Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Sal Di Stefano on the Ugly Truth About "Privilege"
Episode Date: September 23, 2020This episode is a bit of a curveball. While not a health or fitness topic per se, the subject of this episode is tangentially related. Specifically, the topic is privilege and the idea that it’s wro...ng for some people to enjoy advantages that others don’t get to enjoy, and that equal outcome should be our goal. In other words, inequality should be corrected through government policies and societal norms. According to some people, equality of opportunity isn’t enough. The only way to have a fair society is to have equality of outcomes. That’s the real sign that you have a system that works for everyone. Privilege is at odds with this idea. And while many people have heard of “white privilege” in recent times, that’s just one head of the hydra that needs to be lopped off to slay the beast of entitlement. Is that the right frame of reference, though? Is privilege really at the core of our socioeconomic and racial dysfunctions here in the West? Is it something we should systematically mitigate or eliminate altogether for a better world? Should you feel guilty and ashamed for any privilege you enjoy? Everyone has different privileges relative to one another and almost anything can be viewed as an advantage if you compare to the right subject. So what’s the proper response? Should we dispossess our advantages or feel pride? Should we “cancel” people with privilege, or use those advantages to help others? These are just some of the questions I chew the cud over with my guest Sal Di Stefano, a good friend of mine and one of the co-hosts of the number one fitness podcast in the world, Mind Pump. Now, you may be wondering why two fitness guys are talking about privilege on a fitness podcast, and the simple reason is that we love chatting about politics, culture, economics, and history. Plus, a lot of the non-fitness content I’ve sprinkled into my podcasts over the years has generated a lot more positive feedback than negative and we don’t subscribe to the “stay in your lane bro” critiques. So with all that said, let’s get to the show and let me know your thoughts! 7:34 - The skill of being objective and logical 10:10 - Two roadblocks to objectiveness 16:04 - Can I act in ways that are going to produce a desired result even though the action doesn’t feel right? 19:19 - What is privilege? 24:21 - What is Intersectionality? --- Mentioned on The Show: The Mind Pump Podcast: https://mindpumppodcast.com/ Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: https://legionathletics.com/coaching/ --- Want free workout and meal plans? Download my science-based diet and training templates for men and women: legionathletics.com/text-sign-up/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Oh, hello. Welcome to another episode of my podcast, Muscle for Life. I'm Mike Matthews.
Thank you for joining me today. And in today's episode, I have something a little bit different,
a curve ball, something that is related to health and fitness indirectly, but is not a health and fitness topic per se. And that is privilege. The idea that some people
enjoying advantages that other people do not enjoy is somehow wrong and should be corrected
through government policies and cultural norms, ultimately to get closer to an equality of outcome. You know, the idea that equality of
opportunity is not enough if it is producing equality of outcome. That is the only real way
to know that you have a fair society, that you have a fair system that works for everyone.
And one of the great enemies of fairness is supposedly privilege. And yes,
that means that we also get into white privilege in particular. But according to many people,
that is only one head of the hydra of privilege that must be lopped off to finally slay the beast.
Is that the right frame of reference though? Is privilege really at the core of our
socioeconomic and racial dysfunctions here in the West? Is it something that we should
systematically mitigate or even eliminate altogether in any place we can find it,
in any form we can find it? Should you and I feel guilty and ashamed for the privileges that
we enjoy? And although we may enjoy different privileges, we certainly enjoy privileges in
comparison to someone else. The fact that you can hear me speaking means that you have the privilege
of a functional auditory system. Many people in the world do not have that privilege. They are deaf.
If you are in good shape, you are enjoying tremendous physical and psychological privilege
because your body is healthier. You have a stronger immune system. You're able to be more
productive at work. You're able to be more present in your relationships and give more to those
relationships. You are going to be perceived as more attractive
and this inclines people to want to do you more favors and pay you more money. And so what is the
proper emotional and behavioral response to enjoying privilege? Should it be shame, regret,
and even dispossession, disgorgement of privilege? Or should it be maybe pride if it's
something that you have worked for? Or gratitude if it's something you have been given? And humility?
And instead of lessening or even canceling that personal privilege, should you use it to help
others? Should you use it to make the world a little bit of a better place in some way because
you can have more of an impact than other people?
Well, these are some of the questions that my guests and I chew the cut over in this
episode.
And if you're not familiar with my guest, it is the one and only Sal DiStefano, good
friend of mine, one of the co-hosts of the number one fitness podcast
in the world, Mind Pump, which I highly recommend you check out if you have not already. If you like
my podcast, you will certainly like Mind Pump. Now, the reason why Sal, who's mostly a fitness guy
like me, is coming on a mostly fitness podcast like mine to talk about something like privilege
is, well, like me, Sal's just into this stuff. Politics, culture, economics, history, those are
some of our favorite hobby horses outside of our health and fitness gigs. And as really all of the
non-fitness commentary that I have sprinkled into the show
over the last several years has generated a lot more positive than negative response. And often
the negative response is often some form of stay in your lane, bro. As if being a health and fitness
expert disqualifies me from talking about anything
else. And my response is always the same. And it is always the end of the conversation. And it is,
are you a moral philosopher? Oh, you're not? Well, maybe you should stay in your lane then.
What qualifies you to make a moral judgment on what I can and can't talk about or
should and shouldn't talk about? So if you don't like what Sal and I have to say and you want to
disagree with me, I would love to hear your thoughts, but you're going to have to do better
than that. All right. I think that's enough by the way of introduction. So let's get to the
interview. Also, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely
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Mr. DiStefano, it's a great privilege to have you back on the show.
Yeah, it's awesome, man. I always enjoy talking to you. It's always a pleasure
just talking about any topic with objective,
logical people. And you're definitely one of the most objective, logical people that I've encountered. So any conversation with you is always stimulating and fun.
I'm flattered. That's a compliment that actually means something to me.
Dude, that's huge. I think the ability to be objective and to try to be logical is a skill
that is extremely valuable. Maybe not so prevalent, but it's very,
very valuable because it allows you to examine yourself, to grow, to progress, and to also
question your own actions, which is super important because oftentimes we're blind to
the actions that we take that are driven by emotions and are driven by non-logical ways of thinking and feeling.
Those things tend to hurt us. And we see this as a trainer, just taking it to fitness. You see this
all the time with people's health. The choices that they make for themselves can be pretty
illogical and cause people a lot of problems. But if you expand upon that, I mean, we do that
across the board. So logic and objectivity, those are very important skills.
And I think that one of the reasons, probably one of the primary reasons those skills are rare
is not stupidity. It's not, oh, people are just stupid. I'd say it's more ignorance and it is not
necessarily their fault. The apparent cause would be that they're not taught these skills. Like there was a time when early on in your education, you would be taught the basics of language and how your
language works. You'd be taught how to think rationally. Like you'd be taught about logical
processes, logical fallacies, like some formal training in logic. And you'd be taught how to
communicate persuasively, how to use now your ability to think rationally, to make persuasive
arguments, rhetoric, right? And that's no longer the case. So you can have people who actually are
very educated in one field. You can have people who go as far as they can possibly go and get a doctorate in something who have never actually learned how to think critically.
So you'll see some of these people who have maybe impressive bona fides say some very
unimpressive things that are so obviously wrong. It can be hard to understand. Like this person
is not stupid. If you were to have them do an IQ
test, they're probably above average, yet they will think in very stupid ways and say very stupid
things. And again, I think it comes back to what you were just talking about is a skill that needs
to be learned. Maybe some people come with it a bit more than others and like anything, right?
people come with it a bit more than others. And like anything, some people may have a knack for logical analysis, but to get good at it, you have to learn about it and you have to practice it.
Right. And to my best observation, there's two big roadblocks to that. One is ignorance, right?
One is just simply not knowing the right information. And so children obviously can
act in very illogical ways.
And oftentimes it's because they just don't know any better.
But the second roadblock is actually much bigger and much more difficult to overcome.
And that is what I consider to be one of the biggest faults or I say biggest challenges
of humanity, which is arrogance.
And that's where people are very informed, are very intelligent,
and their arrogance prevents them from self-examination and prevents them from
critical logical thinking. They're so arrogant, in fact, that they believe they have all the answers.
This is where you get the great planners of society, people who think the best way to run
society is to control all of society, to dictate people the best way to run society is to control all of society,
to dictate people's actions, to control markets, because I'm so smart and we're so smart,
we could do it better. Yeah. We can centrally plan everything better than all of the peasants
ever could. Right. And this is historically why you see academia historically opposing merchants. There's always been this bit
of this fight between the merchants who run commerce and business. And this is historical.
This has always been this way. And you still see it today. And it's really arrogance. It really is.
And today, arrogance is at all-time highs. It's true old wisdom because, oh, that's what people
thought thousands of years ago. Totally negating
the fact that wisdom literally has stood the test of time. It's evolution of ideas. I don't think
there's any better test of an idea than thousands of years and millions of people. But no, I know
better. I'm so arrogant, maybe not realizing I'm arrogant. And so it's your logical thought
process, your ability to be objective is gone. And it's because you're arrogant with
your intelligence. And that is a very difficult block to overcome. I had to really forcefully
examine myself years ago and continue to do every single day because I think one of the first steps
is realizing that you are not above being manipulated and you are not above illogical, non-objective actions or
thought. I think that's the first step is to know that you're not immune to it. That's number one.
And then number two is, okay, how can I look at this from an objective point of view? What
information is the most objective I can use? And how can I apply that in the most valuable,
effective way? And then you move from there.
That is definitely a skill.
You're 100% right, Mike.
You got to practice it for sure.
And when you say arrogance, I don't think you're just talking about thinking that you're
better than other people, or maybe you are.
That is only what you're referring to.
But if that's the case, then I would also add to that.
And this is something you alluded to a couple of times now that maybe it's a matter of
trusting your feelings and your intuitions too much or it could just be intellectual laziness
and this is how a lot of people fall into confirmation bias and then support it with
disconfirmation bias is you have this maybe two fundamentally different ways of coming to decisions or
coming to attitudes or conclusions about things, worldviews, ideologies. You can have feelings and
have intuitions and then make decisions based on them and then go search out information to confirm
that your feelings and your intuitions are correct.
Or you can have feelings and intuitions. We're all going to have that. However, temper them and
look to the objective reality and allow that to now inform your attitudes, inform your feelings,
your attitudes, inform your feelings, and maybe disconfirm them. You have to be willing to go against what you feel is right. Well, it may not be right. It may be completely wrong.
And so that process is just uncomfortable. Nobody likes to be wrong. Nobody likes to feel stupid.
Nobody likes to feel like they can't trust their feelings and their
intuitions. And unfortunately though, where do feelings and intuitions come from? Nobody knows.
We may never know. And some people have better intuitions and more accurate and practical and
logical feelings and intuitions than others. no matter how logical we are no matter
how well we try to live in accordance with the things that we're talking about here i mean and
i say this myself like i this is something i've i don't know if i've really talked about much on
the podcast but it's just one of these things i've definitely discussed in person just random
conversations that i generally i wouldn't say i don't trust my feelings and my intuitions. I'm just always
skeptical of them. It's trust, but verify, right? The old KGB motto. I apply that to myself very
much so. And I catch myself sometimes where I question, I have an idea about something and I
question myself, why do I think that? What evidence do I have for that?
What is that based on? And sometimes I don't have a great answer. And I think I'm over the maybe
defensiveness that can occur just internally when that happens. And I'm okay with that. I'm not
a person who tries to assert my rightness to a fault. I'd rather actually be
right than feel right. But that's a process though, that I feel like I've gotten better.
I certainly have gotten better with it as I have gotten older. I don't think age is the reason,
but in time I have gotten better with it, but it's still something that I don't struggle with,
but I think it's going to be something that I'm going to have to consciously work out my entire life, I think. Right. And here's the challenge. It's a big
challenge. The big challenge is, can I act in ways that are going to produce a desired result,
even though the action doesn't feel right? Oftentimes, we do things that feel good,
that are completely counterproductive or even damaging. I'll give you a couple examples. Okay, I'll give you a simple example, right? And by the way, I'm not talking about being a robot, right? We are human and feeling and emotion is part of what makes us human. I think it's important to check it, however, because feelings and emotions are powerful. They're much more powerful and instinctual drivers than logic. Logic is what
makes us intelligent, self-aware beings. It's emotions in combination with that that makes us
human. You got to examine it. You have to examine it. So I'll give you a simple, stupid example.
So if I was based off of just pure feeling, I would eat food that tasted good. I'd have sex
with everybody and I'd never work out. Working out would hurt my body.
And take every drug.
And take every drug. So that's a simple, silly one, but I'll take it a step further.
When you look at people who enable other people to harm themselves, like parents who enable their
drug addict children or alcoholic children, for example, who provide them with a place to stay,
continue to give them money, sometimes even buying them the alcohol and drugs,
because it feels good to know my kid is with me.
Oh, at least they're not out in the streets.
I'm going to keep them safe.
Not realizing that they're actually enabling the behavior.
This is a very classic example of parents acting or people acting in ways that feel
right that are actually producing the exact opposite result.
Now, why is this important?
This is important for two reasons. One, you can do
things that are very bad for you and people around you if you don't develop the skill of logical and
objective thinking. And number two, and here's the big one, Mike, your inability to do this is
exactly what's going to get manipulated by advertisers or even worse by government and politicians and people who want to manipulate you to do certain things and want you to feel good while you do the things that they want that are counter to what you actually want, what you actually are fighting for, anger, and then the most powerful feeling to manipulate
is empathy. If I can manipulate somebody with a false sense of empathy, they will oftentimes never
question the actions that they take because the actions that they're taking are based in
the feel-good feeling of empathy. Because empathy is a good... You're supposed to be empathetic.
Boy, if you get manipulated by empathy, it's a very difficult thing to come out of. And so being able to think
critically and objectively, you better develop that skill or you are going to be floating in
the wind and being taken advantage of, manipulated, and you will be the cause of your own destruction
and the pain and suffering of the people around you and not even realize it.
I think that's a great segue to get into the crux of what we wanted to talk about today.
I think we've done some good stage setting because all of that is relevant to this idea
of privilege.
And we can get to white privilege, but to get there, we have to start with privilege.
Now, what is privilege?
We can start with a dictionary definition,
which would just be a special right or some advantage or some immunity that's given,
or it's only available to a certain person or a certain group of people.
And these days, of course, it's a pejorative and it's considered bad. And in any kind of
discussion like this, I always like to question everything. And that's
a given for many people. Of course, privilege is bad. But is it actually bad? That's where this
discussion we need to begin is somebody having a special right or a special advantage of some kind
that other people don't have. Is that undesirable? Is that something that we need to fix and it is always bad? It is always
unfair? Yeah, that's a really good question, but I want to take it a step further. And I think I
want to start with the understanding that advantages and disadvantages are very real.
That's for sure. In fact, most people can look within, look around, and identify potential
advantages or disadvantages,
even within themselves. This is totally normal, nothing wrong with it. And then you could take
it a step further. And then you could say, I feel blessed because whatever. I feel blessed because
I have two parents or I'm healthy, or I live in a wealthy country, or I have the ability to speak
my mind. It's a protected right or
whatever. I could go down an infinite list of reasons why someone may feel blessed. And by the
way, we'll get into this as well, I think, is my mindset around my situation can switch something
from being a disadvantage to advantage or vice versa, right? So that's obvious. It could also
be very strongly manipulated, especially if you take somebody who wants to be empathetic
and helpful, because if somebody feels blessed, I could take that and say, well, now that
you're blessed, what about this other guy over here who isn't blessed?
You could judo that into guilt and shame.
Right, right.
Now, again, there's nothing wrong.
In fact, this is probably a good thing for you to say to yourself, man, I feel blessed.
And with this blessing, I think I'd like to help other people. Actually, not only is there nothing
wrong with that, it's actually a good trait. Right. Now you're talking about judeling that
into humility. And I would agree. I would say it's universally good. I can't think of any scenario
where being humble, not self-denigrating, but being humble is a disadvantage.
Exactly. One thing we have to understand is that politicians in particular, but people in power
or people who wish to sway you or change your views or your votes or your dollars,
you got to understand one thing. They understand how to use marketing, but it could be propaganda,
it could be political ads, it could be news articles. It could be AI that is directing you down these rabbit holes of articles and things to read and whatever. It could be posed as information. Their goal is to sway you and they're very good at it. We got to remember that the science behind influencing people has existed for thousands and thousands of years and is lots
and lots of money spent on the most effective way to do this. Okay. So now, number one,
the most effective way to manipulate someone is to not create something out of thin air,
but rather to use a very real human emotion with some truth. And that's the greatest starting
point. So the starting point is you feel blessed,
you observe advantages and disadvantages in your life and perhaps in others. Let's start from
there. And so from there, what we have is the philosophy. And not only that, but I think it's
worth adding that most people want to help other people. They want to see other people do well.
They don't like to see other people not do well. 100%. Again, nothing wrong with that. It's a very good thing, right?
And so from there sprang the philosophy that we're using today when you talk about privilege,
or at least how it's used today when we speak about privilege, known as intersectionality,
which is also based generally on the philosophy
of Marxism.
Okay.
And we don't need to go deep into Marxism because we'd have to really explain it.
But philosophy of Marxism, generally speaking, is a worldview of oppressors and oppressed.
It's a worldview of class and groups.
You belong to groups.
That's definitely more valuable than your individual value. People are oppressed. There are oppressors that are oppressed. And it is the job of the
oppressed to rise up and overpower the oppressors because the world is all about power. And so from
there, spring. And it's a zero-sum game. Correct. For them to win, you have to lose.
Right. Be objective now. Be very,
very objective. I don't care if you're a Marxist, if you're whatever. Objectively speaking,
historically, the batting average of Marxism as applied is 0%. It's always resulted in terrible
tyranny, destruction, death in its people. That's 100%. There is no example of Marxism
ever working very well. But anyway, let's move away from that. Let's move into intersectionality.
Yeah, let's define it first, just so people know what the term refers to. as they apply to a given individual or group regarded as creating overlapping interdependent
systems of discrimination and disadvantage. Okay, so let's break that down a little bit further.
Intersectionality aims to look at every possible advantage and disadvantage. So every possible
advantage and disadvantage. And when I'm done saying this, I think let's you and I have a fun time listing all the ones we can think about,
although we're going to have to stop. Otherwise, we'll be here for, I don't know, 10 hours.
All the different identities that one can assume.
Right. So what they're trying to do is they're trying to look at all of the possible disadvantages
and advantages that exist in the world and then rank them in order of which one is more of an advantage than
the other and which one can potentially give power over another one. So for example, if you
look up a chart on intersectionality, you'll see like a white woman, she has the advantage of being
white, the disadvantage of being a woman. And if you compare her to a black man, disadvantage being black,
advantage being man, which one has more power? And then you can list an infinite number of these.
And then they aim to describe the world in this way. Now, here's the huge, massive flaw
in that way of thinking. It is a very arrogant, it's ignorant at best, arrogant at worst way of looking at the world and trying to rank people who are, I think we can all agree that the universe, okay? In terms of our behaviors,
why we think and act in the ways that we act,
the things that make us up,
the different groups we may belong to,
our mindset surrounding all these things.
We are extremely complex.
And so intersectionality at best is ignorant
and at worst is arrogantly ranking people
based off of their observed advantages and disadvantages. So that's what
that philosophy looks at. Now, there is some validity to it, though. At least there certainly
was, right? So if you were black in the 1950s, you were going to have a harder time of things
than today, right? Yes.
Period. Regardless of how great of a person you are. Now, it doesn't mean that
your black skin was going to doom you to a life of abject poverty and misery, but you were going
to have a little bit of a harder time getting ahead. Yes. However, now, number one, what you're
talking about are real disadvantages imposed upon people by law, right? And throughout history, women were
certainly at a disadvantage in some ways, and that is not the case anymore. But women were
systematically discriminated against in certain ways for a long time. Yes. But again, I am not
saying that we cannot observe advantages and disadvantages throughout history or even today. But to look at someone who is extremely complex and say, based off of looking at them even, that person is privileged or that person is underprivileged or disadvantaged is extremely arrogant. I'll give you an example. So just to be clear, again, I'm going to jump in sometimes with these devil's advocate kind of positions because I think it's useful.
So what you're saying is that it's more the weighting of these things. How are you to say
that this element of your identity, like this gives you a plus five to your advantage score.
And oh, this element though, gives you a negative two. And so
it's as if we can kind of just do this calculus to get your privilege score.
It's even worse than that. It's even more challenging than that, Mike, because we're
not including a person's mindset and behaviors. I'll give you a couple of examples.
That could be included though. We could be like, oh, we'll factor in your IQ. We're going
to have you take a big five personality test. We're going to look at certain key elements of
your personality. Like, oh, you're a gregarious person. That's privilege. Oh, you have an above
average IQ privilege. Right. Again, I'll give you a few examples. Okay. I'll give you a personal
example. I'll give you a famous example. And'll give you a famous example and then maybe one that people might not be familiar with. But here's a personal example. My co-host Adam,
he grew up, his father committed suicide when he was seven. His mother remarried and had an
abusive relationship and he lived in poverty for most of his life. Now, Adam, the way that he
interpreted that, or at least his mindset around that situation,
drove him to never live in that situation again.
It drove him to be one of the hardest workers I've ever met.
It drove him to learn and grow and study.
And today, by most measures, Adam is a very successful person because of his mindset around
what easily could be considered disadvantages.
mindset around what easily could be considered disadvantages. Would Adam be who he is today had he grown up in a completely different situation? Who knows? Who knows? Okay. I'll
use a famous example. Oprah Winfrey. She grew up in terrible circumstances, was abused as a child,
was trying to be a news anchor and a media personality when there was a very clear
discrimination, both from the market and from the powers that be against women,
especially minority women. She's the wealthiest woman in the world. Would she be that person
today had she not grown up under those circumstances? I don't know. I'll give you another
example. There are people, off the top of my head, I can't think of the gentleman's name. I'll try
and find it while we're talking here, but there are people who have climbed Mount Everest who are
double amputees. They don't have two legs or an arm and a leg or something. These are real people
who've done this. And some of these people, when you ask them what motivated them, what drove them
to climb Mount Everest, they will tell you it was being
born without legs or it was being in that car accident that caused me to lose my limbs that
drove me to do what many people think to be impossible. Their mindset around a widely
perceived disadvantage or underprivileged is what drove them to do incredible things. When you look at people who
are volunteers, who dedicate their lives to helping people, oftentimes these are people who
are trying to help other people who grew up in similar challenging, difficult circumstances.
They took their disadvantage. They took their underprivilege, as would be perceived,
and it drove them to be incredible, incredible people.
Now, some people, skeptics, might be thinking, yeah, okay, but maybe they wouldn't be exactly
where they're at now. But some people might think they would be in an even better place if they
would have had a better childhood or would not have had these disadvantages because they would
have been able to apply
themselves to overcoming more external obstacles instead of internal obstacles.
Of course, because that's arrogant. That is arrogance. It's complete arrogance. One of the
guys at Climb Mount Everest, a double amputee, Mark Inglis, that was the guy I was thinking of.
Of course, people are going to think that because it's super arrogant for us to say that. Now,
of course, generally speaking, you want people to grow up and you want to
put them or have them be in a situation that we consider to be ideal and healthy and all that.
And there's nothing wrong with that. And that would be another cynical take,
right? Like, so Sal, what are you saying? You're saying that it's good that some children are
abused because it then puts this big chip on their shoulder. So they feel like they have to
prove themselves.
Not at all. What I am saying is that the power of mindset and just how you perceive your life can turn disadvantages into potential advantages or privileges. And that is inarguable.
I immediately think of Marcus Aurelius. That goes all back to stoicism. The obstacle is the way,
right? You're not harmed unless you think that you've been harmed.
Look, take it back to my profession of exercise and fitness. One of the questions I get asked sometimes is, what do you think would happen if scientists invented a pill that would
make everybody lean and fit? And I'd say, well, they'd get some benefit, but definitely not even
close to all the benefit because much of the benefits you get from exercise is the journey,
is learning the discipline, is learning to develop a good
relationship with activity and with nutrition. If you've been working out for a long period of time
and this is something you focused on, you know this. Again, going back to Mount Everest,
I could take a helicopter that could drop me off on the top of it. Am I going to be at all the
same person as if I climbed the damn mountain? So my point with this is that mindset can shift
the whole thing, can throw a wrench in
the whole philosophy. But again, if we take a step back, try to list potential advantages,
disadvantages, or privileges. I mean, being tall, being thin, having lots of muscle, being athletic,
being intelligent, having good skin, having good eyesight, having all your limbs work,
having two good parents, being in good
schools. I mean, shit, you can go as far as sleeping well. That privileges you because it
actually affects all of these things. You are more attractive when you sleep well. You are healthier.
You have a better immune system. You are able to exercise more. You are able to control your
calorie intake better. Right. So we can make this infinite list
literally of privileges. And just with that, try to match them up with other individual privileges,
which good luck. But here's where it gets impossible. Stack them on top of each other
because there isn't a single human being on earth that has one privilege or one underprivilege or
disadvantage based off of
this intersectionality philosophy. You're a complex human. You are a combination of a lot
of different potential privileges and underprivileges. And then you throw mindset on top
of it, which good luck trying to put that in a box. Psychologists have been trying that forever.
Impossible. Again, we have very
complex ways of thinking. Context matters. Today might be an advantage, might be a disadvantage
tomorrow, depending on my emotions and my mood and my mindset and the context and whatever.
So you throw that all into the blender. And now what you're trying to do is you're trying to look
at someone and you're trying to say, you're privileged. Okay. That has to be the most arrogant, insane thing I've ever heard in my
entire life. It's impossible to look at someone and say they're privileged.
And just to put a point to that, so take someone like Adam and somebody might say,
Adam, you're privileged because of your white skin. And they would look at some black person they don't know and think that that person has enjoyed a lot less privilege than Adam because they have black skin.
But what they may not know is that black person might have grown up with multimillionaire parents who loved them.
And that black person might have graduated from Harvard, essentially now has a meal ticket to make six figures, seven figures for the rest of their life.
They might be smarter than Adam. They might be smarter than Adam.
They might be better than Adam in many objective ways.
And so to your point, you can't know that just looking at somebody.
Well, yeah.
And also, again, even doing that is impossible and arrogant and ignorant.
Well, of course, but I'm just making the point we're going to get to white privilege in particular.
just making the point we're going to get to white privilege in particular, but white privilege is,
of course, predicated on the assumption that simply being white gives you so many privilege points that no amount of underprivilege can possibly put you in the red. You know what I mean?
Right. Let me just put an exclamation point on all of that. You look at celebrities. These are
the people that for all intents and purposes are modern day royalty. So we don't have kings and queens anymore, but we have celebrities.
And they're often worshipped, or at least the actions of people worship these people,
Kim Kardashians and the Kanye West and the Beyonce's and the whoever. And we look at them
and we admire them. And they live just extraordinary lives within bubbles that most people can't even
comprehend. Lots of
admiration. Everybody loves them. Access to tons of money, all the drugs they could ever use,
have sex with whoever they want. It really is do whatever you want. The world is your oyster. You
have access to literally everything. Right, right, right, right, right. Okay. Now look at their
suicide rate. Look at the suicide and drug abuse rate among celebrities. It's far higher than the
average population. We hear about celebrity overdoses and suicides all the time. We're like, why would that person
kill themselves? Or why is that person so tormented? And so we're sitting on the outside
looking at them and saying, you're rich. You've got all this. You're super privileged. Being
totally arrogant to whatever mental or internal turmoil that person may be going through to the
point where they kill themselves.
Okay. So you cannot, my point is this, you cannot look at somebody. We can objectively on a piece of paper, rank privileges and say, well, yeah, this in the world, probably whatever,
but it's impossible to apply it to a human. And it's impossible to break the world down that way.
And it's impossible to judge people based off of these things because it's far more complex than anybody could even articulate or quantify.
Totally impossible.
Okay, so now we go to the powers that be in politicians.
Okay, what a wonderful power.
I'm a bit of a nerd for politics and propaganda in history, less in economics, but in particular politics and
political strategies. And I tell you what, Mike, brilliant. What a brilliant way to manipulate
people. Because here you are in America, collectively speaking, we have a few wounds.
We have a few original sins, if you will, to use the biblical term of original sin, right?
Where historically, we could say that people have done bad things, which by the way, not to minimize it at all, but if you go back enough time, everyone's ancestors in every country and every place in the world has done lots of terrible, terrible things. In fact, to take it personally, if you're listening to this podcast right now, if I went back in time and looked at all your relatives and anybody
connected to you, I'm sure I could find an uncle that did some terrible shit or an aunt or a
cousin or whatever. Let's just talk quickly about slavery. The Middle Eastern region of the world
has engaged in far more brutal slavery. You still have slavery in certain areas
there now than whites ever have. And slavery, of course, was rampant in Africa. I mean, you had
slave owners selling people to- You still have slavery in Africa.
That's correct as well. And you had merchant classes who owned all the ships that brought the
slaves over of different ethnicities.
What about those people? Shouldn't they be held accountable? And as far as whites go,
whites were actually the first to end slavery over in England. How does that factor in? And
then there was a civil war here where over 600,000 people died, which originally the war was not
about slavery, but that did become the rallying cause for the North. And that is what it resulted
in. So how does that get factored in? So if we're supposed rallying cause for the North and that is what it resulted in.
So how does that get factored in?
So if we're supposed to feel guilty for the sins of our ancestors, can we also feel some
pride?
Do we also get some credit for the good things that they did, like being the first people
to end slavery in England and sacrificing over 600,000 lives to end it here in the United
States? That's a very slippery slope. You can be proud of your own actions, the way I look at it. And
you can look at the past actions and admire them or say that they're whatever, but what are you
doing? How are you acting is the way I like to look at it. And my point with that-
I understand that. I'm just talking about if we're trying to weigh,
because I know we're going to get to this, because that's one of the big,
way, because I know we're going to get to this, because that's one of the big, I'd say, sticks that is being used to beat whites with in particular is how bad they should feel for what
their ancestors did in slavery in particular. And so I was just commenting on that. I know we're
going to get to that, but. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. No, and then again, if you go down that rabbit
hole, again, you're right. Slavery has been practiced on every continent on earth. It's an
old practice. Actually, humans have done it for longer than they haven't. It's existed for
thousands and thousands of years. And it was the West that at large ended slavery before anybody
else. And really it had more to do with the philosophies that came out of the West, in
particular, the philosophies of liberty, that people are born with inalienable rights.
And that is what drove the progress that ended slavery. And that's something that I think we should all really admire and stick to because that's a philosophy that's ongoing. It's one
you can adopt, right? That people are individuals, that all people deserve to be treated with
dignity, that all people own their own lives. And that's the philosophy that ended slavery at large. It is
a Western-based philosophy. But with America in particular, we do have this wound that we
had slaves at the beginning of our nation. I suppose the original sin, it really started
with the colonization, right? And this is the narrative. And then we compounded it with slavery,
correct? Right, right. So you look back and you, man, there was some stuff that people did that was
really bad. And these same people founded or started our country. And so, wow, that's terrible.
And we look back and we say, wow, that was really bad. I'm glad we don't do that anymore.
And if you learn about it with modern context and modern understanding, and we have progressed in
the way we look at people.
I mean, I couldn't imagine humans owning other humans. It's appalling. And again,
I'm not going to take for granted for the fact that my understanding now is more progressed, and it is based on a philosophy of individual liberty. And maybe a lot of people didn't have
that or at least express it appropriately back then. So we have this understanding.
So here's what politicians do is they take that and they manipulate it.
And here's how they manipulate it.
Now, what they're not trying to do is hammer white people into submission.
In reality, what they're doing is they're trying to make them feel terrible and guilty
for things that they didn't do.
And they're trying to get them to feel empathetic about this and then manipulate the way that they vote and then the way that they act.
So this is how that's applied towards people who may identify more with slave owners because of the same skin color, which I think is silly.
You know, I have as much in common with a slave owner as one of my good friends, Larry, who's African-American, who was born right around the same time I was.
Neither one of us ever owned slaves. But, you know, people tend identify, or it's easy to get someone to identify with someone that looks
like them. So white people are like, oh my God, slave owners were white, even though I never owned
a slave. This is terrible. My ancestors came from Ireland and Portugal. So I should be able to claim
quite a bit of grievance, actually, because the Irish have been shit on by first the English,
and then even here
in America for hundreds of years. Oh, yeah. And I'm first generation
American. You go back one generation and my quote unquote ancestors weren't even here.
But nonetheless, you could take that and you can manipulate it. And you could tell people
with this philosophy of intersectionality, which again, is a Marxist philosophy. And the reason
why Marxism is so powerful, it's got some religious undertones. In fact, one of the core parts of the playbook of Marxism is to eliminate religion because you
can't worship anything above this philosophy. So you eliminate religion, eliminate people's
belief in God. Now they worship this defunct religion of Marxism, which says that group is
more important than identity. And boy, does that philosophy lead to some pretty terrible actions.
But anyway, so now you have intersectionality that says very arrogantly and ignorantly,
you are privileged, you are underprivileged based off of this one factor and totally ignoring the
complexity of humans. And then they take that a step further and say, now what we need to do
is we need to equalize society. But what they're not talking about is equalizing society based off
of opportunity, which is the only way that you can accomplish any semblance of equality.
It is actually, it's funny because the very act of observing advantages and disadvantages, the very act of even being aware of the fact that some people are tall, some people are short, some people are born with strong bodies, some people are born with weak or unhealthy bodies.
That very act right there shows you it's impossible to ever produce equal outcome. We're not ants. We're not bees. We don't live in a hive. In fact, even ants and bees aren't equal. It's really just an essay, but it's a fictional
essay. So I guess it is a very short story by Kurt Vonnegut. Anybody listening, just read that.
And that quickly illustrates where quality of outcome gets you when you double, triple,
quadruple down on it. Or you could listen to the song, The Trees by Rush. That's a great song. Or just look at what happens in societies that try to accomplish this and how the people are treated
and what actually happens in those societies. We have ones that are happening now. You can look and
see how Chinese citizens are silenced or how they should act or the camps that they re-education
camps. Look at Venezuela. Look at how they try to allocate resources. I mean, the Soviet Union had thousands of acres of rotting fields of wheat. Meanwhile, people starve in
certain parts of the Soviet Union because they couldn't figure out or plan how to allocate
resources like markets could. And so anyway, my point with all this is it's easy to manipulate.
And here's what it creates. It creates a few different scenarios or feelings. So if you buy into this because of the obvious observation that things are not the same,
there is no real equality in the sense that there's so many changes and differences in
mindset and the way we're born and all these circumstances. The very real thing, compound
that with past things that humans did that were terrible, which is real. Now you take that,
manipulate it and say, okay, now today we're going to attempt to categorize people based off of individual
privileges or perceived privileges. And now we're going to attempt to make everybody
equal based off of that. Here's what that causes, that creates. It creates strength in feeling like
a victim. That's number one. So if you are in the category of people that politicians or the
powers that be decide to
make the underprivileged, right now it happens to be being a minority.
In 2016, it was about being a woman.
Of course, incidentally, that was when Hillary Clinton was running for president.
That's when it was all about gender pay gap and it was all about toxic masculinity and
all that stuff.
So that was very advantageous then, right?
It was showing that women are underprivileged.
Of course, right now it has to do with minorities. So if you're in that
category and you hear this message, it can start to make you feel powerful through feeling like
a victim. Or another way to look at it that is interesting. So let's say life is just not going
your way. Things are not going well. And of course, it is mostly because of your behaviors
and your habits and your attitudes, but that would require self-reflection and personal responsibility.
And those things are completely repugnant to you.
So you can live in that or you can look to what other identity you might be able to glom
onto that allows you to claim grievance, to claim victim status, and that in a perverse way
can feel empowering. It can. Look, I'll even give many people the credit, the benefit of the doubt.
Maybe you are born in terrible situations. Maybe you do have major physical impairments. And so
now what you've done is you're focusing on the very things
you literally cannot control. That has become the center of your grievances. Again, I'll take it
back to fitness. You know what I love about fitness, Mike? It's objective. It's black and
white. It's nonpartisan. So I can talk about fitness and people, no matter where they come
from, it oftentimes makes sense. But when I'm training clients, the last thing you do as a
personal trainer, focus your client's attention on all the stuff they can't control.
You know, like, oh, right.
Oh, yeah, definitely.
You've got a bad bone structure.
Yeah, you definitely got some genetics that mean you can't be Mr. Olympia or a super.
Let's just focus on that.
What's the result of that?
Person never progresses and feels terrible.
What do you do as a good trainer?
You say, oh, yeah, yeah.
Those things are real.
You can't control.
Let's focus on the stuff you can control.
It's empowering and you can actually impact those things, right? So here's where the power from
feeling like a victim, here's your evidence of that. You actually see people talking to each
other and bringing up their underprivileged status as a way to either silence other people
or as a way to claim superiority. So you have, for example, a gay white man. This is a real thing.
There was a LGBT parade. One of the people leading the parade was a gay white man. This is a real thing. There was a LGBT parade.
One of the people leading the parade was a gay white man.
They took him down because he's white and male.
So no, no, no, no, no.
Because you're white and male, even though you're gay, you take a step down.
Or you hear people talking and they'll say, oh, I see you're privileged talking.
Or my opinion is more valid than yours because of these underprivileges.
So what it does is it gives power to feeling like
a victim very dangerous. Now here's what it does to other people. It preys on their empathy.
So now you're telling somebody, hey, you've got all these privileges. All these things give you
tremendous advantages, which by the way, the irony of this is it's the same thing that white
supremacists say. It's the same thing. A white supremacist says they're superior because they're white. The intersectionality champions say you're
privileged because you're white. It's so funny. They should all eat lunch together. They would
get along phenomenally if they just spoke about their philosophies. But now you're telling someone
because of these factors, you are privileged. You should feel terrible about it. You should
feel guilty about it. Through that guilty about it through that empathy through that
guilt and empathy we're going to have you vote and it's very by the way it's very condescending
if you really look at it for a person to not feel grateful or blessed that's totally different
that's humble but rather feel privileged and then go to somebody look down on them and be like man
i'm i feel so sorry for you because of your under i feel feel so sorry. Imagine if I went up to somebody who was overweight as a trainer and I said, man, I feel real bad for you because you're fat.
That's a really underprivileged... Life must suck for you because you're fat. So here's what I'm
going to do. You need me to give you this free stuff. How condescending. If someone came up to
me and said that to me, I'd be like, fuck off. Excuse my language. I'd be like, who are you to say that to me? So that's what it creates in some people is this guilt and this false misplaced empathy. And actually, really what is being pushed
is that you should be dispossessed
of anything that might give you privilege.
So if you have been deemed overprivileged,
you should not only feel bad about it,
but you should give up these things.
You should look through your life
and find where you have achieved a better outcome
for whatever reason. And you should dispossess yourself of those things because that is unfair.
We need to level the playing field. If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
definitely check out my VIP one-on-one coaching service,
because my team and I have helped people of all ages and circumstances lose fat, build muscle,
and get into the best shape of their life faster than they ever thought possible. And we can do
the same for you. Here's the deal. I love charity. I love people who volunteer and want to help other people.
If you're doing it because you feel guilty and bad for someone because you feel superior
to them, that's also very condescending.
Now, if you feel like you want to help people because you want to be a good person, that's
different.
That's totally different.
Totally different.
But again, it's like me walking up to someone, looking at them and scanning them and being like, oh, I noticed three underprivileges. Imagine walking up to someone in the store. You look at someone, you're like, oh, there's a trans person. I think that's a trans person. You walk up to them and you go, hey, man, here's 10 bucks. And they're like, why are you giving me 10 bucks? Well, you know, you're trans. That's what they're manipulating. That is the emotion that they're calling. And it sounds silly. That's exactly what ends up happening. But in other people, Mike, it causes resentment because you have people who are being told how
privileged they are. They, in fact, know their own lives. They, in fact, know the circumstances
and the context of their lives. And you tell somebody like, Adam, he's so privileged because
he's white. You're going to develop some resentment because the dude's going to be like,
hey, man, you have no idea the stuff that I've been through.
You have no idea the challenges I've had to overcome.
Stop telling me this.
That's not cool.
You are discrediting all the hard work and effort and stuff I've had to do
to accomplish some of the stuff that I've accomplished.
There's three things there.
You've got the power in being a victim, what a terrible message that is.
Imagine if you're a child, by the way.
You're a child and you're growing up in an environment that tells you that you're constantly
underprivileged. Imagine what kind of mindset, oh my God, if I had a kid who was born blind,
for example, or born disabled, I would not tell them, man, you're screwed. I would say,
yeah, you definitely got this challenge, but guess what, son or daughter, you're going to
have to make up for it in other ways. You got to overcome that. Let's focus on the stuff you can
change. Let's not look at it like a disadvantage. In fact, here's the way. It would be a different
conversation. But imagine if you were being hammered as a kid that because of one factor,
whether it be skin color or gender or sexual orientation or whatever, that you are just
screwed. That is a terribly, unbelievably terrible message.
So you create those three people. And then there's a fourth category, Mike,
that nobody wants to talk about. You confirm some people's superiority beliefs in themselves.
They talk as if the intersectionality crowd talks as if they're anti-racist or bigots.
They are creating more of them every single day because you are confirming to somebody how
superior they are because of their skin color or their gender or their whatever. You are confirming this belief that they are superior,
that they have this incredible privilege that's so powerful that makes them better than everyone
else. It's a terrible, terrible message. It's also, by the way, this message can be changed.
I can make it about gender. I can make it about class. I can make it about
other circumstances. This is the philosophy of Marxism. This is how Marxism takes over and
destroys countries. And what they do is they grab onto a real grievance or a real issue,
and they manipulate the shit out of it. In America, that just so happens to be race.
And that's a very powerful one. It's a very effective one to use here in America.
to be race. And that's a very powerful one. It's a very effective one to use here in America.
Gender to a much smaller degree can also be manipulated and used. And so this is exactly what it is. And so when people look at me and say, you are privileged, it's incomprehensible
how arrogant that is for someone to say that to me. And it is so counter to the philosophy
that has led to the most equal societies. These societies that I have first and foremost listed as part of their governments
protecting individual liberties, even above and beyond a majority vote.
You know, that's what the Constitution does, right?
We have certain liberties that are protected.
For example, speech is one.
And I'll use that one because most people like freedom of speech.
You know, freedom of speech doesn't exist to protect popular speech popular speech requires no protection everybody
likes it freedom of speech explicitly exists to protect unpopular speech so in other words you
say something unpopular even though the majority disagrees with you you can still say it these
concepts that have led to uh the ending of, the ending of segregation, giving women the right
to vote that led to this concept of individualism. In other words, looking at someone and saying
the only fair way to judge that person is off of their actions and their character. It is not fair.
Yeah. Allow them to operate freely under law and let's see how they do.
That is a concept that has led to the best outcomes we've ever seen. It is a radical concept.
People don't realize how crazy it is. It is counterintuitive in human intuition. And here's
where logic and objective thought come into play. So what we started the podcast with,
human intuition has led to historically for 99% of human history,
dictators, rulers, monarchs, peasants, and slaves. That's human intuition. You let humans run
things intuitively, that's what you end up getting. So this radical concept that, okay,
yes, groups exist. Yes, we could put ourselves in different categories. However, let's judge people
as individuals.
Let's protect their individual liberties, which are inalienable and are self-evident,
meaning they don't require anyone else to produce.
For example, you have freedom of speech that doesn't require someone else's labor to give
to you.
Just means you can speak your mind.
Let's value those things.
That has led to what we have today, which if you're a minority, if you're a woman, if you are gay or lesbian or transgender, if you are Muslim, the best places in the world to live today are societies that are based off of this concept of individual liberty and not on collectivism, which is judging everybody by skin color or gender or class or whatever.
Those have led to the best outcomes.
Which, of course, is a grand irony in all of this. Where would you rather go,
oppressed person, to make a life for yourself? North Korea or South Korea? Why?
It's insane to me because here's the thing. This is also true. It is not perfect. And yes,
this concept of liberty that was the origins of which you could say came from a combination of some Greek philosophy, Stoicism, and then really pushed forth by the Judeo-Christian religions that talk about man being created in the image of God and all that stuff and really being put in place first as a form of government in the West, America, Europe. In America, particularly, we have protected liberties that no other country, that are quite special to us. For example, our right to speak
is quite special to America. Our right to bear arms is very special to America. So this very
radical idea that we had, that we started with, definitely was not applied perfectly or universally initially.
And does create quite a bit of dysfunction at the state level. I mean, you could look at the polar opposite of China and you can go, wow, as far as a state goes, as far as a government goes,
being able to enact its will, it's pretty efficient. However, this is the radical opposite
of the ideology that is the spirit of america in china
the individual is nothing these people are considered ants and it is the colony that matters
and so that does give them certain advantages the people who are in power for example they can plan
they could plan almost generationally um or even multi-generally generationally because of that dynamic but
here we're saying that the individual matters enough to value to protect to protect by law
but also you know and the point that individualism matters enough to make that unconscionable that
we really should not be
able, like a government should never operate like that because there's something fundamentally evil
about it and something fundamentally almost inhuman about it. It's tyrannical. And look,
my point with this is this, this concept led to the founding of America. It was not applied
universally from a government standpoint. This is true.
We had slaves. Later on, we had segregation. Women could not vote. However, it is this concept that
drove us to progress, that drove us to free slaves. Segregation was ended by white people.
It was ended largely by the Republicans who were the original individualists,
right? The right to give women the right to vote was given by men, but it was driven by this
concept of liberty. Liberty is why America beats herself up. Liberty is literally why we have
arguments, debates, why we fight, because we push to progress. It's this philosophy that, although not applied perfectly at all, definitely not in our early
days of America, although today far more perfectly than ever before, it's what drives us to progress
and lead the world in equality of opportunity and protection under the law.
And then culturally, what does this lead to?
Now, culturally, there's lots of factors. There's your spiritual practices, how you are with your family, all that stuff.
But there is some influence here by this government philosophy of the spirit of America.
What has that led to? Interracial marriages continue to rise and grow. When they do independent
polls or studies, America, number one, the most diverse country in the world,
any way you slice it. Also, the most tolerant country in the world, any way you slice it.
Not perfect, but better than everybody else and always progressing. If you look at these things,
it trends in a wonderful direction to where the dream of Martin Luther King of people being judged
not by the color of the skin,
but the content of their character, this is driven by this philosophy and concept of liberty.
Intersectionality and this privilege philosophy as used by politicians is the opposite of that. It is collectivism. It will drive us in the opposite direction. It'll drive policies that are explicitly collectivist and racist. You know,
today, modern times, there are no laws that are explicitly racist. And what I mean by that is
there are no laws that have race listed in their legislation, except for laws that are driven
by this collectivist attitude. There's affirmative action laws, which are explicitly
racist, explicitly. And there are hate crime laws, which are explicitly racist. Now, I understand
what drives them. Again, it's that good feeling, that wanting to help others based off of this
defunct kind of philosophy. But on their face, they are actually the only racist and sexist or discriminatory,
based off of those things, laws. Other than that, there are no laws that explicitly list race
in their legislation anymore. And just to comment on those things,
especially in the context of white privilege, this idea that it's prejudice plus power,
and that's what racism is, and that whites have all the power
and so therefore non-whites can't be racist i consider that a conspiracy theory because
if white supremacy is real why do we have affirmative action to benefit non-whites
and non-asians it's not just discriminatory against whites, also Asians. Why is every major college
and every university committed, openly committed to, and this is reflected in their policy and in
their actions, social justice and racial equity? Why does every major corporation have major
diversity initiatives? They have diversity officers, they have diversity departments.
Why is there a major political party that is fully committed to social justice and racial
equity, ready to go all the way?
Where's the white supremacy in power?
All of the major levers of power in academia, media, pop culture are 100% in the tank for
social justice and racial equity.
So I don't get it.
And the same goes for most of the Western multimillion justice and racial equity. So I don't get it. And the same goes for most of
the Western multimillionaires and billionaires. They put their money behind social justice and
racial equity. So I can't wrap my mind around this element of the supposed white privilege
and the institutions that are benefiting whites so much. There's lots of ways you could argue that, right?
The clearest way that I like to look at this
is if you look at groups,
which I don't like to necessarily do,
you can definitely learn things from looking at groups,
but you got to look a lot deeper.
You can't just take it at surface value.
I like to look at people as individuals,
but if you look at groups,
the most successful groups in America are minority groups,
Asian Americans, Indian Americans.
There are also African immigrants actually perform better in terms of wealth and incarceration rates
and satisfaction. There are Middle Eastern immigrant groups that also perform better than,
let's say, white Americans, which I hate saying that because that's also very general. My gosh,
there's so many different cultures. And when you talk about white people,
it's silly. But nonetheless, and same thing with black or brown, there's so many different
cultures within them. It's so silly. It's not that groups don't exist. Of course,
they exist. And you're talking about statistics. And when you come down to an individual level,
it's the old stereotype cliche that, yes, there's a reason
why stereotypes exist because certain groups of people exhibit certain types of behavior patterns
on average. But of course, you have bell curves. You have people who are outliers in one way or
another. And even if you break that down, Mike, and we could try breaking it down. It's extremely
complex. But as of right now, the best science that we have, the best studies that we have, a
few factors that will determine, that can predict a child's future success as measured
by wealth, education, incarceration rate, medical or health, I should say.
There are a few factors you could look at.
And what those factors...
I mean, the best predictor, single predictor, it's not 100%, but it's the best single predictor,
is whether or not you grew up with two parents. That's the best single predictor of that.
And we listed... Asian Americans are the top performing group in America. They also,
incidentally, have the lowest rate of single parent household. So there you go.
had the lowest rate of single parent household. So there you go. But my point with all of this is not to say that on its face, you can try to list one thing as a potential privilege or
disadvantage. I think we can make arguments that are compelling in one direction or another.
We can use obvious examples like disabilities. But my point with this is,
when you look at a complex individual and their behaviors and the addition of all these other
potential privileges that that person has in their life or whatever, you cannot look at someone
and say that they're privileged. And you should definitely not.
I don't entirely agree because on an individual level, somebody could say,
I'm privileged. And yes, that is very
true. I mean, the dictionary definition of privilege applies to me. I do have special rights.
Well, rights depends on how you want to define that, but I do have advantages. I certainly have
advantages in several ways, but to that, I say, so what? I say, why don't you go get some privilege
as well? There's a fundamental hypocrisy here.
For anybody who would criticize me for being privileged,
I would say, yep, you're right.
And I've worked hard for most of those privileges.
Some of them were related probably to my family
and my upbringing, and that's fine.
But I wasn't given as much of a hand up
as some people would assume.
But yes, I'm at a point in my life now where I certainly enjoy privileges.
And if you were me, you would feel the same way.
And you want privilege as well.
So there's a disingenuousness about a lot of this in that we're giving, I think, or
some people give these types of arguments and these claims
too much respect and too much consideration. They're not authentic observations. These are not
positions that people came to through Socratic, rational, unemotional thinking. No, these people
are not arguing in good faith and they are hypocritical
because they just wish they,
and I'm speaking generally,
but this is going to generally be the case.
They just wish that they had more privilege
and they are envious that you have more than they have
and they want some of it.
You could say that.
I mean, but honestly,
the crux of it really is which philosophy, which
ideology is going to lead to the best progress and outcomes? Is it an ideology that says all of us
should be protected equally by the letter of the law? Now, of course, it's administered by people
and people are not perfect, but the best thing we could do is put it in writing in the law.
So there, and how do we do that?
Identifying people as individuals and which philosophy should we adopt?
One in which we look at people and judge them by their actions and their character and their
behaviors, or one in which we judge people off of factors that are their skin color or
their gender or their sexual orientation or whatever else category you want to place them in.
Which one is going to lead to the better outcome?
And we know which one.
We know which one.
And these are very abstract, convoluted models dreamed up by intellectuals in ivory towers.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
No, that's a hundred percent.
And I think you're speaking to an important point here is what outcome are we actually
trying to achieve? That's a question I've asked is what are people who are denigrating
privilege and trying to use this as a psychological weapon? What are they trying to achieve? What
actually is the end game here?
They want you to vote or buy a particular way.
That's really what it boils down to.
They want you to feel bad or empathetic or victimized. And they want to use that as a way to manipulate you into hurting you into the right corral
so that you make the decisions that they want you to make because individualism
is empowering. It also is the antidote to manipulation. It's looking out and saying,
I am responsible for my own thoughts and actions.
And that's the key as a personal responsibility to use the title of a book that I recommend everybody read if they haven't, Extreme Ownership, right?
To refuse to accept any outside interventions, to refuse to accept that anything is responsible for
your condition or your situation or an outcome that you experienced except for you. And if that immediately turns you off, dear listener,
if that immediately sounds wrong, if that feels wrong,
I challenge you to read that book
and see if you could think about it otherwise,
to see how you feel when you can come to a place
where you refuse to be a victim, no matter what, no matter what has
happened to you, even if it is factually true that you were victimized by the dictionary definition,
again, to talk Aurelius, right? How you perceive it and how you interpret it and how you act on
such a victimization is the key. The key is not objectively what has happened or not happened.
It is subjectively what you do with it. And so even if it is a fact that you have received
some harmful action that you cannot conceive of any reason why it should have happened to you,
you can still take extreme ownership of what comes next and in some cases even what has happened if
you're willing to expand your level of responsibility and maybe for example look at
how the sequence of events led to this fiasco and what you could have done differently along the way
but didn't and this is is something that is part and
parcel to leadership, good leaders. This is the crux of the book. There are a couple of other
key principles shared in the book, but of course they chose that title for a reason. And this is
the make break actually for leadership is, can you take responsibility for everything under your downstream, right?
If we're talking about a chain of command and good leaders or great leaders do, they
never blame others for undesirable outcomes, even if they didn't directly have anything
to do with the leader even if it was one of their juniors
who went rogue and did something wild and crazy a good leader doesn't doesn't blame that person
and say hey I had nothing to do with that that guy's an idiot he looks at it as what did I not
do that I did I not train this guy well enough? Did I put him in a situation where he
couldn't win? Did I not see that he was under way too much stress and he should have never been
there in the first place and so forth? Yeah. It's mirrors and windows, right?
If something goes wrong, look in the mirror. If something goes right, look out the window to the
people around you and give them credit. Another good book to look at would be Viktor Frankl's Man's Search for Meaning. It was a man
that was in the Nazi death camps. And then he wrote, he survived. And some quotes from him,
everything can be taken from a man, but one thing, the last of the human freedoms to choose
one's attitude in any given set of circumstances to choose one's own way. This is a very empowering thought process.
It's in a very empowering way of being. And I want to kind of...
And it leads to good outcomes. Again, just coming back to something that you were talking about. And
that's very important because it allows us to go from the realm of the abstract and the academic to practical reality, objective outcomes.
And if we're talking about us individually, the ability to flourish in our life.
Right. And really just to hammer this home, there's nothing wrong at all with wanting to
help other people. There's nothing wrong with wanting to make
the world a better place. But the most effective person that's going to do that is you when you
are healthy, strong, empowered, and effective. You are not an effective person. You're trying
to fix the world. Meanwhile, your life is in shambles. You don't have any discipline. You're trying to fix the world. Meanwhile, your life is in shambles. You don't have any discipline.
You're unhealthy.
You're not helping anybody.
You can't innovate nearly as well.
You can't produce nearly the same result.
So be the best version of yourself, number one.
And by the way, just doing that, just trying to be the best person you can, you will affect
more change than anything just from doing that.
But then take it a step further.
Now you've accomplished that. Now you help other people as an effective human being. And be careful with
your feelings because your feelings can drive decisions that actually result in the opposite
desired outcome. And I'll give you one simple, basic, easy example. There's lots of legislation
that we pass based off of feelings that actually
produces the opposite result. One simple, easy example of that are laws that fix the price of
labor. For example, a minimum wage law, a law that says nobody can make less than, I don't know,
$10 an hour, which the feeling behind that is people deserve to make at least $10 an hour.
Nobody should be paid less than $10 an hour.
But in effect, and in reality, if we take out our feelings and emotion, what we've effectively done
by passing a law like that, for example, is we have made everybody whose skills and experience
in life context that is less valuable than $10 on the open market, we have made those people now
valuable than $10 on the open market. We have made those people now unemployable. The very people that we think we're trying to help, we have now relegated them to the system. We've knocked them
out of the market. They can never work because they have a felony or because they have no
experience. Now they go to an employer and they want to get a job and the employer has to pay
them at least 10 bucks an hour. and the person's skills and experience and past
doesn't make them worth $10 an hour on the market, that employer is like, I can't employ you.
If you took that law out, which feels good, but actually produces the opposite result. If you
took that out, now that person can go to wherever and say, look, I know you're paying some people
$10 an hour. I know my skills are lacking. I know I have a felony, but let me work for $4 an hour.
Let me build some skills.
Let me show you what I can do.
Now you've got some leverage, and now you've made them employable, and you've given them a path to help themselves.
And this is a sad, not a sad, it's an unfortunate fact, I think, because it doesn't feel good sometimes.
But the unfortunate fact is the best way to help people is to empower people to help themselves.
This is true in fitness and health.
I cannot get somebody to lose 50 pounds of body fat unless they themselves want to do
it and make those changes.
It just doesn't work.
It's impossible.
We have to empower people to help themselves.
And oftentimes, what does that mean in terms of legislation?
You just get out of the damn way. You just get out of the way. Stop placing all these barriers in front of them that
prevent them from doing things. Stop telling them that they're so underprivileged that they need
everybody to give them things and that they're screwed and there's nothing they can do about it.
Stop saying that. Get out of the way. Give people the opportunity to help themselves.
And then if you want to go out and help people, now do it out of the goodness of your heart.
Give them opportunities to help themselves. Hand them a ladder if they need something to climb to
get to another spot. That's totally fine. There's nothing wrong with that. But look at the end
result of these insane political philosophies that are used to manipulate you. Intersectionality, privilege leads to the
attempt at equalizing result, which leads to tyranny and destruction. And the irony of this
is the people who are most tyrannized and most destroyed under governments that follow this
philosophy are minorities, are the smaller groups. It is not the majority. Look up the term,
if you're listening right now, useful idiots.
This is a part of the Marxist playbook. They will take a group, use them. Once they get what they
want, the first group that they execute are those useful idiots. Now you're out. Now we're in power
and majority rules. And that's when the ideology no longer matters. Once power has been seized, it does not matter what ideas were used to get there
because the end result now is, and this is just human nature and it may never change,
but tyranny really just comes in one flavor when it's all said and done.
It does. And so, you can definitely feel blessed, definitely feel gratitude.
And use the privilege. Just to put a cap on that is having privilege is not a bad thing.
What you do with it is what matters.
And it comes to, again, your character and your actions.
I mean, take philanthropy.
Everybody who donates money to philanthropy, the fact that they can do that means that
they are privileged to some degree.
And the vast majority of philanthropic giving comes from, of course,
the ultra rich who are extremely privileged. There's a lot of good philanthropy and then
it has been abused. Like John Rockefeller Sr. pioneered the abuse of philanthropy for
the purpose of accruing power. However, that's not the case with most individual people who give
time and even give or give money or even time to charitable causes.
So it's how they use it.
And what I said earlier about being the best version of yourself oftentimes results in the best outcome for other people.
I'll give you, here's a simple example.
It's one that pisses people off, but it's totally true.
Who saved more trees?
true. Who saved more trees? The innovators who invented the zip drive that they did because they wanted to make themselves successful, now resulting in the drastic reduction in the use of paper.
Who helped more people? Bill Gates, the entrepreneur, or Bill Gates, the philanthropist?
I can make a very strong argument that the entrepreneur or Bill Gates, the philanthropist. I mean, I can make a very
strong argument that the entrepreneur helped more people through his innovations. And so
I'm not comparing and saying it's bad. Oh, no, no, no. I know. All I'm saying is
privilege itself, it's how you use it, right? Are you in a privileged position and you're
using it to be arrogant and condescending and to put other people down and to put harmful products and services out into
the world like cuties or the, what is it, the Sacker family who has been embroiled in the-
It's so crazy to me that, and it's funny, this is how, look, what a great example of mass
manipulation. The rage and outcry over a Native American image on Land O'Lakes butter that caused them
to remove it.
No problem.
By the way, I don't mind.
It's a market response.
Okay.
Take the-
And that's how they felt about it.
They're like, well, whatever.
And if the market in 10 years, if it indicates that this will increase sales, putting it
back on the packaging, we'll put it back on the packaging, whatever.
My point with that is mass rage.
Everybody's pissed off.
Take Aunt Jemima off the syrup and take the Native American woman off the butter.
Okay, everybody's pissed off.
Then we literally, and this is just an example of mass manipulation.
Then we literally have a documentary on Netflix that is literally sexualizing 11-year-old
children, literally.
That is literally sexualizing 11-year-old children.
Literally. But put cells only to make you understand how repugnant that is.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Right.
So, but there's some outrage from there, but then there's a lot of people trying to prevent
it from being taken down.
And it's a lot of the same people that wanted the Native American woman to be taken off
the butter.
Now, does that mean that these people are bad people?
No, it just means that they're manipulated. They've been manipulated to be mad at what
they are told to be mad at and not mad what they should be mad at. And so it's insane to me.
It's happening right now. This underlying philosophy, this collectivist Marxist philosophy
is powerful. It is insidious. It has religious power behind it. It's like a defunct religion,
and it can take many, many forms. And what we're seeing right now is this use of this philosophy
to manipulate the masses and pay very close attention. And again, one last point, okay?
If you're one of these people that is so distrustful of other people, oh my God, everybody's so evil and they're trying to have power over me and people can't be trusted.
Why in the hell would you give more power to people in government?
They're still humans.
In fact, I would even say this.
There's a bit of a self-selection bias with people who seek power.
You probably have more power-hungry people seeking power.
have more power hungry people seeking power. Why in the hell would we give them more power to censor our speech, to censor our social media, to control us and tell us what we can and can't do?
Why don't we adopt this philosophy instead, which is protect my individual liberty. I have personal
responsibility. I'll be a good person. Let's judge each other by our
behaviors and our actions, not by the group that we may potentially belong to, which be based on
skin color or gender or sexual orientation or religion or whatever. Let's just look at how
other people act. Let's look at their character and let's take it from there. That's the philosophy
that's grown and progressed us. It's what's led to some incredible changes in very short periods of time when you look at
things from a historical standpoint. Let's not throw that out. Let's continue to use that the
way we've been using it to progress us. And let's continue to block and throw out these
collectivist ideas, however they present them, however alluringly they present them.
Don't allow yourself to be manipulated by this garbage at all.
People who think their politicians have their best interests are like guys who think their
strippers are into them. That's so true. There's always that guy. No, dude, you really like me.
I remember one. I remember he was, I don't know, 19 or 20. I used to play volleyball with some
friends when I was younger living in Florida.
And there was a guy that this stripper had sunk her hooks into him.
He blew through thousands and thousands of dollars.
And he would tell us how into him she is.
And he thought that they were going to be a thing.
And when he ran out of money, all of a sudden, her legs closed.
This is a great example.
No, politicians today are the same game as always.
It's no different than the fifth grade, the kid that runs for fifth grade president that
says, vote for me and you get free pizza on Wednesdays.
It's really no different.
Vote for me.
I'll give you more free stuff.
Vote for me.
I care about you.
I'll help you out by passing these laws that whatever.
Really vote for them to get out of the way and then be a good person.
Make yourself a better person.
You know, try to grow and do the right thing, which is often the difficult thing to do.
Embrace the struggle and the challenge and the discipline that it takes to being a good
person.
You know, working hard, going to bed early, eating right, being logical and
objective. Do those things and watch what happens and stop placing your trust in these strippers
that are pretending like they like you. And take responsibility for mistakes and
make amends if you need to. Sometimes mistakes require that. Sometimes they don't. Sometimes
you just have to try harder next time.
Sometimes you have to apologize.
Sometimes you have to do a little bit more than that, and that's okay.
But I totally agree, man.
Well, thanks for taking the time.
As always, this was a great discussion.
Is there anything you want to let everybody know about as we wrap up?
I mean, obviously, people are going to know about MindPump and everything that you guys
are doing.
Do you want to talk about your book at all, or is that too far out?
No, too far out. Okay. So the podcast,
Mind Pump, we do talk about current events, but it's mainly a fitness and health podcast. So what you heard me just talking about, you probably won't hear me talking a lot about this.
And the same goes for mine. It's just both of us are into this stuff. This is a bit of our
side hustle, I guess. I love having these discussions. They're wonderful. And I love debate. I love debate. I love discussion. Here's a practice that I'll
recommend to your listeners, regardless of your opinion on what we just talked about.
Do this. If you have a strong opinion about something, you feel very, very strongly about
something, find somebody on the opposite side that is very good at articulating their argument,
on the opposite side that is very good at articulating their argument, has great information,
is open for discussion and debate, and then debate them open-mindedly. Don't argue with them,
but debate them and allow yourself to have your mind changed if they do a better job.
It's a wonderful feeling. And then the second piece of advice I'll give is this.
This is awesome, by the way. This is so much fun. When you're on the internet or your phone,
open up CNN and then open up Fox News and toggle between the two of them, and you will get a very clear picture
of the narrative of both political parties. It is awesome.
A good news aggregator for that is Drudge Report, which used to be a conservative-leaning outlet,
but I would say at this point, he certainly has gone anti-Trump.
So it's not a pro-Trump. It's not like what it was in 2015, 2016, but that also is an easy way
just to see both sides of the narrative and how the same events and the same, well, situations
can be spun in different ways. Well, full disclosure, just for me, I identify,
I'm not 100% with the libertarian political party. I'm libertarian-ish. So I definitely
am pro free markets. So that means you're only a little bit into kiddie porn.
Jeez. God, Mike. That's terrible. That's the libertarian plan.
No, it's not, dude. Jeez. We need to have a free market.
No, you believe in... That's anarchy. Jesus. That's like anarcho-cap No, it's not, dude. Jeez. We need to have a free market. No, you believe in...
That's anarchy.
Jesus.
That's like anarcho-capitalist.
That is not me.
Libertarian-ish, I would say.
And so, full disclosure, 2008, I voted for Barack Obama, mainly because he opposed the
Patriot Act and NDAA.
These were liberty-destroying acts.
He was anti-war, at least in his rhetoric.
Of course, when he was in office, he just acted just like Bush did. In fact,
he was Bush on steroids with a nice bow because he spoke so well. 2012, I voted for Gary Johnson.
He teleprompters well. When he's off script, he's not very impressive,
but he is an impressive order when he's reading a teleprompter.
Very likable, very charismatic. 2012, I voted for Gary Johnson. I'm not a Republican. I'm not
a Democrat. I will say this though. I identified a little bit more with the left back in 2001 and
2008, back when the right was the pro-war. Pro-mporation, ship all the jobs overseas, ship all the cheap labor in,
NAFTA, TPP. Now, these days, I cannot believe how far the Democrat Party has gone left. I cannot
believe that they had an open socialist running in the primaries. I can't believe.
Who really should be their candidate if we're going by enthusiasm.
Oh, yeah. No, he's not the establishment. They got rid of him real quick.
He's not the puppet. Yeah, Biden's the puppet. And the modern Democrat party has gone so far
left and insane, and they have so much power right now, or at least people behind them,
they pose the biggest threat to our liberties and freedoms and way of life and our philosophies.
The modern right, there's definitely things I disagree with them on, but I identify more with them these days. And I'm sure that'll change in the future. But right now. and basically destroyed the status quo for the GOP. I don't know if they can ever go back to
politics as usual, if they can ever go back to their old neocon ways. Imagine if after Trump,
the GOP ran Jeb Bush again. It would be the lowest GOP turnout ever.
Here's what happened is you had libertarian Republicans strongly influencing the Republican
party. I mean, look, here's the deal. Republicans used to be anti-gay marriage. Now, neither party what happened is you had libertarian republicans strongly influencing the republican party i mean
look here's the deal republicans used to be anti-gay marriage now neither party is anti-gay
marriage the republicans used to be pro-extreme drug war policy keep all the drugs super illegal
throw people in jail if they just possess them they were more that than the democrats were
for sure was that hw oh i, all of them up until Donald Trump,
actually. And really, it's because you had people like Justin Amash and Rand Paul and other
Republicans pushing the showing, talking about how the drug war has been a massive failure.
We need to revisit it. Apparently, it started with Nixon. I just Googled it.
Oh, you mean who started the drug? The war. Yeah, the war on drugs. Oh, well, Nixon, just for context,
the scheduling of drugs had nothing to do with the drugs. It had everything to do with being
able to jail the counterculture. That's what it was all about. The counterculture at the time,
at the time that we had the Cold War and we ramped up our CIA and everything was a threat. And they saw the counterculture, which openly protested
the Vietnam War and protested the establishment. They viewed them as a threat. And we were hyper
vigilant, especially at that time because of the Cold War. And how the hell do you use your
government force against people who are protesting. Protesting is a protected right.
And so brilliantly and also despicably, Nixon took their favorite drugs and listed them
as Schedule I.
So if you look at all the Schedule I drugs, it was all the drugs the hippies used, including
marijuana.
And now they had a wonderful way to throw them all in jail.
And then it became public policy.
And then Reagan enforced it even more. And then we had the minority coalitions that supported it because of
the crack epidemic in these urban neighborhoods. And it just ramped up this drug war to the point
where possessing, you know, a little bit of crack cocaine would throw you in jail for longer than if
you, you know, if you raped someone or something like that. So just insane. And the CIA was
involved in creating the crack epidemic. Oh, there's conspiracy theories around that.
That term just needs to go away because conspiracies are the dominant theme of history.
I used it earlier in this podcast, ironically, but when you have very strong circumstantial
evidence for something and you have way too many coincidences, it's no longer a conspiracy theory. Again, especially when by definition, people have
been conspiring since the beginning of time and will continue to conspire. Rich and powerful
people will always work together behind the scenes doing things they probably shouldn't be doing to
stay rich, stay powerful, get richer, get more powerful,
destroy their enemies, like what you're talking about. What you are sharing is a conspiracy.
That's a conspiracy theory. No, no, no. That's not conspiracy. That's actually-
No, no. That is a conspiracy by definition. Oh, I hear what you're saying. No, yeah.
Yes, that's how the world works. Yeah, no, but it's real. It's out. This is now
public information and knowledge. That was the policy behind Nixon and what they did
and all that stuff. And you got to be careful when you go down as defined by modern, I guess,
lexicon conspiracy theory, because we are now in the age of social media and AI algorithms
that has now been proven to radicalize people through this rabbit holes of conspiracy theories
as defined now. And so you got to be very careful.
It's more just a matter of if you are going to look into that type of stuff,
you have to have a high standard of evidence. You can't go about it willy nilly. You can't be lazy
and just look at Instagram or Facebook memes and think that you're learning things. It takes
actual study and it takes vetting of sources of information who's reliable
who's not and understanding the importance of primary documents and yeah totally i mean yes
and we do have real like you know like for conspiracy a book i write if you haven't read
it you should read it conspiracy in america written by he's a professor, I forget his name, but that's an example of somebody who I consider
a reliable source. And the book is well-researched, it's well-cited, primary documents,
and you can learn about particularly the phrase conspiracy theory and how the CIA was involved
in weaponizing that phrase. They didn't come up with it, but they weaponized it. And it is now,
it's now used, of course, to discredit anything
that the establishment does not want us talking about or even thinking about. And that book
does a very good job just showing you how we have gotten to that point. And there are many other
such good books. If you want to learn about the quote-unquote conspiracy theory of 9-11,
If you want to learn about the quote unquote conspiracy theory of 9-11, check out David Ray Griffin's work. Very well researched, well sourced, well cited things you actually can go verify for yourself.
There are many strange coincidences and many very strong pieces of circumstantial evidence that would indicate that our government may have known something.
The official story is probably not
the whole story. Another book, Day of Deceit, if you want to learn about Pearl Harbor.
And I'd say, I mean, that primary document, compelling, almost red-handed evidence that
not only did our government know that Pearl Harbor was going to happen. They actually helped instigate it. They took indirect Machiavellian actions to bait
Japan into doing it and then allowed it to happen as a pretext for-
Well, you don't even have to go that far. I mean, you can read the creature from Jekyll Island,
which is all true. You can look at how the Gulf of Tonkin, which was an event-
Another good example. One of the two supposed attacks actually never even
happened. No, and that's all declassified. We also know the- Operation Northwoods,
go to archive.gov and read that. That's real. That's unclassified. Or the Tuskegee experiments
that they now officially apologize for. So I get the whole like- The American eugenics movement,
which was over in California and some of the experiments they did with-
Planned Parenthood. Look at the founder of Planned Parenthood and her history.
Saying some of the things that she had to say about black people in particular.
Oh, it's terrible. It's absolutely terrible. This is all real documents.
This is the factual part, okay? Because you could go down a pretty crazy rabbit hole,
but here's the fact. Whether government or people in power cause things to happen or not,
it depends on the situation and the evidence and all that stuff.
But one thing's for sure, something happens, they're going to take advantage.
They will use it for political gain.
That is a fact.
So, you know, if there is a terrorist attack, you better believe politicians are behind
closed doors and thinking, how can we use this to motivate people to vote?
Yeah, the slot machines, they start ringing loudly.
Oh, I mean, oh, we have a video of an officer killing a minority in a terrible way. How can
we use this to manipulate people? Or we have a video of this. How can we use it to manipulate
people to act in a particular way? I mean, look at the Patriot Act and NDAA. I mean,
if September 11th never happened, no way in hell Americans would have supported an act that gives the government the ability to not just spy on you without any judge or jury or warrant, but they actually have the power, if they want, to throw you in a cage forever and tell nobody about it as long as they declare that you're a terrorist, which requires no proof.
These are all things that we passed because of events. And so we get, again, this goes back to what I said earlier,
fear, anger, empathy. They will use those to manipulate the shit out of you to make you
act in ways that are not in your best interest or in the best interest of others,
which is why you need to practice the skill of objective, logical thought.
It's not perfect, but it's the only antidote to that kind of manipulation.
And we are in an unprecedented time.
We have a pandemic.
So it's a worldwide pandemic.
Fear is at all-time highs.
We're also in the era of social media, which does a phenomenal job of driving those behaviors
through your own clicks
and the things that you want to read and what you give attention to. And then on top of it,
we are in an election year where they're going to spend record amounts of money on the books,
off the books. Did you see that Mike Bloomberg just announced yesterday or the day before that
he's putting $100 million into Florida alone.
Yeah. He's also very ineffective. I mean, how much money did he spend to win the primaries and he got trounced? Well, I mean, he's about as likable as an
eel, so that's not surprising, but money has been the primary driving factor in presidential
elections until 2016. And I don't remember
where I heard this from. I did file it into my reliable source drawer. So I'm going to share it,
although I can't say it is accurate with complete certainty. But if I remember correctly,
apparently 2016 was the first instance where the presidential candidate who spent the most money lost. That's true.
And she spent, what, about $500 million or $600 million more than Trump?
It wasn't a small amount.
No, she did spend more.
What it was is that the Trump administration, well, there's a lot of factors.
Okay, let's be honest.
I think the main factor that gave Trump the win, and if he wins again, we'll give him
this win, is less to do with his advertising and his campaigning
and more to do with how far the left has gone
and now they're pushing everybody in that direction.
I mean, Trump won less because he's Trump and what he says
and more because Hillary Clinton and the left.
Which was so unlikable.
Well, they just drove people into that direction.
They're doing it again. If Trump wins again, you should give the trophy to the left It was so unlikable. Democrats who are going to vote for Trump, not because they like Trump. They're literally pinching their nose while they're doing it, but rather because the extreme left pushed them in
that direction. And then the other reason is that the Trump campaign spent their money quite
effectively. They were actually the first. They used social media in brilliant and really,
really brilliant ways. And Trump, in some ways, is a brilliant politician if you just study the art of politics.
He's not charismatic like Obama or Reagan or Clinton.
He definitely doesn't have that same likability factor.
But as somebody that knows how to use the media, Trump is brilliant.
I mean, the guy will do a tweet and he'll misspell a word on purpose, knowing full well,
all the media is going to share it and people are just going to read his message. He knows very well
how to troll the left, get them to react in ways that are in his favor. I mean, he's brilliant at
the way he uses media. It's not presidential. It's in no way like past brilliant politicians,
but effective nonetheless. Yeah, it's a different playbook.
Yeah. And I don't know how effective he would be if the left wasn't so extreme,
to be quite honest. I mean, if the left... If they were running Tulsi Gabbard...
Oh, it'd be tough. She would have beat him. Tulsi Gabbard, I could not imagine her on a
debate stage with Trump, a former veteran, fought in war, very moderate, strong,
confident woman. You can't shake her. Also attractive, which matters a lot.
It would screw Trump. He would have a tough time being a bully to her because she fought in war.
To be fair, he probably wouldn't even want to bully her in the way that he wanted to bully
Hillary because she's a very different person. There's a reason why the DNC quickly washed their hands of her.
Yeah, but I don't think he knows how to not.
He's a bull.
Anywhere he goes, he acts like a bull,
and that works very well under certain circumstances.
A healthy, vibrant, cognitively functioning properly Biden
would actually pose a threat to Trump on the debate stage.
I mean, 10 years ago, 15 years ago, Biden was a pit bull,
and he would have fought back against Trump on the debate stage. I mean, 10 years ago, 15 years ago, Biden was a pit bull and he would have fought back against Trump on the debate stage and it would have been a great battle.
But Biden is so obviously cognitively, he's got some serious-
Deficient.
Yeah, that he's going to look terrible. And of course, Hillary.
Could you imagine him four hours on Rogan with Trump? It would end in the first hour with
him unconscious on the floor. Well, I mean, and to be fair, I'm sure in a four hour conversation,
Trump would give his political opponents like hours of political fodder because.
Sure. He says all kinds of, he only knows how to shoot from the hip and seems to have very little
sense of tact when it comes to playing this game.
The bully, when you give him the bully pulpit, he just, you just never know.
You never know what's going to come out of his mouth or out of his Twitter account.
He's not the leader that, you know, unites everybody and makes them feel good and all that stuff.
He just, you know, like when these riots happened, he got up there and he just, he's angry and pissed off.
And I'm like, oh man, that is the opposite what you should sound like when this happens.
Well, your actions behind the scenes should totally could be different.
I mean, that's like Obama.
When those riots happened with Obama, he was on the stage and, you know, stroking everybody off.
And then behind the scenes, he's, you know, National Guard's coming in and, you know, shooting rubber bullets and tear gas at everybody.
You know, so Trump does not play that side of politics very well at all. But boy, does he use media in ways
that if you step... I don't care if you like him or hate him, if you take a step back and you see
how he plays the left like a puppet, he gets them to react. And then they realize what happened when
it's too late. It's pretty interesting. Yeah. I saw a study that estimated that he got over
a billion dollars in free media back in 2016.
It's just hilarious.
It's just hilarious to me.
He'll do his like, you know, these...
What's that girl's name that does his press briefings?
The blonde lady?
Oh, Kylie?
Kaylee?
Yeah.
I mean, she's brilliant, right?
But goes up there.
And I don't remember what video it was that she played on loop while she'd answered questions.
It was some just hilarious video of... I don't remember what it was, but of the loop while she'd answered questions it was some just hilarious
video of i don't remember what it was but of the left doing something stupid or whatever
and while she's answering questions it's playing on loop on the tv behind her i mean this is the
kind of shit that he does because he's gonna get airtime because it's a press briefing oh i think
it was the peaceful protesters yeah yeah yeah riding looting and it was just on loop right i grew up on the
internet so i appreciate stuff like that you know i have to and i mean to be objective the right
memes way better than the left does i'm sure you know this there's actually research on this was
it a university university of montana but there was a university study that was done to assess the effectiveness of memeing.
And they concluded that the right is overwhelmingly more effective in terms of virality.
And I mean, it's not hard to see why.
I mean, your average leftist meme is completely unfunny and has way too much text.
It's like a wall of fucking runes that you're supposed to decode.
It's so bad.
And I think part of that comes from,
at the heart of good humor
is what you're trying to say.
What is your observation?
What is your unencoded message?
And once you have that,
then you can work it in different ways
to make it funny.
But if your message is fundamentally wrong, for example, if it doesn't accord with reality,
or if it is not interesting, if it is not edgy, if it's just conformist, normie, what
everybody thinks, it's very hard to take that and make it funny.
And part of it is just how extreme they are. So it's hard to
make a funny, quick, viral meme with an extreme... Which is an overreaction, right? So when your
fundamental message is just a silly little piece of hysterical nothing burger, it's hard to make
that funny. It is. And again, these days, I just do not identify at all with the left anymore because they've gone so extreme.
But I will say this, Mike.
Here's my fear.
And my fear, this fear is based off of what I think to be the real risk that is posed to us right now.
So a bit of a risk coming from the left in their policies, in their socialist policies, in some of these collectivist ideas that they're promoting.
So I do have some fear there, but here's where I really fear. What I really fear is the strong,
inevitable reaction from the opposite side that they're going to cause, which is going to be
equally tyrannical, but it's going to be wrapped in an American flag. It's going to sound and look
very patriotic. It's going to be nationalism. And this one, I fear more because Americans like nationalism. It feels good. It feels uniting,
but it can be just as tyrannical. And so I'm waiting for that. And in fact, Trump with his
authoritarian tendencies hints at it sometimes. I mean, he made a comment not that long ago where
we should throw people who burn the American flag in jail for a year. That's a nationalist. And I know part of me is
like, yeah, because I hate when I see people do that. But then the logical side of me is like,
if you own that flag, if it's your property, you could do whatever the hell you want with it.
I don't care. It hurts my feelings that you burn the American flag because you don't understand the
ideals it stands for, but whatever. But he talked about throwing him in jail and he threw it out there, not as actual policy, but as a comment.
I think he's testing the waters.
And then just recently he passed this law that's going to, or this act or whatever, that's going to, you know, compel public schools to teach children about how great America is.
And of course, it feels like a justifiable counter to the message of how bad
America is that we get sometimes in public schools. But it's propaganda really is what it is.
So what I'm afraid of is that the left pushes so damn hard and gets so extreme and keeps up this
insane ideology that promotes these riots and whatever that we get like a federal police force,
that we get these laws that are
like you know if you're not a company supporting america then you can't conduct business and these
kind of literal fascist policies that'll be the reaction that i'm afraid of because americans will
vote that in they like that you wave an american flag and you say it's for us and then people will
vote in their own you know actual literal. So that's the thing I want
to keep an eye out for, but it's not happening yet. Right now, what we see is the extreme left
that's causing all the problems. Yeah. Well, if we don't end, we'll probably never end.
So we should probably just wrap it up. And one last little comment I wanted to make just because
I think it's useful. If you, and not you, Sal, but I'm sure you agree with this, Sal, but
if you, Mr. or Mrs. Listener, are wanting to decide where you fall on, I think, any matter,
really, consider this. And this comes from Charlie Munger. But if you can't make your opponent's
argument, if you can't summarize their argument better than they can, you don't know what
you're talking about. It doesn't matter what you think and what you've researched and how long
you've sat in your little echo chamber and wallowed in your confirmation bias and disconfirmation
bias. You can only really say you're informed and you've really taken the time to come to an
informed decision when you know the other side's argument
just as well. I mean, for the sake of exaggeration, better than they do, where you could go to
somebody who is your ideological opponent and you could say, let me make sure I understand.
Here's the crux of your position. Here are the big three pillars that you stand on, correct? Yes.
Okay. Now let me explain why I disagree with
those things. And that's the level of conversation that I'm interested in. I like debates as well.
And I look for that in myself too, where I'm quick to say, you know, this is where I'm at
currently. This is where my feelings and intuitions and maybe a little bit of research has led me.
However, I have not looked
into it enough. I have not looked into the other side enough to have a strong opinion. There's
nothing wrong with saying that you don't have to pretend like you've figured everything out.
And like you were saying this, you know, much earlier that you're right, period. And changing
your mind is essentially impossible because you are infallible. It's very arrogant. wrong, but consider that what's driving them may be that they really do want better for themselves
and better for other people. Because if you think everybody's evil, all debate and discussion is
over. That's very good. I like that as well. All right, man. Well, thanks again for doing this.
I look forward to the next one. We'll have to brainstorm. Maybe we should talk about democracy.
We could talk about democracy. As a form of government.
Dude, I'll talk about anything. Maybe you should ask your audience what they want us to talk about
because I'm down. Okay, man. Well, thanks again.
And I look forward to the next one. All right, brother. Thank you.
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