with.
But after they'd been there like four times, they were afraid of Tammy,
which I thought was so funny.
Because her attitude was very straightforward.
It was like, you're really welcome here. But if you do something dumb and we never
have to see you again, that's really not going to be a problem. And then what happened was that
they didn't do dumb things. You know, they did, you have to have some realm of tolerance for
noise and stupidity, but the limit, the limit you put, the limit you place should be your limit.
It's like, I don't find it amusing to have these people here anymore.
Then it's gone too far.
You have a right to, no, you have a responsibility to put down those limits.
And then you check it with your right because maybe you're having a bad day and you're
a crabby bastard and you're being mean. And you should find out if that's the case, but maybe not.
Maybe it's just time that the stop sign goes up.
This is why I thought your talk at Dave Ranjou was so important because I think so many
people underestimate that zero to four because I think parents a lot of times think, oh,
they can't really articulate how they feel.
They can't really communicate very much.
They don't realize what they're downloading
and the foundation.
Everything, their paying attention, man.
And I believe even more so.
Because they can articulate, they are observing
and you are building that child that right out the gates
and so the way you communicate to your spouse,
the tone that you use in the house,
the whether you decide to just let things go,
or discipline,
whether or not you're watching them while they're on their own.
Or so on your phone.
All that stuff,
and I just think we've gotten away from,
away from how important that is,
and I think that we've found these tools with iPads and TV
and streaming everything that to be these babysitters
and they're missing out on this
unbelievably important time and I think we're seeing that manifest in these teenagers now that
got that. It's scary. Jordan, I want to respect your time. One more question. Sure.
That's okay. You're, you know, people that they just start learning about your watching seem
very serious and, you know, and how you communicate. But you seem to have this real appreciation for comedy, with comedians in particular.
So you obviously have a really strong sense of humor appreciation.
Talk about that a little bit because I've noticed, I mean, you've been on, obviously
Joe Rogan and Theo Vaughan.
And you've talked about how you like comedy.
Yeah, what is it about comedy that you like so much
or why is it so important?
Play.
Okay.
Well, you know, I was fortunate a lot.
In the town I grew up in, working class town,
the real pathway to status for boys was humor,
more so than sports even, at least I would say, Canada isn't as sports obsessed
as the US with the possible exception of hockey, but our competition was for humor always.
Like in class, we were always trying to make each other laugh when we were socializing.
It was always like the guy who could make everybody laugh was at the top of the heap.
And I had three friends and my my junior high friends
They all dropped out of school by the time they were in bulk grade 10. They're a pretty funny bunch
But pretty rough humor the guys that I who I became friends with in
In high school were from this little tiny place even smaller than the town I grew up in called Barachanian
Which had literally been settled in 1937?
It was at the farthest end of the Northern Prairie.
And it was pretty isolated community,
and they had just learned to amuse themselves,
and they're incredibly funny.
I went touring with two of them last year,
and we had a blast of a time, incredibly funny.
And then the people I went to college with
was the same thing.
It was all competitive humor.
And then my friend, my kids,
what did Tammy say about Michaela? Two years ago, she said, you know, I think everything that Michaela says is a joke.
That's right. Everything Michaela says is a joke.
And Julian was like that too.
And I think part of that is that there isn't anything more important than play.
Fundamentally, I think play is the antithesis of power.
I think what men can really bring into a child's life is that sense of play.
Women are concerned with care, and fair enough, but men can be concerned with play, and
play is a form of care.
It's a high form of care.
And that's another thing that the young men who are listening might think about too is you can play with your kids.
That's fun. It's not like burdensome responsibility. If it's burdensome responsibility, you're
not doing it right. You know, there's obviously you have to pay a price, you have little kids
because you have to take care of them. But have to. That's the wrong way of thinking about
it. You get to, you have a pet for for Christake. Why do you have a pet?
You want to take care of something?
You know, it's a primal it's a primal need
and it's way more
entertaining than like
some idiot bout of hedonistic self-satisfaction. They're not even in the same universe
It's way more it's way more is there a connection of humor and intelligence. I find some my smartest friends have some of the darkest humor.
Is there a they've proven a connection there?
Well smarter people buy and large can be funnier because they're just faster and sharper, you know, so and
I think what really distinguishes comedians though is
their capacity to pay attention,
they're watching.
Because you've got a time, you've got a time you're damn joke, right?
And you can say something like super mean and vicious.
If you say it in exactly the right tone, it's exactly the right time.
It's hilarious.
It's hilarious.
You know, and so that is that capacity to pay attention.
I think that's why so many of them make effective podcasters.
They're very good at paying attention. And comedians also have a commitment to pay attention. I think that's why so many of them make effective Podcasts. They're very good at paying attention and comedians also have a commitment to the truth because
People either laugh or they don't it's really cut dried and a lot of what comedians do is tell truths that other people won't say
Social commentary
They say they're unspoken
Everyone laughs
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, Thank you for listening to Mind Pump. If your goal is to build and shape your body, dramatically improve your health and energy,
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