The Joe Rogan Experience - #2308 - Jordan Peterson
Episode Date: April 22, 2025Jordan Peterson is a clinical psychologist, co-founder of the educational platform Peterson Academy, host of "The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast," and the author of several bestselling books. His most rec...ent title is "We Who Wrestle with God: Perceptions of the Divine." www.jordanbpeterson.com Get 20% off premium protein meat sticks at https://paleovalley.com/rogan Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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It's the greatest thing in the world.
I have a big dent here from
when a meteorite landed on me when I was a kid.
A meteorite?
Oh, funny story. I've got plenty of cuts on my head.
I've got them all over the place.
Well, you're looking pretty unscarred.
Oh, the back of my head, I have one
when I was a little kid, it's pretty big,
that one of these cranes that lifts up sewer pipes, of my head I have one when I was a little kid it's pretty big that these
one of these cranes that lifts up sewer pipes those big concrete pipes bang me
off the back of the head yeah oh yeah that's not good great out went to the
hospital were you a different person before that experience I don't know I
don't have talked my mom I was always a little while autobiographical
significance oh there's definitely a lot of head trauma
We knocked out personality. No, no, I stayed conscious, but I got close the big predictor. I got great everything
I grayed out that I came back to I didn't completely go unconscious
So Jamie went golfing this weekend with oj simpsons golf clubs. Oh
Simpson's golf clubs. Oh, not with OJ.
He's not here.
Jamie bought OJ Simpson's golf clubs after he died.
This is like a childhood dream?
No, we're just for sale. I saw them for sale.
I said, why not? They came in.
I wanted some big grips.
Yeah, a couple of my friends. What did Shane get?
Shane got a bunch of stuff, right?
He got like scarves and ties.
He bought a bunch of ties right him into buying some stuff. Yeah, he got like scarfs and ties He bought a ties ties. I think scarfs too. Okay, he bought a trophy a trophy and a Bill Clinton
Yeah, and photo and he spent thousands of dollars
Yeah, I was like an estate sale, yeah, yeah, you know, he's dead now so you can get his stuff right for nothing
Pennies on the dollar. Let's I mean only people like Jamie and chain are dumb enough to buy. I was like it's like
for a goof. It's one of those things like you're the getting it for a goof or you're
a very dark person. Yeah, right. Yeah, right. Right. I wouldn't want to own it even for
a goof. Like if I found a OJ played pool, I wouldn't want his clue his cue.
Was there cues? No, there wasn't. There was a weird notebook that Robert Kardashian had like handwritten stuff to him. Blood-spattered. I was like, that might be interesting.
It's taking a vicious turn, Joe, already. Yeah, that's a dark story. It is. Yeah. Yeah. And you
only know the surface of it. Well, it's dark in both ways. It's also dark in
planted evidence. You know, there was blood at the scene, the crime that
had preservative in it, allegedly, supposedly, according to Robert
Kardashian and according to, I believe, the forensic scientists when they analyzed it. It matched O.J.'s blood, but they had to draw blood from O.J. in order to
determine whether or not it was his blood that was at the scene of the crime, and some of the blood found at the scene of the crime had that preservative in it that they use.
They were sloppy in the 90s, you know.
Compared to now.
Well, there was no DNA evidence back then.
You know, people were, cops were, there's always going to be a certain percentage of
cops that just want to convict somebody regardless of the evidence, and if they're, you know,
in their mind, they believe someone's
Guilty, they'll do whatever they they can including planting evidence. I guess
At least that's allegedly I don't not that I don't think he did it
I definitely think he did it but I also think the cops planted evidence which is probably at least partially why he got off, you know
I think the big reason why he got off was Rodney King, right?
Yeah. Right.
Yeah. Right.
Yeah. Have you gone into the whole George Floyd story at all?
Have you ever like looked at like
what they actually did to him?
It's like combination of things.
Like what the cop did was horrible,
but also he was dying you know
like most people probably like if they did that to you you probably would have
lived you know the guy had an understanding of his fucked up but that
cop did lean on his neck which is always interesting to see people try to
minimize that you know I'm always like you gotta be able to just say what it is
situation can be ugly in a multitude of ways.
Yes.
That's when things get well.
That's when it's very difficult to pick your moral pathway forward.
All your choices are not good.
Yes.
Which is oftentimes the case when it comes to conflicts, right?
Yes.
Conflicts are very complicated and people want it to be binary
They want there to be a good guy and a bad guy and that's oftentimes not really the case
Well, it's hard to organize yourself for combat unless you are quite convinced that you're the good guy
So there's a default to that dichotomy
That's a necessary part of well even standing your own ground right because otherwise you get demoralized
And so I suppose people, when they're threatened, they default
to a simple narrative, and because that's, you can't defend yourself. In some
ways, it's very hard to defend yourself, especially physically or
militarily, without a pretty cut-and-dried narrative. Well, especially
like military operatives, you know, you have to have a very your your life and the people that you're with their life depends on you
not having any confusion about whether it's morally correct to be doing what
you're doing. That's why they like to break it down to kill bad dudes you know
kill bad dudes. Right. Real simple. Let's go. They tell us what to do we do it.
Which is why you want to stay alive, you want your teammates stay alive, that's what you have to do. Yeah, well you never know when
doubt will cause a fraction of a second difference in reaction time. Oh yeah, yeah,
yeah. That's always the thing with physical altercations with people too.
You know, oftentimes people get sucked into these things where they're not sure
whether to act or not act and that's when they get in trouble. Right.
You know.
Right.
That's probably true in life.
You don't want to oversimplify things too, but once you've made a decision, well, that's
when it's necessary to put doubts behind you because otherwise you just act in half measures.
Yeah.
And oftentimes you have to have done the wrong thing before, like failed to act or hesitated to act and it
cost you and then you have to learn that lesson. It's very difficult to like know
that without experiencing mistakes. You know you have to you have to have
failed to act and then realize oh I should have done something there.
Yeah well that's I think that's partly too one of the things that I often faced
in my clinical practice and with the students that I mentored was this confusion about acting. I don't know what
to do so what should I do? Well nothing. I'll wait around until I figure out what
to do. It's like no you should put together a bad plan and you should
implement it because even if you fail in the implementation, you'll gather information and then you can rectify the plan.
And so staying in that malaise until you know what to do makes you get older and more miserable
and you gather no information along the way.
A bad plan is a good idea.
Any plan is better than none.
That's a good rule of thumb.
And a bad plan, a bad plan can be incrementally improved with experience.
Right.
He who hesitates is lost.
Yeah.
That's really difficult for young people.
I think more so today than ever at any time in history because the distractions are so
many and they're so engrossing. I think more so today than ever at any time in history, because the distractions are so many
and they're so engrossing.
If you get out of high school, you don't know what to do,
and then you start playing video games
and you're on social media, a day can slip by like that.
A day becomes a week, becomes a month, becomes a year,
and before you know it, you're 30.
Yeah, right, that's for sure.
And you haven't done shit.
And that's really common. That's really common today. And I don't think we can ignore those factors, the factors of
just engrossing distractions. Yeah, well, and the algorithm is optimized for short term attention.
So, you know, it's a weird thing, eh, because you could imagine that you would want a machine
that offers you what you want, right? Because you want ads that are targeted to eh, because you could imagine that you would want a machine that offers you what you want.
Right.
Cause you want ads that are targeted to you.
Cause you want to see a bunch of ads that
aren't relevant to you now and then, because
maybe you'll learn something and content.
Well, why not have a machine shovel the same
sort of things that you are interested in at you?
Yes.
That's a kind of curation.
The problem comes, and we haven't figured this
out at all, technically and probably not psychologically, the problem comes, and we haven't figured this out at all technically
and probably not psychologically, the problem comes in time frame, right?
Because there's a big difference between what you might be interested in if you were diligently
striving towards a long-term goal that required conscientiousness and what's going to attract
your attention right now, this moment.
And the thing about the algorithms is that they maximize for short-term attention.
And so basically, they're actually optimizing for hedonism.
Yeah.
And then you might say, well, so what?
Because you're getting what you want.
Well, the problem with short-term impulsive hedonism
is it doesn't play out well over any reasonable time span.
Yeah.
So that's why you have to mature, which is painful and annoying, but absolutely necessary
and much better than the alternative.
The alternative is exactly what you...
That's Peter Pan, right?
Yes.
A 30-year-old, I still haven't grown up and I'm a little past my shelf life now, too.
I think people are afraid of losing fun
They think that when you grow up you lose fun
But it's silly. It's not true
You can grow up and still have fun, you know, you just have to you have to have discipline and prioritize your time
Like well, that's why Christ says to people that they have to become as little children, not stay.
Right? You have to rediscover that.
Rediscover the joy of it.
Yeah, but also...
Kids are good for that too, aren't they? Because they teach you that again.
You look at the world through eyes of memory by the time you're an adult, so the world
loses its freshness. That's part of it. The world loses its freshness because you see
your memories instead of the world loses its freshness because you see your memories instead of the world And then kids come along and you think oh, oh, yeah, that's really actually quite interesting
And they're so compelled by everything because their perceptions are so fresh that they share that with you and that can help
reawaken that
Spirit of childhood play let's say hmm. I've been thinking a lot about play in the last year or so
Yeah, well I spent a lot
of time trying to take apart the causes of like truly pathological degeneration, right, on the
sadistic side, on the criminal side, on the totalitarian side, very curious about tyranny. and I it was very difficult for me to conceptualize the opposite of that as
cleanly as I could characterize it its presence like what's the opposite of
tyranny it's not freedom by the way it's certainly not anarchic freedom it's not
hedonistic freedom benevolence I think it's play play I think it's play right
yeah well make sense well the developmental psychologist Jean Piaget, one of the things he pointed out was that
play, so let's say play is the foundation of micro community, right?
When you're a little kid, you play a game with another kid.
And then if that works well, you inhabit a little dyadic community
You're both in it together And then if it really works you replicate that across time and that gives you a friend
But there's play is a very interesting. It's very interesting psychologically and
psychologically because
It has to be entered in voluntarily. You can't force someone to play and it's also
Motivationally fragile so
Mammals have a play circuit and it can be disrupted by pretty much any other motivational or emotional circuit
So the circumstances have to be set up properly like the walled garden
You know that idea the walled garden is a place that play can take place like eternally so to speak and and
Because it has to be undertaken voluntarily, it's the opposite of tyranny. And like my wife and
I have really started to apply this in our marriage more consciously, you know, once
I'd figured out this relationship, because I've been lecturing to people for a long time
about how to conduct themselves in life so they don't become a tyrant or a handmaiden to the tyrants, right?
A silent handmaiden to the tyrants, let's say.
And aiming at play.
You know, when we walked in here today, one of the things we said was, let's have some
fun, you know?
And I've been thinking this morning, too, about what attitude I should take coming in
to talk to you and there isn't a better attitude
there isn't a better attitude than play. And so, and I think it is because it's the antithesis
it's the antithesis of tyranny in particular. And then you were talking more about mature play
and that's that good, you know, that also makes sense. This is the issue with the
idea that adulthood isn't any fun. It's like, well, you want to play a simple game or do
you want to play a really sophisticated game really well? Now, that's going to require
some discipline and some training and some maturation, but the payoff is much higher.
That's a good way to conceptualize
marriage.
The highs are higher when you're successful.
And also, the people who have the most sex now are religious married couples.
Really?
Yeah. Isn't that funny?
Which religion?
It's like, ha ha ha! Yeah, good question, Joe. Good question. Well, I guess in the West
that would obviously be Christianity. But it's an interesting case example of the sorts of things we're talking about,
because you can imagine at the dawn of the sexual revolution when the birth control pill became prevalent,
that the last hypothesis anyone would have possibly generated was that the cascading consequences of that over 50 years would be,
well, radical increase in pornography use, because sex has been made less dangerous by the pill and that the people
who were having the most sex would be religious married couples.
Right, but is that true?
Because like pornography essentially was very difficult to acquire before the birth control
pill was invented.
True, true.
You used to have to go somewhere to get the pornography.
Isn't part of the excess use of pornography just the access is so instantaneous now
Oh definitely, but you could imagine too that you might have hypothesized that
If the birth control pill took the threat out of sex that pornography would be less necessary
But that didn't seem to work out right so on it's certainly the availability is
We would never know though because no the birth control was when was it?
1960 so that's really when it's summer on then yeah when it started to to to ramp up
Let's say it's so crazy because it completely changed the dynamic women could have sex
For recreation with people that they didn't even know and not have any
consequences in terms of like having to carry that person's child, whereas that was always
a giant fear.
If you're a woman in the back of your head, every time you have sex, you possibly could
be taking care of a child for the next 18 plus years.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, every time.
Right, right.
Take this thing.
This is a consequential thing where with a guy, it's like you have this biological imperative to spread your seed, but
you're not thinking about making babies, right? You're thinking about sexual
activity. When a guy's having sex, he's not thinking, I can't wait to make a
baby. You're just thinking, boy, sex is gonna be great. I'm excited. Oh, boy,
that's fun. You're not thinking,'m making a kid because that would make you hesitant and
Nature is not interested in hesitation nature's like no no no no no no no let's just make you dumb as fuck for about 20 minutes and
Focus on one goal
So why did you get married?
Well, I love my wife. She wanted to get married. We had a child. It seemed like a good thing to do.
It's like at a certain point in time
Making a baby is more of a commitment than getting married. You made a life, you know, like the commitment of getting married seemed
Right, right, of course
But it's also but why did you stay committed then before
the marriage once you had a child? Now you said you loved your wife. I love her, it's
a thing to do. It's a... life in raising a child became everything. It becomes a very
different thing, right? I think... I have a lot of friends who don't have kids. And
I'm not the type of person that thinks everyone should have a kid. You know, I think you have a lot of friends who don't have kids and I don't I'm not the type of person that thinks everyone should
Have a kid
You know, I know a lot of people with kids they do say that I don't think everyone should have a kid
I think you should do whatever you want. I don't know how your brain works
I assume your brain works along similar lines with me, but there's a thing that happens when you scary thought you'll
similar lies similar
Share okay, similar similar lines. I think we all share similar lines.
There's an empathy that comes from having a child that's so different and an understanding
that we are all babies that grew up.
We all start off as these bundles of potential and genetics, and then we're influenced by
so many different things or so many different factors.
But I used to think of people as being grown up all the time.
And then when I had kids, I was like, oh, we're all just babies.
We're all just babies that have just been alive for a long time.
Everyone started out as a baby.
And it just profoundly changed the way I interact with people.
The amount of compassion I have for people, the amount of charity that I have for people,
the charitable way in which I think about them when they do something or they say something.
I give people the benefit of the doubt way more.
Dave Chappelle said this to me once at the Comedy Store and it was very profound.
He said, having children didn't just change the amount of love I have, it changed my capacity
for love.
And I was like, ooh, that's it.
You just nailed it.
You just nailed it.
You know, because there's, well, there's private moments when you talk to people about their
children, about having children and what that's like.
It's a very psychedelic experience.
That would be another reason why the family with children is the foundation of the community,
has to be the foundation of the community.
It's kind of obvious from a biological perspective, let's say.
No children, no community.
But there's no reason to assume that you wouldn't get radically better at something with necessity and practice and if you're practicing
loving your infant and your child well why wouldn't that generalize? Why would
that capacity develop? It's not like a practice it's like an overwhelming
desire that comes about like the love you have for your child is like, it's not like anything else.
It's very different.
It's very, my friend Jim Brewer said this once.
He said, when I had a child,
that's when I really understood murder.
Really understood like my capacity to defend my child.
It was like, I never understood,
like how could somebody kill somebody before?
He was like, oh, now I get it. Now I get it. And you know, that's real too. And that's
also tribal, right? So it's not just your child is the child of everyone around you
and your child in your tribe. And then you think that you're being invaded by an oncoming
tribe and genetics and history dictates,
you have to be insanely ruthless to fight off that tribe.
There's no other way for survival,
which is really wild, right?
Because those people have that same feeling
towards their children.
It's like that sting line,
if the Russians love their children too.
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So that love that you talk about with regard to your wife,
you know, I asked you a little bit about that.
It's like, I've talked to people who have,
they can't understand how someone could be
with the same woman indefinitely, let's say.
These are people who usually haven't been able
to establish that within their own life.
And of course, the price you pay, assuming it's a price, for forgoing all others is that,
well that's exactly it.
It's a major sacrifice.
And so what do you think, what role do you think that love plays?
How do you conceptualize the relationship between that love that you described and that willingness to stay in a permanent relationship and that, and the
willingness also to not pursue any other women. How do you, how do you understand, how does
that make itself manifest in your life? I mean, I presume that you, I presume that, you know that you had opportunities of all sorts.
I presume you do as well.
In principle, I suppose. They don't seem to come to me in this sense.
You're a hot professor type character. Back in the day, guys like you would be banging
their grad students. Not guys like you, but guys in your position.
Yeah, yeah. Well, there were guys that-
Wasn't that always the thing?
Yes.
This is a fascinating aspect of academia. I seem to shut that off pretty much at the beginning well they they
seem to have completely stopped that like if you go back to Feynman and
Oppenheimer and famous famous scientists were notoriously playboys
mm-hmm which is really interesting because it's like these wild, innovative
people were essentially intellectual rock stars, right? And then somehow or
another that just got stopped. Like if you were a professor in the 1960s, like
the girls would be wooing the professor. They would be excited. These 22 year old
graduate students would be so excited to be talking to this incredibly famous intellectual. And they all were ladies men. Like Feynman was
famous for chasing skirts. That was part of the thing. He does a lot of math and chases
skirts. That is a giant distraction to people that are trying to get things done in life.
And it's also a distraction from your own personal development, I think.
I think you could be with the wrong person and want to be with other people, and that makes sense.
But really what that is, is you should not be with that person anymore.
Which is unfortunately the case.
Like, there's a lot of guys who wind up with really hot women who are out of their fucking mind
and a lot of women who wind up with really hot men who are not what they thought they
were going to be.
If you find yourself in this situation where you're with this pathological person and you're
trying to make it work and you realize at a certain point in time, I'm not going to
make it work. You have to be able to just like jump ship
that's why people are hesitant to get married.
That's what would really dangerous about marriage.
It's not like being with one person you really love being with like I really love being with
my wife.
She's fun like we go we have date nights all the time.
We have a lot of fun.
You know, we really do. She's fun. Like we go, we have date nights all the time. We have a lot of fun. You know, we really do. It's enjoyable. But that's not always the case.
Why did you decide to set up date nights? How did you go about that? I mean, I know
that's personal, but and I don't want all the gory details, let's say.
No, it's really simple. We just enjoy hanging out together. We have a lot of laughs. And
so we just said like, it's kind of important because I'm so fucking busy that we schedule time that's just unavoidable. Like this is what we're doing. We're going
to do this.
Yeah, I do that with Tammy too. We've done that for like 30 years.
I think most married couples will tell you that that's important. Most married couples
will tell you that that's kind of the secret. And it's the secret is like-
It's also the best thing as well as being the secret. Yeah, it's fun
It's fun. Like if the person that you're with is fun, that's the real problem is that sometimes people just they pick people that are hot
That's it, you know hot and willing and nice enough nice enough to be around then you deal with all the other crazy nonsense and
You're you're setting yourself up. I've had many friends ruin their fucking lives and then they go through divorces and you've
said this best that one of the things that women are very good at is reputation destruction.
I have seen that happen.
So imagine you are legally entangled with someone who at one point in time you loved intimately and now that person is trying to destroy every aspect of your life and you have to pay for their lawyers.
So you have to pay for the general of the army that's trying to destroy your kingdom.
And I've seen this happen to many of my friends.
And that is why
people are afraid of marriage that's why people are afraid of commitment because
the disastrous implications of like what can happen if it goes sideways like what
can happen if you wind up hating each other and what can happen if you just
lie to yourself and you trick you like, some of the hesitation that I had
for getting married is most of my friends
that got married when I was young
all went through horrible divorces.
When I was on news radio, Dave Foley, Stephen Root,
and Phil Hartman were all going through it,
all going through it in different levels of psychosis. Obviously,
Phil Hartman is being the worst because his wife shot him when he was leaving her, by
the way. He decided to leave her and he tried to leave her a few times and she shot him
in his sleep and then she shot herself. It's a horrible, horrible story. But Steven Root
went through it and they, you know, they'd confide in me and be like, oh, Jesus Christ. The amount
of money these women were trying to get from them when they knew that they couldn't afford
this. So one of the dirty tricks that will happen with divorced lawyers, with people
that are on sitcoms is when you get on a sitcom, if you're an actor and you get on a sitcom, it is the most stable job, the greatest job
in show business for a lot of them because you're going to get a steady check.
You're going to do 24, maybe 26 episodes a year.
You're making more money than you've ever made in your whole life, but then you get
divorced. So what happens is it gets set up
where your ex-wife wants a percentage
of what you're making at this very unrealistic level,
where you're never gonna achieve this again.
And for Dave Foley, it was so bad
that at one point in time,
I don't believe he was allowed to go back to Canada.
I don't know if that's changed,
but the judge literally told him,
when he told the judge, like, I don't have that kind of money anymore. I don't have the potential
for earning. I was on a hit sitcom, like, not even a hit sitcom, but I was on a sitcom
on NBC, paid a lot of money, and that was the only time I made that kind of money. The
judge said to him, your obligation to pay has no relation to your ability to pay. That's Canadian judges for you. Just insane.
You know, those are words you never want to hear even once in your life.
I love him. So I was going through this pain, not like he was, but just like, oh my God,
oh my God. So these three people that I was very close to and then most of the other people that I knew
You know, I knew so many people
Fortunately, my mother and my stepfather have a great relationship and they have for a long time So I had that modeled like they're always very close and they didn't fight which is really nice
It was really nice to have that as a model, you know, like I were I realized okay
It's not everybody's not at
each other's throats all the time and some people actually do enjoy spending
time together. You know Tammy and I on on the tour she started to introduce me two
years ago and to talk about some of the things we're doing in the family some of
our family business talk about Peterson Academy, talk about Essay. And so she'd go out on the stage and... Was that the
first time she had ever gone on stage in front of... you do enormous crowds. Yeah, well, so
first of all she did that and then we replaced the business discussion,
because we were just doing an update about the family, you know, and so she'd
do that. We replaced that with ads and then she started to talk.
She talked about the rules, say, and 12 rules for life or some of the religious things I've
been dealing with lately and she'd relate that to something in her own life.
And then she does the Q&A at the end of the lecture.
And part of that was just, she was along with me and part of that was Michaela was introducing
me for a while and then had to go back to her work and so
we slotted Tammy in because it seemed like a good business decision but one of the things we figured
out very quickly that was really a shock to us was that people really liked especially the Q&A's
because what people will offer their questions electronically on this platform called Slido, which is a
very good platform for such things.
And then Tammy would, they could upvote the questions and then Tammy would sort them and
ask me questions kind of from the top down that were thematically relevant to the lecture
that I had given.
But we found very quickly that people really liked that because they hadn't seen a couple
engage in civilized discussion ever.
Seriously.
There's a lot of that out there.
It was really shocking, Joe.
Like, you know, I was shocked when I first started touring by how demoralized people
were.
Like, that really, that was really striking and painful to See that on such a mass scale and then also to see how little encouragement it took to have a really major effect
I mean, there's a positive aspect to that too, but there's also a tragic aspect. It's like
You mean you just need to have some encouragement and that was enough and you never got that like even once
That's rough when you see that in thousands of people right and
It was the same thing we found it was the same thing with regards to seeing a functional couple at least even that model
because you know Tammy asked me questions and
She thinks about the questions and then sometimes she comments but not that much
But she actually listens to the answers and she wants to hear the answer
And so in that dynamic is being played out on stage and people found that very heartening and all that shows you well
You said you know yourself and this is why I brought it up because you had the example from your
From your stepfather and your mom. Yeah, this long-term relationship that worked in how the hell deorient yourself if you right you haven't seen that anywhere
Right you and then you you consider relationships
Just like all the bad ones and like you're gonna be burdened and locked into that
Did you ever see that video where Alec Baldwin and his wife are on the camp on?
red carpet and they're being interviewed and they're asking them
questions and the wife starts talking and Alex chimes in about something and she said
you're not talking I'm talking when I'm talking you're not talking on camera and you watch
this you like yo that's what everyone's scared of right that's what I definitely want to
competition tyranny the tyranny of being trapped in a relationship like that is like That's what everyone's scared of. Right. Definitely. You want to talk about competition.
The tyranny of being trapped in a relationship like that is like, ugh.
And sometimes one person is so overbearing that the other person just sort of submits
to it, right?
And then you're just like, I don't even want to fight.
I don't want to deal with this.
And so then you're just trapped and this person's insulting you and
Humiliating you publicly that was the case with Phil Hartman. I
Got to see that we would all go like we went to a party once and I remember she was
talking about ex-boyfriends that she loves pickup trucks because her ex-boyfriends had pickup trucks and they would climb into the back of these Pickup trucks and I was like what the fuck?
Boyfriends had pickup trucks and they would climb into the back of these pickup trucks and I was like what the fuck
But she was doing it on purpose to like make him squirm and make him uncomfortable And she would say things like talk about how he's old. Oh, he's old
He doesn't you know, he doesn't like to do anything. It was just it was just public humiliation in front of friends
Do you where you're in this like arena where you he can't say anything?
Yeah, he can't just go what the fuck are you talking about? Like why are you talking to me like that?
Like why are we doing this? He can't do that because he's public and he's out with us
Maybe he should do it anyways, probably should do it. Yeah, probably we're all out and you know Phil was all about like
Appearances, right? Right
One of the things that he was afraid of with getting married
Was that he was just starting to break into films and a lot of the films that he was afraid of with getting married was that he was just starting to break into films, and a lot of the films that he was doing were very, like, family-friendly
films, and it helped that he was a family man.
You know, if he was...
Right, so he had an act he had to sustain, too.
He had an image, right?
And this was critical in Hollywood.
Like they had ideas of who you were, okay, you're a family man.
Okay, good, good,
good. And so if you have this radical change in your life where no longer you're a family
man and if you want to be honest about it and you want to say, I was in a toxic relationship
and some of it was me and some of it was her and this is what happened, like, whoa, now
you're opening up the world to this big can of worms. Better to keep that can sealed. Yeah, well it's generally better not to have your fights in public and it's certainly better.
You know, I've been thinking about this commandment to honour your mother and father. I've been
thinking about what that means. I read this book called Angela's Ashes by Frank McCourt
and Frank had a really alcoholic father like an Irish alcoholic father
back in the 40s.
Good time.
Oh yeah.
He drank every cent the family had and they lived in terrible poverty.
Oh, scary disease.
And his sister died and it was rough.
But he said his father was often sober in the morning and he established a relationship with like good morning sober father and kind of
put alcoholic drunken nighttime father in a different bin and he could get the benefit of
having a father in consequence of that and that honoring that's also something that you want to
do within a marriage right because your wife is your friend and your
lover, but she's also your wife and you're her husband and that means
that a part of keeping that marriage working is honor and part of the honor
is that you don't do that sort of thing in public. Right, right, you don't humiliate each other.
Well that's also in some ways independent, in a way it's
independent of who your wife or husband is
It's like, you know
You could imagine two people fighting in public and one of them or both of them really deserving to have that fight as people
But then to keep the marriage intact you have to remember. Well, this is my wife
She's not just my friend. She's not just someone I know
She's my wife and we shouldn't be not just someone I know, she's my wife. And we
shouldn't be doing primate dominance hierarchy maneuvering in public, we shouldn't be competing
for power, because that's going to destroy the marriage. So that's part of that honoring
I think is to remember the role and to keep it, well sacred is really right, sacrosanct.
Here's another one.
Don't ever insult each other even though you want to.
You want to be mean sometimes.
People get mean to you, you want to be mean back.
I don't do that with my friends, so I don't do that with anyone else.
I don't want to do that.
That's why I don't do it online.
I don't get involved in these hissysy pissy fit. Yeah online particularly on Twitter
I just don't think it's prime place for such things. That's all it is. First of all again as
Someone who looks at everyone like a child or like a baby. I I don't
I'm not angry that people do that. I understand the appeal of it
I'm not angry that people do that. I understand the appeal of it
If I was 15 and Twitter was around I would be tweeting at every fucking celebrity saying you're a loser
Jump in front of a bus. I would say things just to try to get a reaction out of them I think a lot of kids do I
Think a lot of people don't feel like they have a voice and one way to be heard is to be insulting and
one way to hurt is to be negative.
If you look at the majority of discourse on social media
in regards to hot button issues, it's disrespectful.
It's contentious, it's shitty and insulting,
and I've decided, like, over time in my life to not do that. I don't want to do that
I'm not interested. I'm not interested in that. I'm not interested in that kind of conflict like I
see real conflict all the time as a an MMA commentator
You know, I see the most violent legal conflict other than war all the time.
It's a, that's conflict.
That's like real conflict and resolution and, you know,
purposeful agreed upon conflict.
Like regular, like back and forth and solve,
wouldn't it be better to figure out what you agree
and disagree on and why and talk?
Like, why can't we all figure out how to do that?
That should be a discipline you learn at an early age.
Most of the issues that people have,
if the person comes at you insulting and aggressive,
either that person is ignorant or they're playing a game,
okay, and the game is to get your emotions up,
to get you reactive, and to be reacting to them instead
of acting.
The game is like if someone's hyper aggressive in a fight, the game is to put you on the
defensive so that they don't like the best defense is a good offense.
You learn that early on in fighting.
So you learn that you can be very offensive and then the person never has a chance to
get their game going.
That's the case with conversations too. So this is like, there's a gamesmanship to this
kind of communication where it's not just communicating. It's communicating but it's
essentially intellectual one-upsmanship and sparring. You're sparring, you're scoring
points, you're trying to dunk on each other
And I get that I've done that before I've engaged in it's never satisfying it always feels gross
Even if you win, it's gross
Like I said this before like even like publicly things that I've felt like I had to do
like the Carlos Mancia conflict that I had way back in
2007 where like the Carlos Mancia conflict that I had way back in 2007 were Accused him of stealing material and it became this viral video and then a bunch of other comedians jumped in and we all agree
There was a real problem
It was a real problem because he was very famous and he was being protected
By these agencies who were profiting off of him being famous. They didn't want that train to stop. I
Still to this day
trained to stop. I still to this day wonder if I would ever do that again because the negativity that came my way from people that were fans of his was
so overwhelming if you're paying attention to it's like what did I open
up like look even though I knew it was necessary like what and that is also why
people are negative because they want they want to stop you from engaging in
conflict that's gonna hurt them you know so they try to hurt you as much as possible. So you're
like hesitant to do it. I want to wade into those waters. It's dangerous. Filled with
sharks.
Well, you could imagine maybe I think and I think this is worth delving into in some
depth. You could imagine that there are there's various ways of attaining status,
renown, reputation. Status isn't exactly the right word because reputation is
better because you can have a reputation that you deserve, right? And so people do
work for reputation and all things considered that's a good thing.
Earned reputation is the best. Earned reputation. Earned reputation. Yeah. Earned reputation. Earned, valid reputation.
Where they say Jordan, that guy, that's a unique human being and that's a real reputation.
Right, right. Okay. That's what people want. Right, right. And it's also, there isn't
anything more valuable that you can have than that, not even close. This is why, by
the way, this is very cool. It's a bit of an aside, but it makes it's worth bringing up.
In the Gospels, Christ tells people to store up
treasure in heaven where it doesn't rust, where the thieves can't steal it.
That's reputational treasure. Right? So if you,
so the idea is that if you conduct yourself impeccably,
you'll develop a storehouse of reputation that will withstand all catastrophe.
There's no place you can put your wealth that's more effective than that. It's the least
violatable place and that's right. It's right. But the problem is, and this is a really tricky
problem and you're touching on it, is that the reputation game can be gamed.
Okay.
So when your reputation rise rises, your
serotonin levels rise, and that makes you less
sensitive to negative emotion and more sensitive
to positive emotion.
So that's a really good deal.
And what that also means is that there's a high
psychological benefit to status increase,
reputational increase, and a real cost to reputational decrease.
That's partly why people don't like losing face, for example, because their emotions
dysregulate.
Okay, so now the best way to play that game is to establish a genuine reputation.
And the best way to do that, you've done this by the way, I figured out this year in my
lectures that I'm always trying to answer a question on stage.
So that's a quest.
And I'm bringing the audience along on a quest.
And it's a real quest because I'm actually trying to figure something out and I do that
in real time.
And that's a very different game.
That's a very different conversational game than the status battle game.
Right?
Because I could come on here, I don't know if it would work, but I could come on here
and I could try to show that I was smarter than Joe Rogan.
Now I've watched you and that's a very difficult thing to pull off, but hypothetically that
could be my aim and I could play Gotcha Questions and I could lead you into places.
The problem is that wouldn't work because I'm willing to accept that you're smarter than me.
First of all, I talk to a lot of people that are smarter than me and I like it. It's enjoyable. I
don't ever feel uncomfortable talking to people that are smarter than me. I want to know some
things that they can tell me on certain things. I want to educate myself. I want to be, I want to see how their mind works. I want to be blown away. I don't want to compete with them intellectually.
There's times in my life where I would have fallen into that trap.
Yeah. Well, I think that's what's made, well, I think that's also what's made you popular
and a force for good is that you are on a quest and that quest the consequence of that quest if undertaken properly is
Reputational enhancement and people who can't or won't do that
They default to power games and the part of it and that's a very that's that's the default to power
right, it's worsened with social media because if you're if
If if you meet someone and they're playing a power
game with you, you can just decide not to have
anything to do with them anymore.
Or you can put a stop to it if you need to.
But on social media, you can't because they're
distant from you and they're often also
anonymous.
And so they can play power games to enhance their
reputational status falsely with no consequences.
And the social media is rife with that and it's really a problem like I think that virtualization has enabled the psychopaths
Without a doubt yeah, well without a doubt. That's a terrible thing because the psychopathic types They're always the death of everything like I'm seeing this come up on the right now. So imagine this, I've been working on a new theory of political psychopathology and I like it quite a lot.
Is this where the term the woke right comes in?
Yeah, well, Lindsay is pointing at that but he hasn't got the diagnosis exactly right.
So it isn't woke, that's not the issue. It's not exactly.
I think what they're talking about is like similar types of he is talking about yeah
No, what is his point woke just lets you clarify in your head? Oh, it's like that. Yeah, but the problem is like Antifa
absolutely, but the problem is is that
that argument is
Predicated on the claim that the ideas are the problem like the woke ideas
For example on the right or the left, but that ideas are the problem, like the woke ideas, for example, on the right
or the left, but that's not the problem. The problem is that 4 to 5% of the population,
something like that, is cluster B, that's the DSM-5 terms, histrionic, narcissistic,
anti-social, psychopathic, and they have dark tetrad traits, they're
Machiavellian, they're sadistic. That's about 4%. Okay, so the question is how do
these people maneuver? And the answer is they go to where the power is and they
adopt those ideas and they put themselves even on the forefront of that.
But the ideas are completely irrelevant. All they're doing is they're
the Pharisees, they're the modern version of the Pharisees,
they're the people who use God's name in vain, right, as they proclaim moral virtue.
Doesn't matter whether it's right or left or Christian or Jewish or Islam, they invade
the idea space and then they use that, those ideas as false weapons to advance their narcissistic
advantage.
And so then you have the problem, and the right's going to face this more and more particularly, as false weapons to advance their narcissistic advantage.
And so then you have the problem, and the right's going to face this more and more particularly,
because the left had to face it when they were in power.
How do you identify the psychopathic parasites, 4% of the population, who are clothed in your
clothing and waving your flags, but who are only in it for narcissistic benefit.
The people who studied the dark triad, these were people who originally studied psychopaths
and they moved into ordinary personalities, so to speak, on the fringes.
They showed that the non-criminal psychopaths, so the fringe cases, are Machiavellian. They use their language to manipulate. They're narcissistic. They want unearned
reputation, that's what a narcissist wants, and they're psychopathic, which makes them predators or parasites. Okay, that's pretty bad, those three things.
But they had to expand the nomenclature after a while because they found that they were also sadistic, which
implied that if you're Machiavellian
and narcissistic and psychopathic, you develop a sufficiently bad view of your fellow man
that their undeserved pain is a source of pleasure to you.
And that's what's being enabled online.
See, because we've evolved real specific mechanisms to keep such things under control in face-to-face
interaction.
Lack of anonymity, for example, within a community.
Psychopaths in the real world, they wander.
They have to move from place to place because people don't figure out who they are, and
they're held responsible.
They're particularly held responsible by men. But online they escape from that protective, they escape from that
system of constraints and they have free reign and they can find other people
like them very rapidly and they can gang together. And so this is like, I can
really see this starting to happen on the right, like I've been tracking
psychopathic behavior on the right for probably four years, something like
that, especially on the anti-Semitic side, because that's really where it reared its
head first.
And why is that?
There's nothing more annoying than a successful minority.
Right.
Now that's part of it.
I'm going to hear, I might as well get myself in trouble right away too.
Yeah, for sure.
Well, this is a real subject
Well, so yeah, it's a real terrible subject. It's interesting if you don't criticize it enough. You're compromised if you if you criticize
you know, it's like
When it comes to anti-semitism like it's one of those things where you can't separate
things where you can't separate. It's a religion and it's also a race and it's also a government. That's where things get weird. Right, right. And then there's also the concept of intelligence
agencies and compromise that also gets attached to it, the manipulation of world markets and
money and there's a lot to unpack and then there's regular
Jewish people have nothing to do with that. Well, the Jews too are they're very successful
Yeah, and so what you would expect from a purely statistical point of view is you'd expect them to be over-represented at the extreme
They're also a walled garden, right?
Meaning? Meaning it's very difficult to join, they don't proselytize,
they don't try to get you to join, and they're all very tightly knit. They call themselves
the Klan. They're all like locked in, the Jewish Klan, not KKK. The problem with that
term has been compromised by the Ku Klux Klan, you know, but I mean it as terms of tribe.
Oh, community. Yeah, community. They're very tight-knit in that regard. You
know, they stick together. If you understand the history, obviously, of Nazi Germany and
of persecution in Eastern Europe, like, yeah, you have to. Yeah, of course. Yeah, well,
all these complex things are multi-dimensional. I mean, I watched your whole conversation with Douglas and I thought you guys did a very credible job,
all three of you, of navigating unbelievably choppy waters. So that's the first thing I'd
like to say because one of the things I was trying to figure out when I was watching that is,
do I think I could have done a better job of any of you? And I certainly didn't walk away from it
with that idea in mind. But then underneath all that I thought there's really a there's a really unbelievably
tricky problem here and I think that's why it's made it it it poked up into
well you also set that conversation up but it it poked up and made itself
manifest in that conversation. And the issue is how do you identify the
psychopathic pretenders and it's even worse now and then
make a barrier right now the right was calling for the left to do that for decades right
and they didn't and they couldn't and the left is not good at drawing barriers partly
temperamentally the right is somewhat better but there's no shortage of monstrosity there
and and so then the question is how do you how do you draw the line? And that's
kind of what I was, because I've been watching these right-wing, they're not right-wing,
these psychopathic types manipulate the edge of the conservative movement for their own
gain. And a lot of that's cloaked in anti-Semitic guise. There's plenty of anti-Semitism on
the left too, by the way, So it's not unique to the right.
Well, particularly now.
Yes, yes, particularly now. And so, you know, you've let your curiosity guide you,
your curiosity and your desire for knowledge, this quest, you've let that guide you as a
podcaster. And by the way, I'm trying to work through exactly the same sort of thing.
guide you as a podcaster, and by the way, I'm trying to work through exactly the same sort of thing.
How do you know, given your radical increase in stature over the last ten years, how do
you know when your curiosity and even your skepticism about the fact that things aren't
the way that people say they are, because that's certainly been demonstrated in the
last ten years. How do you, how should anyone decide what guardrails to put up? Like what do you
look for? Do you have a conceptual system worked out for that? Like...
And what do you mean? In what way? Well... How do I look for in terms of people to
talk to? Yeah, yeah, yeah, because you have this insanely immense platform and you're inviting people
onto it and you know, you said to Douglas and I know this to be true that you're not
really thinking about the outcome exactly, you're thinking about this is an interesting
person to talk to and I'd like to go on that quest.
But then you have the additional conundrum.
We're trying to work this out in the daily wire side of things, too
Not to say that that's exactly the same situation. It's like
once you gain in reach and
authority then
How do you know that
How do you take great care that the people you're talking to aren't, what would you say, eliciting or feeding a subc people, mediators, right, and guests,
and that was also back when we could rely on the structures of authority in some sense
to filter.
And now we're in this helter-skelter world where everything is up for grabs.
The legacy media is the worst at that now.
Yeah, I know.
They're the worst at that.
I know.
Which is fascinating.
You know, it really is. It's really fascinating when you
lose faith in a New York Times piece, you know, it's like you you go like well, this is bullshit
Yeah, I know this I know what they're doing. I know yeah, they're just this is editorial bullshit and
That didn't used to be the case. I don't think no I't. But then I go back to like what I learned about the Woodward-Bernstein-Nixon thing at
Watergate that was all essentially an intelligence operation.
Have you ever looked into that?
Bill Murray on the podcast and Bill Murray said one of the wildest things.
He read the first five pages of Bob Woodward's biography on John Belushi, Wired.
He read the first five pages, he's like,
he goes, oh my God, they framed Nixon.
Oh really, wow.
Isn't that crazy?
Yeah, no kidding.
He's like, what they wrote about my friend was so not true,
it was so wildly off.
He said John Belushi was a lightweight.
John Belushi would have a couple of drinks
and he'd be fucked up.
He wasn't like a big partier.
That time he did that speed ball
was probably the only time he ever did it in his life. But Woodward had
him painted as this maniacal, off-the-rails, just drug-addled monster.
And he knew that did not be true. He was very close to Belushi for a long time.
And so he was like, oh my god, they framed Nixon. Then when I told him the whole
story, you know, what Tucker Carlson had told me
about Woodward being an intelligence asset,
and then that was his first job ever as a journalist,
was Watergate, and that those FBI guys
that were involved in it and the break-in,
and the whole thing was they tried to get Nixon out of there,
the most popular president in the history of the country
in terms of the vote, and they were successful.
They got him out of there. And it's probably because or likely because Nixon was very concerned
with who killed Kennedy and he wanted to find out and he wanted to get that information
out and apparently he had been talking about it. I know who did it and he was you know
he didn't want it happening to him obviously and he knew it could if you're a president, you know a couple of guys ago
you know just
Most one of the most popular presidents at least posthumously popular presidents
I know he's very polarizing while he was in office
But was shot in the head in the middle of Dallas and you think that the government might have had something to do with it
Like that could that could fuck with your head, obviously.
Yeah, well, and there's many things like that. I mean,
you saw the government website that came up two days ago about COVID?
Yes.
Okay.
Wild.
Wild.
Yeah, that's for sure.
What are you supposed to do with that?
All the things that would have gotten you fired if you were a professor and you said them four years ago,
you would have 100% got fired for espousing
any of these ideas that turned out to be true.
You would have gotten kicked off of YouTube.
You would have gotten, you know, there was a lot,
there was a lot going on there, you know,
which is I feel so fortunate that right at the height
of COVID was also when I had gone over to Spotify.
Spotify is a Swedish company.
It's different.
They're different.
They don't, they're much more rational and they're not overwhelmed by this identity politics shit and they aren't overwhelmed by our weird political binary
system of good guy bad guy depending on which side you're on and they were like what are
you talking about?
Like this is crazy.
We don't censor our rappers.
Well the Swedes also didn't lock down.
Yes, they didn't lock down.
They were also like we don't censor our rappers.
Like we don't tell, like the rap lyrics. Some of my favorite
rap lyrics are horrendous. But it's just like my diet. My
favorite movies are Tarantino movies. The dialogue is
horrendous. It doesn't mean that these are horrendous people that
are putting together this. Tarantino is a wonderful guy.
He's fun to be around. He's great. I've had dinner with
them brought to the comedy club. He's great. He's fun to be around. He's great. I've had dinner with him, brought him to the comedy club. He's great.
He's not a bad person, but he is an artist and he's creating this thing and this thing
is going to show you aspects of humanity that you know to be true, but they're horrific.
That's the same with rap lyrics. It's the same with a lot of things and Spotify's position was we're not censoring.
It's the same with a lot of things and Spotify's position was we're not censoring
That's not what we're in the business of like promoting art like we sell art and we're not interested in censoring art
essentially and Turns out luckily we were all right
We were all correct, you know, and now the government shows it on their fucking website, which is crazy
Have you seen it Jamie?
Pull it up because it's bananas and
Look at this lab
By the way
You know
I know that he would bring up the vaccines when he was on his rallies and people would boo
When he was on the rallies and people would boo when
he was on the campaign trail.
People would boo.
And I think he was like confused by that.
I think he's a little, I don't want to say he's out of touch, but there's too many things
for him to be thinking about, for him to be paying attention to what people really think
about the vaccines and vaccine injuries and mandates and just the psychological warfare
that was played on the American people.
You remember that very famous White House post that they made for the vaccinated, you've
done your job, but for the unvaccinated, you're looking forward to a winter of severe illness
and death and the hospitals that you will overwhelm.
Like that was the White House telling you something
when it was in Omnicron by that point,
which was like a cold.
Like it was crazy.
The deaths had dropped off radically,
but they were so in bed with the pharmaceutical companies
that they were like, you gotta do it.
You gotta get vaccinated.
And if you don't, you're looking forward to death
and severe illness.
Like, imagine this is, you're not forward to death and severe illness. Imagine,
this is, you're not basing this on real statistics, you're not basing this on
science, you're just basing this on this control, this fear element that you're
trying to impose upon people. So okay, so that's an interesting point there too,
that issue of control and fear. You know, I started this, I was part of a group
that started this organization in the UK called the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship. We had
our second convention in November, which went very nicely, by the way. So you're doing like a positive
counter to the world economic. Yeah, well, we have some rules. And one rule is you don't use force or fear Right use invitation. Mm-hmm. So can I tell you a story about please do please do
Okay, so
I've been touring about this new book of mine, right? We who wrestle with God and it's
I've been lecturing about
Lots of the things I know but I've been using biblical stories mostly to provide an analytical frame, because
that's what stories do, they provide a frame.
And there's a great story in the continuing Exodus story, the story of Moses and the Israelites,
where Moses has led his people away from the tyrant and away from their own slavery, because
there's a dynamic in that story between
those two things. No tyrants without slaves, or you might say no tyrants without willing
slaves. And so the Israelites have to get away from the tyrant, but then it's across
the Red Sea of chaos and blood and into the desert for 40 years. You don't escape from
the tyrant if you're a slave without paying a price and maybe for three generations. It's rough. So Moses is trying to get these
people to stop being slaves and to take responsibility so they don't need a
tyrant. And so he's kind of got there and they're on the edge of the promised
land, right? And so they're almost at the end of their voyage and they run out of
water. They're still in the desert. They run out of water and they get all whiny and bitchy about the fact that they had to go across the desert.
And it was way better under the tyrant and that Moses is nothing but a corrupt patriarch and he's only power mad.
And they foment some rebellion.
And anyways, it's a pretty ugly situation.
And the Israelites go to Moses and they say,
look, we're really starving.
We're thirsting for water.
We're going to die.
Do you think you can have a chat with God?
See if he'll do something about this.
And God tells Moses to go to some rocks in the desert
and to ask them to bring water forth.
And so he goes with his people to these rocks.
And instead of asking, he takes this staff of his
The staff is really important thing. It's like your staff if you have an organization same derivation
But it's also the magic wand of Gandalf. It's the flag you plant in new territory. It's the tree of life. It's the
living
tradition that has a
living tradition that has a spirit inside it and that's a serpent and that's the serpent that eats all the serpents of the Egyptian tyrants, magic, magicians.
That's the staff. It's his rod of his authority and he instead of asking the
rocks he hits them twice with the staff, so he forces them. And God tells them that in consequence of that, number one, he's going to die,
and number two, he's not going to get to the promised land.
Right, right, right. So there's this insistence. It's really interesting.
Well, it's a crucial insistence, and it's very important in this time, I think, to understand what this means.
So Moses is a leader, he's the
archetypal leader, and he realizes his responsibility in the encounter with the
burning bush, which is something that attracts his attention, that he takes
with great seriousness, and that transforms him. And so then he becomes the
leader who stands up against the tyrant and frees the slaves and takes them
through chaos into the desert. And his temptation as leader is to use force.
So when he's a young man, for example, he kills an Egyptian aristocrat who was tormenting
a Hebrew slave, and that's why he has to leave Egypt.
He's tempted by power because he's a leader.
And then at the end, even though he's done all these things, he's been an upstanding
man and gone beyond his call of duty.
And he's right at the point where he attains victory, right, to enter the Promised Land,
and he uses force once.
When God tells him to use invitation, to use his words, the logos, to use words, to use invitation.
And that's enough so that he's dead.
So is his brother Aaron, that's his political arm, and he doesn't
enter the promised land. And then in the gospels, of course, Christ forgoes power altogether.
The temptation in the desert, one of the three temptations is the temptation for use of power.
So one of the things that maybe we could conclude from all this, given the context of what you
said is that you can tell the tyrants they use fear and compulsion and they
don't use invitation.
So one of the rules we put together for ARC was invitation only.
Play, we're going to do this playfully and we're not going to use force or fear ever.
You have to use invitation.
And so I don't know what you think about that is a distinguish, imagine it's a distinguishing,
it's the distinguishing characteristic between the wannabe tyrants and the true leaders the true leaders say here's an offer
Would you accept this of your own free will and the tyrants say the apocalypse is coming and
Everything and we are allowed to do everything to forestall it right right including control you and everything that you do
Yeah, and that's how they get people to fall in line. They fall in line through fear. Yeah. Yeah, well fear and force
It's like also, you know, you have to do this because the apocalypse is looming which is always in a way true
Always there's always well, there's an always an apocalypse of one form or another looming.
The question is what do you do about it?
Well, depending on where you live, and compel them.
And terrify people and compel them.
You might be experiencing the apocalypse right now if you live in Gaza.
You might be experiencing the apocalypse right now if you're in Yemen, if you're a Houthi.
Right?
The end of the world is always coming.
Right. For you, for for you for me for everybody. Yeah, right
so so you can always look into the future and conjure up an apocalyptic scenario and maybe even that in itself isn't a
Sin, although I think it is
There's another but if you yet then turn to fear and compulsion as your means of governance, then you're a tyrant
I don't care what your excuse is. It has to be invitational.
That's when it gets scary when you see governments telling people that they have to fall in line,
or these are our horrible consequences for you not agreeing to what we're saying.
Yeah.
Yeah, and then if you don't do this, you're a part of the problem.
Right, exactly. Well, and if the apocalypse that's generated in that way is of sufficient magnitude
there's no limit to the amount of power that can be
Exerted right because obviously the rationale is there they have to do it, right?
This is the rationale to stop Trump right you're trying to stop Hitler. Right, right
Well, no matter what so I think it's a good use the law use lawfare use whatever yeah use whatever
This is one of the things that worries me about Canada at the moment.
You know, I know when we talked a couple of weeks ago, I expressed my concern about what was happening in Canada.
Doesn't look good.
Well, I read Carney's book, Values. I read it twice and I understood it.
And Carney says in that book, well he says he's an advocate of centralized planning, ESG, he was a huge
ESG advocate, he organized many large corporations to go down this central planning governance route
because the market wasn't pricing everything properly and so central planners had to step in
and Blackrock and Vanguard and places like that were big parts of that.
Don't know if they were directly affected by Carney but it's the same thing and
they've stepped away from that and
he's a big DEI advocate
and he's also a net zero advocate and Carney says in his book
this is a good example of this and I think also a good example of this kind of
narcissism that
we talked about earlier.
Every single financial decision that every individual or organization makes has to prioritize
decarbonization above all else.
Or else!
And there will be many, he doesn't say casualties, but he implies that.
There'll be many who pay a price along the way, but it's necessary, you know, because
you can't make an omelet without breaking a few eggs.
And then he says 75% of the world's fossil fuels have to stay in the
ground. And this is who Canadians are seriously thinking about electing.
Right.
Why does he say the fossil fuels have to stay in the ground?
Too much carbon.
You know, you know,
the real problem with that is the same problem with the COVID narrative is that
they don't allow any dissent, they don't allow any data that conflicts with the
narrative, and they don't want to look at any possible... like both of them are
complicated. They're not similar in a lot, but there are because they're top-down tyrannical tools using fear and compulsion
So they did in during the kovat times. Nobody wanted to look at any alternative treatments. They didn't want to look at
Health metabolic health. They didn't want to look at any factors other than
vaccination and compliance
With carbon no one wants to look at... I'm sure you saw
that Washington Post study of the last... was it 50 million years, the graph that
shows the temperature of Earth? Have you seen it? We're in a cooling period. And
that was always what... I mean during the 1970s, Leonard Nimoy, when he had that
In Search of show, one of the things that they covered was that we are at the verge of an ice age and how terrifying an ice age is
Yeah
Well the the conclusion you draw about climate and carbon dioxide is entirely dependent on where you put the origin point of your graph
So if you go back 150 years ago carbon dioxide is increased if you go back 500 million years ago
Which is quite a lot longer we're in a drought like a serious carbon dioxide drought right and so carbon
dioxide is the fuel of plants yes they turns out that they like it well you
know the glow you know the global greening data well when we had said
well so people know it well you know one of the things I learned as a scientist was that there's usually an explanation or two that accounts for a phenomenon so
completely that almost everything else is noise. Like the Maha movement, Make
America Healthy Again, the fundamental issue is insulin resistance. Like that's
the fundamental plague of, North America and everything else is
noise. It's not unimportant noise but insulin resistance is the major
contributor. On the climate side when I look at the data the thing that leaps
out for me is greening. It's like the planet is 20% greener than it was 30
years ago. Okay 20% this is NASA, I'm not inventing this. Okay,
and then the next question you think, oh 20%! If 20% of the plants had vanished, you'd be
sure we'd heard about that. Yes. Okay, so, and agricultural outputs got up 13%. Now,
whether all that additional carbon dioxide is a function of human activity, that's still
debatable, doesn't matter. There is an association between the carbon dioxide
rise and the plant propagation. Okay, it's even more
particular than that, because a lot of the greening has occurred in semi-arid areas,
so areas around deserts, and the reason for that is that if there's more carbon dioxide,
the plants can close their breathing pores more and they don't lose water.
And so not only is there 20% more vegetation, which is a lot, I think it's twice the area
of the United States that's green.
That's a lot of greed and where our agricultural production is more effective.
And the places that have greened
were the very places that the deserts
were supposed to expand into.
And so, right, because they've greened,
they've shrunk, not grown.
Now, you know, you could say,
well, that rate of change has its problems,
and rates of change have their problems.
But I don't see another data point
that's anywhere near as stunning as that.
I think it's a really important point where you said that if we lost 20% of the planets
people would be freaking out.
Oh my god.
Rightly so.
Rightly so.
But yet it's not even discussed.
Because again, it's one of those things that invades the narrative.
It's one of those pesky facts, those pesky truths that gets in the way of the thing that you're saying, well the apocalypse is coming.
Yeah, well that's the thing about the narrative is like, okay, so now we talked about the psychopaths who
manipulate belief systems for their own advantage, right?
The people who use God's name in vain, the Pharisees who want to dress in religious clothing and obtain status and
consequence, they're Christ's number one enemies in the Gospels, by the way, those
people. They're the ones who conspire to crucify Him, right? The religious pretenders.
So this has been going on for a very long period of time. So the climate apocalypse narrative is perfectly situated to, what would you say, to serve
the perspective, to serve the purposes of the narcissists, the Machiavellians, the psychopaths
and the sadists, because it's an infinitely expanding existential threat that can be used
as an excuse for anything.
Yes.
Right?
And it also provides a perfect cloak for any amount of power maneuvering.
It's like, I want to make your shower heads put out a needle spray
so that you're cold all the time while you have a shower,
while you're doing something you do every day that could otherwise be highly enjoyable.
Why do I get to invade your life to that degree?
Well, because the planet's at stake, Joe. And who are you to invade your life to that degree? Well, because the planet's at stake Joe, and
who are you to privilege your shower comfort, something that trivial, over the fate of the entire planet?
Well, you can use that argument at every single level.
You know, Trump came out with this executive statement just a few days ago about shower heads, and everybody kind of laughed about that,
and I thought, no, he has an eye for petty tyranny
right for petty tyranny and there there's very little that's more petty than
Well, I think the showerhead example is a perfect one
Yeah, and then you also think look if they're willing to control your life at that level of detail
What are they not willing to control?
It's like you're concerned about my shower heads like we're out of water, which we're not at all. So what won't you control? So you think, well the
psychopaths are edge cases, they'll move wherever the power is. They find a
narrative that can be used to strike fear in the hearts of people and to
justify compulsion. They ally themselves with that belief claim, and then they ratchet
themselves up status hierarchies without any rep true reputational validity
riding on that edge of fear and power. Right? Right. I wrote an article, it hasn't
been published yet in the Telegraph, because I got hell a lot after one of
our podcasts. You may know this but...
The climate change stuff.
That's right. The whole bloody transcript was sent to the college as an indication that I was out of
my wheelhouse. You know, and maybe I stepped a bit out of my wheelhouse when we had that discussion
because I'm not a climate scientist, whatever the hell that is, by the way, because you have to know
a lot to be a climate scientist and an economist on top of that.
So today I'm talking about something that's a lot more psychological. The climate apocalypse narrative is a social contagion
that's driven by power mad psychopaths who are hell-bent on using fear and compulsion
to make sure everyone steps in line so that they can continue with their acquisition of undeserved power
It's also effective enough that the people that are underneath the power comply and do the job of the man for the man
Yeah, well, that's the advantage of using fear and compulsion
Yeah, right. It's like well, I have to go along with this because
My leaders who had built up a certain degree of credibility
are telling me that the apocalypse is nigh and who am I to, well first of all question
because God there's a hard thing to figure out, what's the global effect of human activity
on the climate for the next hundred years?
Well good luck figuring that out, but this is why I'm making it more psychological this
time.
It's like the climate fluctuates and for complex reasons, but that is why I'm making it more psychological this time. It's like, the climate
fluctuates and for complex reasons, but that doesn't mean that you get to look a hundred years
into the future and you get to conjure up an apocalyptic narrative and you get to say we're
the only people that can save you and you get to say you have to change every single thing you do
in your life and prioritize our concern above all else including even the well-being of your own children or the
Economic future of the Africans for example who don't get to use fossil fuels, right?
You don't get to do that. You don't get to do that using fear and compulsion
Not only that it's being done by people who have been wrong about everything every step of the way every step of the way
Yeah, well, then they just play a slight of hand hand game there though Okay, we got the time frame wrong Joe. It's not 20 years. It's not even just 40 years
It's not even just climate change. It's basically everything public health agriculture. You name it. Yeah everything
Yeah, well that every single thing the water supply that sets us back into this conundrum that you and Douglas and Dave were addressing
It's like okay
two conundrums, like three, how do you
pursue your interest in a landscape that's been shorn of reliable expert
input? Right? Who do you rely on? Okay, if you don't know who to rely on, like how
do you keep the bloody psychopaths at bay? You know, and the conspiracy theorist
mongers and the people who aren't trying to discover the truth
But who are using the conspiratorial edge? Let's grifters
Yeah, the the Gripers for that matter, right?
these are people who are clear clearly playing power games for their own benefit and they're spinning up these
conspiratorial narratives and riding on them and
Occupying them in this this parasitical manner there's gonna be a huge if this is a huge problem already on the right
wing side I don't you know I don't even know what the hell that is anymore
because I don't write the left is and I don't know what the right is but we need
to claim the center yeah well that's also what we're trying to do with arc
yeah what is the center right centers and center is where we can all meet up. Well, and I think that's doable. Well, let's specify it even more. Okay. The
center is a place you'd go if you were invited. Right? Right, exactly. While that
also ties back into this idea of play, you know, like Piaget figured this out
when he was watching Little Kids. So if a little boy wants to play house with a little girl
Which is generally a good idea if you want to play house with a woman at some point in your life
You better get that right. It's a very serious game. What's the first rule?
She has to want to play
Right, what's the second rule? You have to play with her in a manner that makes her want to play with you again, right?
I've been thinking about this a lot in terms
of what constitutes objective standards of morality. You know how Sam Harris, Sam Harris
was obsessed with malevolence and he wanted to ground morality in objective science because
he thought that would give us a firm standing place. But he went down the wrong scientific
rabbit hole I think. I think if you understand this relationship with play
and iteration, then you have the core of morality. So, so, and Piaget, by the way, this is part of,
what would you say? This is the larger, this is the philosophical edge of his theory. This is actually what he's trying to accomplish. How do you decide if an arrangement is good versus bad or good versus
evil? Well, Piaget went to children to find that out.
It's like, okay, you want to set up a game.
Why?
A game is the first social, it's the foundation of social interaction, right?
Play a game with one other people, one other person, and then maybe you can play a game
with a bunch of people, and then you can play a game with one person or a bunch of people
across a long period of time, and then you could do it in a way
that improves. Okay so now so what are the rules? If you're a little boy she has
to want to play and then you have to play with her in a way so that she wants to
play with you again. If you do that then you have a friend and that iterates now
so you can imagine that there's a structure of voluntary play that's
really quite stringent but this is what you do on your podcast seriously
and that's why it's so attractive to people you know and that's the core of
what you might call objective morality it's like there's there's a very
limited number of ways to play to offer a game that someone else wants to play
and then there's a very limited number of ways to play that game so that they want
to keep playing with you and then you could if you add that additional constraint of improvement
across the games you've got the straight narrow path right then it's marked by we're really trying
to do this at arc we want to offer a vision that people want to accept or even thrilled to accept, because that's
even better, right?
A game that you'd be thrilled to play.
So one of the things we're doing on the energy side, I'm going to an event with Alex Epstein
here in two days, talk to energy executives about this.
You know, well, what kind of world do you want to see?
Well, how about a world where there's so much energy that
poor people Can afford it?
How that be for a vision like have you got a problem with that? Well poor people can't have energy because that'll destroy the planet
It's like no poor people can't have that energy because you'd have to let go of the game that you're playing as a narcissistic psychopath
That's elevating your status
playing as a narcissistic psychopath that's elevating your status inappropriately and you're perfectly willing to sacrifice the world's poor to continue your grip on power. How about that for a psychological interpretation?
Right.
And how about this as an alternative? Why don't we do everything we can to drive energy costs down to the lowest degree that's
sustainable, like in a market economy, and make energy available to everyone so that we eradicate absolute poverty.
Why wouldn't the left line up again around that?
Because the left hypothetically serves the poor.
It's like nothing serves the poor better than an ethos first.
We've got to get that right because we're also interested in getting the story right.
But after that on the material side, there's nothing more important than cheap energy.
Right, but can I stop you for a second there?
I don't think people on the left are getting that message.
I don't think they're hearing that this is exactly what third world countries need, is
a reliable source of energy and industry to elevate themselves out of poverty.
They're not.
They're not getting that.
But it's not the problem of the people that are on the left, like the general followers?
Well it might be a problem that's facilitated by the psychopathic fringe types.
Like, look, I think...
It's not offered to them is my point.
Yeah, the question is why not?
And the reason is, like, this is part of the...
You talk to Lomborg, right, to Bjorn, and Bjorn's pretty good on this, or very good
on this I should say, you know, to give him credit, and, to Bjorn, and Bjorn's pretty good on this, or very good on this, I should say,
to give him credit, and he would like to see a world where, and he's part of ARC,
he'd like to see a world where we make energy abundance a top priority.
It's probably the only way you're going to pull third world countries out of dire poverty.
Well, it's also, as far as I can tell, the only way that you pull them out of environmental catastrophe.
Right.
Because if you want to produce an environmental catastrophe a
true environmental catastrophe how about a three or four year famine so that
everyone there kills all the animals for example or dies right so we also know
that if you get people above $5,000 a year GDP then they start paying
attention to long-term environmental sustainability
Because they don't have to scrabble around in the dirt for their next meal. So then we could say well, how about we have a future of?
Sufficient abundance so that
No one is deprived of energy or or opportunity for their children, right?
Well, that sounds that sounds like an invitation now if you hate people and you think the industrial enterprise is a stain on the
planet and that we're viruses or cancer on the planet, then you're gonna have a
problem with that. But my sense too is that if we had enough energy we could
make all the deserts bloom. I was watching a video on pollution in India about the amount of garbage that gets thrown
in rivers in India.
It was staggering, just staggering to watch that somehow or another through because the
population is so large and there's so many poor people and there's a lack of whatever
it is, they're just throwing their garbage in the rivers and their rivers are just overwhelmed with God
If there's ever like a symbol of thing people that have been led the wrong way like bad leadership bad planning
Bad underlying story everything
That's it when you look at your river and it's all you see is water bottles.
All you see is floating plastic. That's the whole river. And you know that if you get in that water,
you're gonna get sick. And yet, no one looks at it as this number one priority. Like, what do you
always say? Clean your room. Make your bed. Like, right? Yeah. What's going on?
Well, you want to incentivize people to pay attention to the local environment and you do that in part by ensuring that they're not living so close to the edge of catastrophe that they can
only think about today. And if you start from the mindset that... Can I tell you another story?
Sure.
Okay.
You tell me all the stories, you don't have to ask questions.
All right. This is a really cool story. This is how to set the world right, this story.
So I've been travelling around lecturing about my book and I wrote a chapter on Abraham in
that book. And Abraham is the father of, in principle, Islam, Christianity and Judaism.
He's the father of nations. That's how the story goes. So when God comes to Abraham in a very particular way,
it's one of the ways God is characterized in the Old Testament. So this is like a definition of God.
Right? It's not a testament to God. It's a definition of what God is. Okay, so Abraham,
he doesn't hear anything about God until he's like 70. And he's already living in privileged paradise because his
father and his mother are rich. And so he doesn't have to lift a finger. If life is
about having your needs met, Abraham's got it covered. And so he lives like a satiated
infant till he's 70. And then a voice comes to him and it says You are required by the God of your ancestors
To leave your zone of comfort to leave the wealth of your father to leave your nation to leave your language
to go out into the world and have your terrible adventure and
If you do that so now imagine that's the call to adventure if you do that
These things will happen. This is the covenant that God makes to the Abrahamic people. It's so cool
I just talked to Brett Weinstein about this from an evolutionary biological perspective on the road because I wanted him to
Evaluate the story I'm going to tell you from an evolutionary perspective
So God God is the voice that says to Abraham if you follow the call of adventure, you'll be a blessing to yourself. So that's
the meaning of life, right? To have the adventure. You'll do this in a way.
Oh, the call of adventure, blessing to yourself.
Yeah, because adventure is compelling. Responsible, romantic adventure is the most compelling
pathway, right? And if it's's intense enough it justifies the suffering right
It's a reason to it's a reason to get up in the morning even if you're in pain
Okay, then he says there's net net another thing that'll happen to which is that your name will become known among your people for valid reasons
so that's that
Genuine reputation that we talked about so if you follow the pattern of adventure properly,
you'll be a blessing to yourself,
and your name will become known among your people
for valid reasons.
So that's a good deal.
You'll do this in a way that will maximize the probability
that you'll establish something of permanence,
or even eternal permanence.
So Abraham is offered, if he accepts the call and makes the proper sacrifices along the way,
God says your descendants will outnumber the stars. So he establishes the pattern of fatherhood
that best propagates down the generations, which is the same as following the pathway of adventure.
Then he says you'll do this in a way that will make sure no one can stand before you, right? So that if you adhere to that adventurous spirit and you
propagate it, all the enemies will, all enemies will either be converted into friends or flee
before you. And then you'll do it in a way that brings abundance to everyone. And so
now this is the question I'd ask Brett, so imagine this.
So imagine that we have an instinct in us, or divine voice, I don't care which of those you use,
an instinct within us that calls us to develop, right? That puts us on the edge. And that's not
the same as looking for infantile satiation or the gratification of our needs. It's genuinely this call
to expand yourself and to be on the edge and to develop. That if you did that, to follow that instinct, then you'd be a blessing to yourself.
Your name would become known among your people.
You'd establish something of permanent significance. No one could stand before you and it would bring abundance to everyone.
Right? And then in the Abrahamic story what happens is that as Abraham accepts
that, goes out in the world and then he has a series of adventures each of which
requires a more complete sacrifice. Because as you develop under the
influence of this call, what you're required to do is to live more carefully
in accordance with your expanding domain of opportunity.
And that's the pathway forward.
So I asked Brett about that, because this is different than the selfish gene idea, right?
It's like there's an instinct within us that calls us to develop, that pulls us out into
the world.
And if we follow it religiously and we make the proper sacrifices along the way,
then those five things will happen around us.
And that speaks of a concordance which has to be there,
has to be there between the spirit that develops us and the pathway that brings maximal benefit to the natural and the social world.
And I can't see how that can be the case.
If we're adapted to the world,
that has to be the case. Right? It has to be that if we followed the instinct that would
best put us together psychologically, this quest, this adventure, that would also be
the spirit that set the world in order. Right? And that spirit, that whole thing, that's
what's defined as God in that particular story.
Hmm.
Right. Hmm. That's what's defined as God in that particular story. Hmm. That resonates.
Hmm. Well, I can't see the alternative is preposterous, right? The alternative is
that we don't have an instinct to develop, like, and you know that's wrong,
you just have to watch children, and you know that's wrong, you just have to watch
yourself, and the curiosity that you have, and the desire for novelty, and for
learning. You know that's there.
That's what you followed to make this show, definitely. And so the alternative is that
instinct doesn't exist. That's a stupid theory. Or what brings you into the world is done at the
expense of other people in a way that won't enhance your reputation, in a way that has
nothing to do with anything permanent, right? Then it would be sort of you against the world. That
would be like a power orientation. You can get your way in the world, but you have to manipulate,
you have to lie, you have to use compulsion, you have to use fear. You can't just rely on the quest,
say, or your adventure. And I think you can. I think you can. I think you better.
Or else. There's that too. It's interesting because you're talking about
tyrants, right? And you're talking about people of extreme power and how that
corrupts. And in that case there's a large percentage of those people that
are violating all those things that you said
Because they do manipulate and they do rely on fear. Well, you know Nietzsche
Was an advocate of the will to power, right? So you can imagine that there's a variety of potential motivating forces and one would be hedonic pleasure
That's the golden calf worshipers by the way
So that's just short-term hedonism and that doesn't work and by work. I mean it doesn't iterate socially
It's like if it's all about you and what some women you wants now
First of all, that's not going to serve you well tomorrow
And I don't want to be anywhere near you right like you're an over
You're literally an overgrown two-year-old right and that gets pretty ugly by the time you're 40
So the whole golden calf thing, no, that's just off the table. But isn't it kind of
celebrated amongst certain high achievers, particularly in the business
world, like that hedonistic, sociopathic drive to constantly get more numbers on
the ledger? Yeah, well I don't know if that's exactly hedonism. Greed is good, that's
Wall Street, that's Michael Douglas. Yeah, yeah yeah well okay let's delve into that for a minute
yeah okay so I'm not advocating I know you're not I know you're not you can
turn to hedonism you can fall into nihilism you can turn to hedonism or
you can turn to power okay this, this Abrahamic covenant, it's different than power.
It's adventure.
It's romantic adventure, actually.
That's not the only definition of God in the Old Testament, by the way.
There's something deeper than that that it refers to.
So those are the options.
Now you said, don't the achievers, you know, who are stacking up numbers. It's like they found a way forward to attain status, but they fixated on an element that
shouldn't be fundamental.
They're not trying to store up the treasure in heaven.
They're trying to store up the treasure on earth, and that's better than not doing it.
See, this is another thing we need to understand, because I've spent a lot of time for example trying to figure out why people
are attracted to Andrew Tate and I know why they're attracted to Andrew Tate.
They'd rather be under Tate than an incel and they're right, right? It's best
to give the devil his due. Like if you had to choose between being kind of
flabby and unhealthy and resentful
and in your basement looking at pornography,
hating women because all of them reject you all the time
and you deserve it and you're ineffectual
and the future looks pretty damn gloomy.
And then you see Andrew Tate,
who's tough and hyper masculine in an almost manner
that's almost a parody and wealthy and famous and apparently has women at his disposal with
a fair bit of stress on the idea of disposal. You'd think, well, I'd much rather be him
than me. That's the incorporation of the shadow from the Jungian perspective.
It's like, it's right.
And you think about the number of men that are incels.
The thing about men also, if they get rejected a lot, they associate women with pain, and
then they get angry at those women because those women cause them pain.
Like it's just a very simple equation. Of course. That's how you get a
man hater or excuse me that's how you get a woman hater. And the same could be
said for that's how you get a man hater right? You associate man with rejection
and cruelty. Well young men in particular are more likely to be rejected.
Young women may have difficulty finding the ideal man, but they don't
face the same degree of universal rejection. So it's hard on young men.
Well they're not the pursuers, right, as much. The young women aren't.
Right, right. Well, and women are the gatekeepers, fundamentally, of sex.
So that's their essential power. That's also the power of chastity.
And that's the scary thing about acquiring wealth, is that wealth allows you to bypass
the genetic social hierarchy.
Yeah, well, I talked to Russell Brand about this a lot.
You know, women threw themselves at him.
How'd that work out for him?
Not great, you know.
It threw him into great spiritual confusion. It was empty and hollow, and that's worth knowing, you see, because you might say to the people who are interested in the shadow figures,
and Tate plays that role, the master of women, let's say, why not do that?
Because you need an answer to that, if it's certainly when it's better than being lonely Isolated bitter and ineffectual that's for sure. Well, it's because
You don't confuse a stepping stone with the pinnacle that's why there's way more beyond that I
Mean you're a tough guy. You went through your disciplinary processes on the physical side in particular, the intellectual
side too, I might add.
You know, you've got what Tate has to offer, but you're what?
You're respectable.
Why?
Why? I have a completely different background than him, first of all. And also, my feeling in life is whenever you can, be nice.
That's like a general guideline.
You mean nice or good?
I mean both.
Okay.
Nice, as well. I get the posturing, I get how it would be attractive to young
men, I get it if I was a young man I would certainly be drawn to him and I
was to many fighters and I accepted a lot of personality flaws and people that
admired as fighters because they were very successful at doing this one
insanely difficult thing. Right, right.
And oftentimes that requires a certain amount of narcissism, requires a certain amount of
internal focus.
Ironically enough, not at the championship level, ironically enough, it gets you close,
but it doesn't get you to be the king.
The kings are almost precisely
universally disciplined focused and generally kind there's some of the nicest people the best at the most
Difficult thing athletically to do and the most difficult you're you're concrete. Why do you think that is? I think you have to be why why? Miyamoto Uesashi wrote about this in the Book of Five Rings.
You must have balance in everything in life.
If you have imbalance, you can get pretty far because you're so-
Specialized.
Right.
You're so driven, but you will fall prey to the balanced man.
Yeah, that's exactly my point. You will also recognize
characteristics in him that you envy and that you wish you had yourself. Like if you're
a narcissist and a sociopath, you know you are, and you can't really be proud of yourself.
You don't have the benefit of the positive feedback that you get from true kindness to others. You don't have that. Well you also know that your reputation is founded
on sand and one of the way to rationalize that is well everyone does
that. Right. Everyone's like that. Yeah, but then you don't trust or like anyone.
Right. And then you're really alone. That's for sure. Really. Yeah. And then if
you do achieve success it's hollow because you realize like... So you know
you just outlined there the the progression that Carl Jung identified as
characteristic of individuation, right, with the second thing that you said. So imagine that you
start at incel, right, you're ineffectual and you're rejected as a young man. Now there are exceptions, but let's just play that out as the
unhappy majority. Okay, now you look for a shadow figure to sharpen you up, to toughen you up, and to
make you strive at least along one dimension, right? And so then you do that. Well then,
the next thing that happens in the Jung union stage progression is for a man,
it's integration of the anima, which is the feminine part and it's integration, it's not
replacement. It's like, oh, well, then you discover the utility of empathy and compassion and kindness
and mercy and care. Well, still being able to deal out justice, let's say. And so then you bridge
that gap and then that integration you just said even among fighters that's
what puts them in the highest place, right?
That's right. That's right. So, but it's
hard for the people, it's hard for those
who are completely disaffected and also
quite angry about it. You know, the people
who are interested in that pathway that
Tate offers, they're not so unhappy that
he's hard on women, because they're pretty mad at women. And so, you know, if it's the bitch or me, then
I'll pick me. You know, right, exactly, exactly, exactly. And so, and it is very
crucial to get this progression correct, because monster is better than wimp. Right. Right. But the question is what's better
than monster? And so it's very interesting that you made those comments
on the fighting side because you wouldn't necessarily think that it would
be true in that world as well. Well one of the best examples is your
countryman, George St. Pierre, one of the greatest of all time, one of the nicest
guys I've ever met. And if you didn't know that that that he was one of the greatest of all time, one of the nicest guys I've ever met. And if you didn't know that he was one of the greatest fighters of all time, you would
never guess it.
You'd never guess it talking to him.
He's curious, he's interesting, he's intelligent, he's very well read, he's always interested
in different things.
He's constantly searching for new information and as a martial artist
He is still on a quest of improvement, even though he's retired from competing always trains
He's constantly training a quest for new information. Okay, so let me tell you a story about that, please. All right, so
This is the story that comes up at the beginning of Moses when he turns into a leader
So it's about how you turn into a leader
Okay, so he's already killed a man and he's left Egypt because of it
So now he's in this land called Midian and he goes there and he chases some ruffians away from a well
For these two girls who are drawing water and they go and tell their father and he says to them bring this young man home
To have dinner so he does and then he gets married to them.
And then he becomes a shepherd.
And this is crucial because the shepherd's an image that runs through the biblical corpus, right?
Shepherds at that time lived by themselves in the wilderness,
on their wits,
and they kept the wolves and the lions at bay with primitive weapons.
So these were tough guys. And they cared for wolves and the lions at bay with primitive weapons. So these were tough guys and
They cared for the most vulnerable
So a shepherd is an image of optimized ordinary masculinity
Take care of yourself. You can keep the monsters at bay and you attend to the most vulnerable. So Moses has got that
He's a shepherd. He's a successful shepherd
So now he's out there one day wander around Mount Sinai and Mount Sinai or Mount Horeb
That's the place where heaven and earth touch
So that's where the messengers of the divine descend to earth
And so he's out there and something attracts his attention makes him curious
That's the burning bush. It's not a forest fire. It's not something you can't ignore
It's something alive because that's a bush.
A tree is a symbol of life.
And it's burning because things that are alive burn.
That's metabolism.
An intensification of that, like a psychedelic intensification
of that, that's what the burning bush is.
And that's what glimmers to Moses.
And he steps off the beaten track to investigate what drives his curiosity.
And so then he goes off the beaten track and he starts to delve deeply into the mysteries of the burning bush.
And at some point he realizes he's on sacred ground, he takes off his shoes.
That's a symbol of willingness to transform identity, because shoes signify identity, right?
They're part of your costume, your working man's costume. And so then he continues to
commune with the burning bush. He gets deeper and deeper into something. He
makes himself a specialist by following what compels him and delving deeply into
it. And when he gets deep enough into it, to the bottom, the voice of eternity
speaks to him and says, you're now no longer who you were,
you're now a leader, you have to go back to your people, you have to stand up against the tyrant,
you have to tell the slaves that they need to leave their tyranny and their slavery and serve
me in the wilderness, and you have to do that now. And Moses says says I can't because I can't speak I'm slow of tongue and God says basically
That's your problem and with me on your side. We can sort that out and don't you have a brother?
Aaron and can't he speak it's like bring him along for the ride
And so that's when Moses becomes a leader right and so that's the pattern. It's like
ordinary when Moses becomes a leader, right? And so that's the pattern. It's like ordinary masculinity. Those are the dwarves that Snow White serves before she meets the
prince, by the way. The ordinary masculine, right? So, but, and that, and those dwarves
protect her from the evil queen that wants to suppress her by feeding her a
poisoned apple. So Snow White has to learn to serve the ordinary man before
she can find a prince. Yeah, something Disney missed completely in the last story.
So, so what's the pattern?
Well, you discipline yourself so you become a shepherd,
and then you follow what compels you off the path.
Then you take it seriously and get to the bottom of it,
and then that transforms you
and thus transformed you can face the tyrant, you can specify the promised land properly and
you can lead the slaves across chaos and blood, that's the Red Sea, and then through the desert.
Right? And so you said, you know, you said two things. You said that
the good fighters have learned to integrate their civilized side, otherwise they don't
get to be great, and that they continue the pathway of self-improvement, right? They continue
to pursue what's calling to them. That's another definition of God in the Old Testament,
by the way. What calls to you. That's the burning bush, the spirit of the burning bush is what entices you,
what grabs your interest, what attracts your curiosity. And that's identical, the biblical claim is that's the same thing as the spirit of adventure.
It's the same thing that speaks to Noah.
Noah is a good man, and a voice comes to him and says, all hells are broke to break loose.
a good man and a voice comes to him and says all hells are broke to break loose and he believes his intuition because he's a good man and can you rely on
himself so he makes the ark right and he brings his family aboard and culture and
nature and reestablishes humanity that's the pathway of the leader too. What is
your take on there's a university in Jerusalem that had this
theory that the burning bush was the acacia bush. Acacia bush is rich in DMT.
Well I think, look, I think that hallucinogens strip memory from
perception. So you see the world in all its blazing glory. Huxley figured
that out with the doors of perception. That's
really what, that is apparently what psychedelics do psychopharmacologically. They mimic a high
stress condition and they strip memory from perception so that you can return to the source
and revitalize your perceptions. Right, so the probability that there's some overlap between that and the burning bush is high.
It's high, so to speak. High. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, so I'll tell you one more thing, one more story, okay, if that's alright with you.
So something else I figured out that I tried on Brett.
So imagine you could take the hedonistic path, you take the power path, you take
the nihilistic path, okay, and then you might say well that's the only three
options. That's kind of what the postmodernists believe, that's kind of
what the nihilists and the Nietzscheans believe. Power, hedonism, nihilism. Those are your options. There's no uniting narrative above that
Okay, so
in the
story of Cain and Abel
Two patterns are laid out that are different than that one is Cain's pattern one's Abel's pattern
So these are the first two people that are that live in in the world, right?
Because Adam and Eve are made by God you can they're in paradise or were Cain and Abel are the first two people that are, that live in the world, right? Because Adam and Eve are made by God.
You can, they're in paradise or were. Cain and Abel are the first two people.
So Abel brings his best to the table.
So he takes the best animal in his flock and he takes the best cut and
the best part of the cut and he offers that to God so he brings literally brings his best to the table
that's what he sacrifices and Cain doesn't so Cain's
sacrifices are
rejected by God and
God tells him if you brought your best to the table you'd be accepted and Cain gets bitter and resentful and
Invites temptation in to possess him so that spirit of resentment possesses
him and then he becomes murderous. He kills his brother and his descendants
become genocidal and then you have the flood. And so that pattern of sacrifice
is established right at the beginning of the biblical texts. Abel versus Cain.
Abel brings the best to the table and that satisfies God.
So one question, God actually asks Cain this when Cain complains. He says, if you,
wouldn't you be accepted if you were doing your best? So that's a question of conscience, right?
If you're in extreme misery and your life is hollow and empty and you're bitter and resentful. It's like, you
bringing your best to the table? Because the covenant proclaims that if you did, you'd be
accepted.
Yeah, clearly.
Okay, so now the question is what constitutes, now you know you have to sacrifice. So sacrifice
becomes the foundation of the state, not power, not hedonism, it's sacrifice.
And then that motif is played out through the whole Bible and that's what culminates
in the New Testament, right?
Total sacrifice as the foundation of the community.
That's right.
And like, I don't know what sense to make out of the metaphysics of the religious realm,
you know, because that's beyond me and everyone.
The world is a strange place and we could leave it at that. But the idea that
See Christ is the exemplar of voluntary self-sacrifice, right?
Won't turn to power, won't deviate from his course, faces the worst of all possible deaths, descends to hell itself.
That's the pattern of life lived with no reserve and that's the foundation of the free state. That's right. I tried that on
Brett. He told me when we first met on the tour that he felt that the biblical
narratives were anachronistic, you know, that they were written in a time that
was no longer relevant to us, but he decided by the end
of our three days together that if you got to the core of the message, it's alive.
Right?
That's the living spirit inside the bush, you might say.
And that it's, so here's even the weirder thing.
So imagine, it's pretty obvious that Christ is a symbol of voluntary self-sacrifice.
Right? I don't think it, it doesn't really come as a shock to anyone. It's pretty obvious that Christ is a symbol of voluntary self-sacrifice.
I don't think it... it doesn't really come as a shock to anyone, but the weird thing is, you know,
we put that symbol at the center of our churches and at the centers of our towns for 2,000 years,
not really knowing why.
And the reason is, is that voluntary self-sacrifice is the foundation of the integrated psyche and the stable, productive
and abundant community.
And that's right.
It's right.
And so, well, it's been exciting to have the opportunity over the last nine months to go
talk to people about that, because I've talked to about 150,000 people, I guess, public lectures.
That to me is one of the most fascinating aspects of Christianity, regardless of whether
or not you think logically these things took place. Logically, these stories are a completely
accurate depiction of exactly that one. If you follow the principles, it's incredibly beneficial to your
spiritual life as a person. Well, that's a kind of interesting proof, isn't it? Yeah. It means that...
There's truth in it. Well, there's certainly the spirit that makes... what would you say? The
spirit of truth that makes life more abundant. That's exactly right.
And these are weird stories because the way they're true is very sophisticated.
They're true always. That's different than a story about the past.
Like, the truest story is always happening. The story of Moses is exactly like that.
Like, the pattern of leadership development that's embedded in the Exodus story, that is how leaders develop, if they're real leaders.
And their temptation is power, but that's not their motivation, that's their temptation, right? That's a very important distinction.
And that's always the case with leaders, and if they fall prey to the temptation of power, no matter what their accomplishments, they're not going to complete the task.
And so there's a cool element at the end of that story too, you know, when Moses, just
before Moses dies, he picks a scout from each tribe, 12 tribes, and he sends them to Canaan,
which is the future.
That's a good way of thinking about it.
It's the potential place we could reside where everything was worked out, the land of milk and honey. He sends 12 scouts there and 10 of them come back and say
they tell a fear story. They say it's insurmountable the challenges that lie ahead of us.
There's no way we can master this. We should have never crossed the desert. We should have stayed
under the thumbs of the tyrants. We should have never tried to be anything more than slaves because now we're doomed and two of them
Say no if we maintain our upward
Orientation and our covenant nothing can stand in our way. We can make the deserts bloom
Moses dies those two scouts and so do all the
Moses dies, those two scouts, and so do all the
Israelites who are convinced by the unfaithful scouts, and the scouts die, and the two people who go on to
the promised land are Caleb and Joshua, and they lead the Israelites, the faithful Israelites, into the promised land. Those are the people who have the courage to confront the future in a faithful and
faithful, hopeful, and courageous manner. They're the inheritors of the future. Caleb, Joshua. Joshua's name
is the same as Christ's name. It's the same name. That's not fluke, right? That's one
of those echoes or precursors to the story. There's an ethos that leads you into the
promised land and what's the ethos? The spirit of voluntary self-sacrifice.
You know, you give up something for a social relationship. Of course, you give
up being primary, right? You do the same thing at the social level and when you
do that it integrates you and it sets the world straight and that's built into the biblical story it's right at its core so
pause that thought yeah I'm gonna use the restroom we'll come back yep we're
back so it's great fun to explain these things to people on the tour because it
it sorts them out well it's very fascinating yeah that's for sure and the
fact that these stories have existed for so very fascinating. Yeah, that's for sure. And the fact that these stories have
existed for so long, so interesting, you know, that's where it gets really weird. Yeah, well
they've adapted to the contours of our memory and our imagination. Yeah. So you find them compelling
and they stick to your memory. So I'm going to tell you what else I'm up to. Okay. What are you
up to? Well the first thing I want to do is thank you.
So we launched Peterson Academy in September and we talked about it and it's been a stunning
success.
We have 40,000 students.
That's amazing.
We think we're the most rapidly capitalized, we're one of the most rapidly capitalized
companies ever,
especially with our degree of investment because we run a lean show. We have great professors.
We have a great social media site. We had to kick 10 people off it. We have 15,000 active users.
10 people were dragging it sideways. What were they doing? They were causing trouble, Joe. Socio-pass.
They were causing trouble.
Well, or immature, or out for, or didn't know how to conduct themselves.
That's all it took.
And now everyone is sharing ideas and Mick, my daughter and her husband, they keep a close
eye on this.
That's great.
We have secured funding to the point where we are dropping the price from $5.99 to $3.99 a year, as of today.
Right. So that should make it accessible to a lot more people.
And we're even more convinced than we were that this has to be the future of higher education. So when we were doing our due diligence for the fundraising, we discovered that 40% of courses at university are now online and
we've investigated some of those courses. Many of them are PowerPoint
presentations and that's all. And so that's the university experience for full
tuition and we literally have the best professors in the world and unmatched production quality.
So, and we're filling in the social element too
because we want people to be able to meet
the social media platform does that.
It's very positive platform.
We've already had our first couple announce themselves,
which was quite fun.
And we're going to do in-person events,
our first plan, we're gonna do a cruise. Can I ask you this? Yeah. What has, what
has your journey been like to go from relative obscurity as a professor in
Toronto to becoming this person who you are now, sort of a worldwide educator outside
of the standard system of academia, but also subject to intense international scrutiny, distortions, complete, complete, like what they've done to change your position.
Something like you are probably the most intentionally misrepresented person I know, intentionally
misrepresented.
We see, you see it with a lot of other people too, but with you it's, it's, it's, it's
malicious.
I've seen it.
But yet you have this desire inside of you
to spread information and to educate.
And learn.
And learn.
I'm learning on the stage.
But what has it been like?
How old were you when I first met you?
It was like 2015, right?
Ten years ago, 53.
You were just encountering notoriety, just encountering attention and what all the trappings
that come with that. What has that been like, like navigating that?
It's very unusual that a person becomes world famous
at 50.
For ideas.
Yes.
Yeah, yeah, that's for sure.
Well, first,
I mean, it was exhilarating and painful to begin with.
It was exhilarating because I knew the ideas
that I was teaching at Harvard and at the U of T were revolutionary. I could
never believe, I never could get over the fact that they allowed me to teach. Like
it was just a, but the students loved my courses and I was very diligent you know
so I stayed in my traces so to speak and I wasn't a revolutionary for the
sake of revolutionary argumentation and I was teaching about totalitarianism
and great evil and so it was hard to make a moral case against me and no one was really inclined to
you know they were happy with my teaching so and as were the students and I had a clinical practice
which was quite extensive but then when I first started to lecture much more broadly we rented a theater and I did a series on Genesis
That was the first foray out into the public space and it sold out
Well, that was when I started to encounter pain I would say at a crowd level
And that was rough Joe
Because I'm pretty good at getting people to open up to me right away
I mean I learned that as a clinician, you know, and have thousands of people do that.
That's pretty rough.
Now, it was good. It was a good thing, like all things considered, because people would tell me
how miserable they were, how discouraged and how sidelined, and often how bitter, how addicted,
how imprisoned, rough stories, and then tell me how much they had improved.
But that was also, there was a tragic element to that because it didn't take that much,
you know, to tap them into the right orientation.
And so there was sadness in that, to see all these people who were demoralized, thousands of them, and then
to see how that could be rectified and yet hadn't been. That was rough. I'm sure that
was what... There's many things that made me sick. I had a pre-existing condition that was autoimmune, but seeing all that, that was pretty rough.
But knowing that it was possible to rectify
it, well, that's, there's nothing better than
that, like, you know, wherever I go now, it's
so interesting, wherever I go now, I'm among
friends, it's very strange.
And I have security people and they keep an eye on me and all the interactions I
have with people are positive.
And I always take time for people, you know, because, well, if they're, they've
been positively impacted by something that I've read or said, and they're trying
to get their lives together, it's like, how about we encourage that?
Right?
Cause more of that would be real good. trying to get their lives together, it's like, how about we encourage that? Right? Because
more of that would be real good. And if we had enough of that, then more of that would
be real good and real necessary.
And good for everyone too.
Hey, absolutely. Well, that's that abundance. It's like, you got your act together, great.
That'll be real good for you. Be great for your girlfriend. Be great for your kids. Be
great for your community. Absolutely. And it's, well, you know, great for your girlfriend, be great for your kids, be great for your community.
Absolutely. And it's, well, you know, the Christian ethos, the emphasis is redemption
one soul at a time. Well, I'm a psychologist, you know, that's what I think. One person
at a time, because everyone's connected way more intensely than we think. And so there's
no such thing as a trivial person. And there's no such thing as a trivial person and there's no such thing as a
trivial sin or a trivial accomplishment for that matter. And so, and I know that, I know that. I
studied totalitarianism for a long time. I know how it comes about. It comes about when everyone
lies about everything all the time. And the way you stop that is by not lying and that's how it stops
so what's it like painful and
Insanely exhilarating at the same time and you know the balance has shifted
Over the years to the exhilaration once I go out on top of it once I got my health under control
which required pretty stringent discipline. Like, I eat steak, and when I deviate from that, things start to fall apart around me
pretty quick.
Isn't it crazy that that alone is polarizing?
You're eating all the steak.
You're contributing to the downfall of civilization.
You're destroying the environment.
Don't you know that cows are the number one producer of...
I know, I know.
We've got to stop eating meat. We gotta stop eating meat. We eat
too much meat. That's why the world's... Meanwhile, China's opening up coal plants every week.
It's hilarious. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, well that's just another... Okay, so it's also surreal.
And that's one element. The diet thing, just alone, not just alone, is surreal. I mean,
my daughter was so sick. And now she's great't it crazy it's crazy well my wife is on this
carnivore diet too and like it's been unbelievably good for her it's
unbelievably good for almost everybody yeah that's what's really not well is
it's it's it's it's crazy for the mind that's oh yeah yeah your brain likes to
run on ketones as it turns out. Yeah, it really does
I felt when I you know, I've done it back and forth
But when I'm on it strictly, you know, like when I go back to it one of the things I notice immediately
So I have like an extra gear
Intellectually my brain stamina. Yeah more stamina. Yeah, no run a study
I think you test people really yeah, cuz my sis we don't know but yeah
We're going to run a study and IQ test people. Really?
Yeah, because my sister, we don't know, but yeah, there's two studies planned.
One group will be people with immunological disorders, try carnivore, keto, and no ordinary
diet, random assignation, but we're also going to give them personality and IQ tests.
You should do it with junk food.
I'd be fascinated to see people pre-, like go the right way first and then try junk food. I'd be fascinated to see people pre- like go the right way first and then
try junk food.
Yeah, right.
You know, sort of like…
It'd be good to do an ABAB design. That's what that is.
Remember that? What was that? Super Size Me?
Yeah.
Yeah, that documentary?
Yeah.
Where the guy just…
Well, it's clear. It's absolutely crystal clear that we eat too many carbohydrates.
Like the food pyramid is upside down.
Yes, clearly. And then on top of that, environmental pollutants and all the other issues that we
have with additives. And this is, to me, is one of the more exciting things about this
current administration is the Make America Healthy Again movement. And, you know, eliminate
fluoride from the water, eliminate all these. I think there's a new list of ingredients
that most of them are banned in Europe and
a lot of other places and are legal in America.
It's insanity and it doesn't make any sense.
And oftentimes the arguments don't even make sense as to why they continue to produce it
because they produce the same products for Canada, for instance, where Canada has better
laws when it comes to additives.
So they produce the ones in Canada where they don't have it comes to the additives. So they produce the ones in Canada
where they don't have the negative dangerous additives and yet they still make this argument
that to force them to stop doing that in America will cause great economic harm. Well, it's clearly
the case that we have an obesity, diabetes, and mental health epidemic.
And the probability that all of those are associated
with insulin resistance and immunological reactions
seems to me to be certain.
Herbicides and pesticides as well.
Well, there's a cascading,
there's a cascade of differential effects.
Undoubtedly some people are more sensitive
to those things as well.
I was watching a documentary that I sent to Jamie about China. And one of the, you know,
China innovates at such a level, like such a fascinating level that, you know, because
they're integrated with the government, which I'm not saying is a good thing, but because
of that, sort of unlimited growth, because the growth is designed for the state, like everyone's all involved in it. One of the things they're
doing is integrating rice farms with crayfish farms. So they figured out a way to stop using
herbicides and pesticides and instead farm these two things together. So they have the rice
and then they have the crayfish. The crayfish feed off the excess material
from the rice but also keep the water nitrogen and carbon rich and so the rice
is more nutrient rich and so soil is more nutrient rich. And then they're bringing in fish and
crabs as well. So they're harvesting all of these different things that people
eat along with the rice all in together, and they've created, you know, sort of
like what they've done with regenerative agriculture, like white oaks
pastures and, you know, poly face farms and different regenerative agriculture establishments in America but they're doing it with rice to avoid using
herbicides and pesticides and hopefully the new administration under Kennedy
will be able to figure out how to prioritize these things so some of them
happen I my concern I suppose it's not my concern a concern is that
They'll try to do too many things at once, you know, and that's why I focused when we talked earlier today about insulin resistance Right, but there's so much to try to change
Well, that's it and you can't change it all like that's there's gonna be resistance on all fronts
But one person at a time as you're saying like when you when you have this message and you talk to people
About things that you've done that have made you healthier that message resonates and then one person at a time tries that
Their friends join in and the next thing you know, you've got a large percentage of healthy people
That are listening to you. Yeah, which is well
I've seen that again and at the shows like one of the things that's also changed across the years is that
The proportion of people who are in trouble at my shows is decreasing and partly that's because many of the guys who come
Generally with their wife and often with the child have put themselves together
Yeah, and then they're happy about that and they tell me the story and so that's great with their wife and often with a child have put themselves together. And then
they're happy about that and they tell me the story and so that's great. Like
there there's nothing better than traveling all around the world and
having people come up to you and say that they weren't doing so well, that
their lives are way better now and thank you. Yes, that's beautiful. That's a good
deal. That's a great deal. That's a good deal. Those are my favorite stories that I hear from people that listen to the podcast. They're like I've listened the podcast
I lost 60 pounds. I started working out every day. I'm much healthier. I'm drinking a lot of water
I'm taking electrolytes and vitamins and and just my mental health has improved because of the daily exercise. I'm a different person
Yeah, I'm on the right path. Yeah
Well, it's so so that's very interesting to a that the fact that that's actually
You said those are the best stories that you can hear of those stories. Well, it shows you something about
non-hedonistic motivation
It's like imagine what you could have if you could have anything you wanted
Well, maybe you know your imagination would drift first to the hedonistic side or maybe the power side for that matter
It's like no, how about you know, your imagination would drift first to the hedonistic side or maybe the power side for that matter.
It's like, no, how about you can wander around anywhere in the world,
some isolated field with a castle on it in Serbia,
and people that you've never seen will come up to you and say,
I was having a pretty damn dismal time of it, all things considered,
and I listened to what you wrote and said and in consequence
I put my life together and their wife standing beside them going, yeah, he's really in a
lot better shape. Thank you a lot.
Yeah. No, those are great stories.
That's a good deal.
That's a great deal.
Yeah. So when you ask what it's like, well, it's like a lot of that.
Yeah.
You know, and-
Do you feel a burden? Do you feel like a sense of responsibility that is at times overwhelming
because of this responsibility that you have?
I think I felt more for a good while the pain of it.
It wasn't the responsibility...
Well...
Well, the intense connection you have to these people that are...
Well, the responsibility...
The responsibility makes you careful. Mmm. You know, how careful are you makes you careful.
How careful are you?
Be careful.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Why?
Because you have a responsibility.
Yeah.
But that's okay?
Yeah.
Well that's part of that additional sacrifice.
It seems natural to me.
Okay.
What do you mean?
That with, you know, the concept with great power comes great responsibility. It just seems normal. Well, it has to be the case, right? I mean, as your field of opportunity expands,
if your field of responsibility doesn't expand, you'll collapse.
And you pay a higher price for stupidity at larger scales of opportunity.
Yes.
Obviously.
Obviously.
And so get your act together and you know and is that a burden?
Voluntarily undertaken responsibility isn't a burden, it's an opportunity.
Mm-hmm.
Right?
That doesn't mean it's not easy, but easy, like I don't know what easy is.
What's easy?
Pointless misery?
That's not easy.
A life with no meaning is one of the hardest things.
Absolutely.
So I guess the reason you pick up your cross and walk uphill is because that's the best
thing you can do, all things considered.
I mean that's why Christ says that His burden is light you can do, all things considered. I mean, that's why Christ
says that His burden is light, that His yoke is light. It's like, huh, you're supposed to take up
your cross and walk uphill towards death and hell, let's say, but that's light. Okay, why? Because,
because there's no better pathway than voluntarily undertaking responsibility.
Well definitely.
That's psychologically impeccable statement.
There's no difference statistically speaking between thinking about yourself and being
miserable.
It's self-consciousness.
They're the same thing.
Which is a giant problem with social media, right?
Terrible problem. Accelerant to misery. Yeah, yeah. Which is a giant problem with social media, right? Terrible problem. Accelerant to misery.
Yeah, yeah, sure as soon as you're focused on you, the narrow you now, you're self-conscious,
you stumble on stage, you can't play your musical instrument, you can't ride a bike, you can't box, right?
You're not in the flow. Why? Because you're not serving the right thing. Like when I go on stage,
I remember first of all, I have music at the beginning of my shows. I've got a great musician.
What kind of music? What are you playing?
Well, I don't play it. I have a musician from Cambridge.
You have a musician?
Yeah. My son sometimes plays for us, which is really fun.
So it's not songs? It's just music with no lyrics?
No. Well, Julian plays. He plays country music on a guitar and a couple of his own compositions, so it's
been fun to have him along because he's quite good at it and so that's really great.
But the music, Dave, the guy who plays for me, he starts out, plays classical gas, he's
kind of like a one man band, he plays classical gas, he's kind of like a one-man band. He plays classical guitar, but he's got electronic instruments around him and he can fill up
the theatre or the stadium.
He likes playing in stadiums.
And he ends with Inception on electric guitar, which is pretty hardcore rock, all things
considered, and it gets everybody focused. And then when I'm lecturing, I have a question, and I know that's a quest, and it's real,
because I pick something important that I would like the answer to, and then I explore
that with the audience.
And I'm not self-conscious.
And the reason for that is, it's not about me.
It's about trying to answer the question. And even more
importantly trying to get the damn question right to begin with, right?
Because you've got to get the question right, man. That's the crucial issue. Then the
words come to you. What did I figure out? The spirit of your aim is what answers
your prayers. There's a brutal idea for you. Right, right, right, right. So if you want to
defeat your wife, the spirit of power will tell you what to say. Right. Yeah, right is right, man.
Right. There's a terrifying thing to know. So if you aim upward high enough, then the spirit of upward
aim reveals itself to you in
words that's right in words and intent and that's exactly right so so it's
great like it's a lot you know you know that it's a lot yeah I had a different
journey though my journey was like a slow drip of fame, which I think was very healthy.
It's a good way to do it so you could adjust to it.
Yeah, well you also mostly escaped from reputation savaging, right?
I mean, you've had, I'm not saying completely because people have gone after you, but
I got a real flurry of early hate around Bill C-16, which I was 100% right about, by the way.
You were right, but you were a lightning rod. You were the patriarchy. You were the one
to point to that was going to reinforce these established norms that are not supportive
of the minimalized and marginalized communities, right? You were cruelty, right?
You were the cruel white man.
What did that guy call you?
Mean, mean white man.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Which is, by the way, you've already lost.
That's, you're throwing pejoratives out there like that
in a debate, like, that's the thing that I was talking
about, like when someone tries to establish insults
and get you on your back, it's offense.
It's offense to put you in a defensive position
so that you cannot do your best.
Yeah, well, it's also to pull the rug out
from underneath you so you collapse your reputation
permanently and that redounds to the person's credit.
Also, it's to establish a narrative to the audience that's listening to you now you have to
look at this person under this light because I've done so eloquently
described him as this thing. Yeah. And then he will be defensive about that.
Yeah. Because he does, well I am not that. And then you look even more like that thing.
Yeah, yeah. It's a very underhanded way of of right dressing which is luckily. I don't like that
Not only do I not like that. I don't think that's necessary
I don't think it's necessary as the person doing it. I certainly don't miss think it's necessary to respond to that
I don't think it does anyone any good
I don't think it's good for society as a whole and it's definitely not good for exploring ideas
I wonder what you do with the psychopaths. It's also you're trying to win. Yeah versus trying to
express
your perspective
With as much clarity and as much thought as possible. You're trying to do your very best to
thought as possible. You're trying to do your very best to examine these things from a selfless perspective, from a truly objective perspective. Well it's a
truly quest perspective I think, right? So it's not exactly
objective, it's more like, because you don't have access to that, but what you
can say is, well I'm genuinely puzzled about
this and I would genuinely like to search for the answer.
Right.
Wouldn't it be ideal if you were having a debate where someone said something that you
agreed with and you're like, wow, he's got a really good point, and you, instead of refuting
that person, exploring that with them, which is one of the reasons I don't like debates
per se.
Yeah, I don't like debates either.
I like debates. Yeah, I don't like debates either. I like conversations. Yeah.
Because in conversations, if you don't have a predetermined narrative that you want to
enforce, instead you have your thoughts, you have your ideas, and you're not married to
them.
Yeah.
And these are just thoughts.
And you put them out there, and then you can encounter a very unique human being who has a way of describing and thinking about things that will open your mind to new possibilities,
which is what we all should strive for.
We should all strive to be illuminated, to learn from new things, but yet we close those
off because that is a point that your enemy is
trying to score. Well, it's also because people aren't really very well versed in how to do this,
you know. So one of the huge advantages of your podcast and of the podcast world in general,
I would say, is that you model how to do that. you know, it's like and there's a there's an there's an intense religious
Ethos under that so okay. So what does it mean? You start without pride in humility?
It's like what the hell do I know right or or maybe more precisely?
There's probably some things I could still learn that would be beneficial
Okay
You know your interest in a topic and your desire to know
more. So that's the quest elements like you're after something, right? You don't know what it
is, but it's more development, it's more wisdom, it's more information, right? You're not sure
where it's going to be. Okay, so now you're the sort of person who could learn and that has
something to learn and now you have a quest in mind.
Okay, so now that's the frame for your actions.
Well, if you're talking to someone who's also doing that, well then those are the words
that come.
Yeah.
Right?
And they come in a compelling way to you and to the participant and in a way that's compelling
enough so that they compel other people
That's the Holy Spirit by the way. That's that phenomenon from a religious perspective. That's exactly what it is
It's because that's like you sit before the talk and rehearse what words you're gonna say
They just appear no and never do right. I don't think I should know I
Don't well sometimes it's a problem because you breach subjects that you weren't really prepared
to talk about and you might not have a fully formed idea about it.
Yeah.
You know, you're not exactly, oh, if I thought about that, what would I have said differently?
You know?
Yeah, but you kind of have to find that out along the way.
Yes.
Right.
You know, and that way you're, you know, you have a right to stumble over your own ignorance.
For sure. How the hell do you know it's there before you're, you know, you have a right to stumble over your own ignorance.
How the hell do you know it's there before you reveal it?
Well, not only that, I don't think the audience truly trusts you unless they feel authenticity
in that quest, as it were, that desire to try to understand, like, what is it that you
believe and why do you believe what you believe?
And where did you come to these conclusions?
How what what journey did you go on? What what ideas did you dismiss?
What ideas were holding you back?
What ideas did you realize were just a personal weakness that you were protecting yourself from reality?
Protecting yourself from the reality of bad choices and past mistakes.
What are you doing to stop that from entering into your current state of mind?
And that kind of thinking, people can mirror and they can listen to you talk about these things and say, I do that. OK, I got to stop doing that. This is how I can clarify the way I view things.
And this is why I'm tripping myself up,
because I keep trying to win conversations.
I keep trying to be right all the time, which is impossible.
Especially as a human.
It's elevating your status in the conversation
as a consequence of abstract
victory instead of increasing your wisdom and enhancing your reputation as a sojourner
towards the truth.
Yes.
And it's especially difficult for young people because you don't have enough life experience to have made these mistakes and correct them and learned
and grown and have the humility to recognize that process.
Right.
Instead, you see other people that are successful or whatever it is and you want that right
now.
Yes.
Yeah.
And that's wrong too because you don't want that right now.
You want to learn how to have that so that when you do get it, you can...
You want to win the lottery, but you don't.
No, no, definitely not.
You don't, right?
Because everybody wants to win the lottery.
Yeah, right.
That's one of the worst things that can happen to you.
Crazy.
Well, and what do young people have?
They can listen, and they can ask questions.
Right.
And they say, when the student is ready, the teacher will come.
Well, how does that play out in the world? Well if you admit to your ignorance and you ask genuine
stupid questions you will rapidly encounter people who are more than happy
to share their wisdom with you. Like people love having mentees right? They
like to be able to share their wisdom and their
experience. Unfortunately, even if they don't have it. Yeah. That's where it
becomes a problem. Yeah. The false prophet. Yeah, well that's right. Yeah. That's a
problem. The false guru. Yeah, right. The people that don't have the answers to
their own lives, so they try to give other people answers to their lives. Yeah.
Well, that's also the psychopath problem. Yes. You know, what about the people who
are feigning competence? Right. Yeah, right. Well, that's a real problem. Yeah, that's also the psychopath problem. What about the people who are feigning competence?
Right. Oh, that's a real problem.
Yeah, it's a real problem. It's a deadly problem and it's massively elevated on social media.
Yes. Well, it used to be a gigantic problem in martial arts, the fake martial artists.
There was a lot of them.
Sure.
The fake martial artists there was a lot of them sure yeah any get any that's the
That's the eternal parasite problem. Mm-hmm. Yes. Yeah, so so
organisms build up a storehouse of value a carcass let's say like a whale carcass for example and
Inevitably the parasites move into invaded, inevitably.
And that's so consistent a pattern that sex evolved to stop it.
How so?
Well, parasites can reproduce faster than their hosts
because they're simpler.
And so they can swarm the host quite rapidly, especially if the host clones itself, because the host then stays identical physiologically across the generations.
So the parasites can optimize to colonize the host and that's the end of it.
If you reproduce sexually, you mix your genes up 50 per... you pay a price, you lose 50% of your genetic specific genetic heritage
but the advantage is you stay ahead of the parasites so sex evolved to outwit the parasites
and a huge part of what we're seeing around us and this is probably a consequence at the
low lowest level base level we've had a phenomenal boom in wealth since World War II. Phenomenal. We stored wealth everywhere, like in Harvard
at a $53 billion endowment. Well, the parasites found the wealth everywhere. And they've invaded
like mad.
That's a great example. Parasites in academia are a great example of what you're talking
about.
Media? Legacy media? Science has been invaded that way? The political? This is a major problem.
And so how do you protect yourself against the parasitical exploiters?
Well, you can recognize parasitical behavior, right? When everything gets chalked off to
racism and white supremacy, when they start using these pejoratives, they start throwing
those around for everything. That's one of the ways you recognize it.
Yeah, that's right.
Oh, you're a parasite. You're not really doing science. You're not really doing academics.
Well, one of the hallmarks of identification from the clinical literature for the cluster
B types, and so they have a parasitical element, histrionic, narcissistic, psychopathic, criminal,
right? That's cluster B. They use false
claims of victimization to manipulate. And so this is a particularly pernicious pathway,
because they parasitize empathy. Right, and the left is unbelievably susceptible to that,
because the left is full of empathic people. And so those who parasitize empathy have a field day on the left. Right, right, because the left is
generally thought to be more educated, more compassionate, kinder, looking out
for marginalized people. That's part of the ethics of it all. The ethic is pretty
straightforward. Anything that cries is a baby. It's like, no, some things that cry
are monsters. Right, right. Well let's take the
case of Nicola Sturgeon, the Scottish Prime Minister, the previous Scottish Prime Minister.
Any man who wants to can be a woman. It's like, okay, any man. You mean any man, do
you? Yeah.
Have you encountered the nightmare men?
Oh, they don't exist.
They're all victims.
Yeah.
You just bloody well wait till you encounter one.
You'll change your story very rapidly.
And for the naive and sheltered empaths of the radical left, they're either psychopaths,
so they're wolves in cheap clothing, or they're people so that are so naive that the the what would you say red riding hoods grandmother can
definitely have his way with them. Yes, that is literally something that I use as an example
in my Netflix special. I said that I think there are people that feel like
they're trapped in a woman's body and then there's also people that are out of
their fucking mind.
They're crazy.
Oh, they're not just crazy.
And that all throughout history, but what I pointed out all throughout history, when
you wanted to make a killer in a movie scarier, you put him in a dress.
Like Norman Bates in Psycho, Silence of the Lambs, and I used the Big Bad Wolf.
I'm like, it's literally a wolf dressed up like a woman.
That's literally what it is. And they've somehow
or another completely abandoned this one aspect of masculinity that's one of the more terrifying
is the predatory pervert. And they've given the predatory pervert a privileged position. Right, right.
And that's...
That's Eve's sin, by the way.
One of the craziest things about it is they've completely abandoned the idea of the pedophile...
Of monster.
And then the monster and the sexual pervert, and then the attacker, the assaulter, the
person who...
When you give a guy, you say all you have to do is say you're a woman,
now you have access to wherever women's spaces.
All the women's spaces, you could victimize them,
you could fight them, you could beat them in sports,
you could dominate them in all games.
It's bizarre, bizarre that no one's caught on to that.
And that's the-
That's for sure.
That's the weirder, that's the more cult-like
and even you could say religious aspect of leftist
thinking. It's an original sin. Eve clutches the serpent to her breast. It's like, that's a serpent.
It's poison. You don't get to love it. It's a monster. It's a guy wearing a dress with an erection in the women's room.
Yeah, yeah, right.
Yeah.
Or worse.
Yeah, or worse.
Or worse.
Or a lot worse, yeah.
Well, right.
And you know, there are no shortage of naive people who've never really encountered a monster
and have no imagination for it.
But there's also people that are willing to justify the monster's behavior because the
monster is a part of a protected class now.
Yeah, well, that's part of that.
Which is crazy. The cluster B types use proclamation of victimization
to parasitize.
That's part of their clinical pathology.
And they're so ubiquitous.
Or me, I get to do anything.
And they're so common.
That's what's really crazy.
And why is it that academia is overwhelmed
by people like this?
Is it because it's vulnerable to parasites?
Sure, why not? It was a storehouse of unguarded value.
Without any religious principles.
Well, yeah, there's that too and with no real gatekeepers.
Like the parasite problem is a very deep problem.
So I can even, maybe I can even give you an example of that.
This is a hard one, but I'll try.
In the Pinocchio movie, this also happens in Jonah, the story of Jonah.
Remember, Geppetto ends up in a whale.
It's like, what the hell?
There's no explanation for that in the story.
It's like he's out looking for Pinocchio and now he's in a whale.
Well, a whale is a giant carcass, right? And so when something dies, its spirit, what would you say,
its spirit is then embedded in a carcass. That's a good way of thinking about it. That's why
Pinocchio has to go into the belly of the whale to free Geppetto and finish his transformation,
is that when things deteriorate, right, you have these
carcasses lying around with their dead spirits, the spirit of what gave rise to them is still
inside there. And the job is to go into the carcass and to revitalize the spirit that
produced it and not to parasitize it. Right.
Boy, I don't know how you got that out of Pinocchio and the whale.
Well, I tried to follow you on this one, I'm like, wow.
Geppetto ends up languishing in the whale. Right. Right? So imagine that there's a spirit
in the universities that gave rise to these great, great storehouses of value. And that
spirit has disintegrated and now it's inside the storehouse. That's a good way of thinking
about it. It's inside the storehouse. That's a good way of thinking about inside the storehouse
Your job is someone who wants to become real is to go into the storehouses of value that have been bequeathed to us by the
past and to discover and revitalize the spirit that gave rise to them not to
Parasitize them and when they parasitize they strip them to their bones and there's nothing left and they do it obviously right?
There's plagiarism. There's all these different and all that stuff.
All scientific papers.
Yes.
And all that stuff gets swiped under the rug because the people that are doing it are part
of the protected class.
So they protect the parasites.
Like this is my lamprey.
Like don't.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
This is my baby.
Like the woman from Harvard, they fired her but they gave her an equal job
It could also be Joe and might as well get in trouble for this too. Let's go. Well
Because women are more agreeable
they're more prone to manipulation by psychopaths because their
primary ethos is
Is nurturing, you know for a naive woman every victim is a baby
It's like fine
90% of them are victims you could even say that about criminals you go to the run-of-the-mill prison and
There's gonna be people in there, and you heard their lives you think oh my god. No wonder right and then there's another
And there's going to be people in there and you heard their lives, you think, oh my god, no wonder.
And then there's another core group that's like, oh, I see, I see who you are.
You're, you're, if I saw one, if I saw inside your skull for five seconds, I'd have post
traumatic stress disorder, I'd never recover.
Those people don't exist.
It's like, oh, oh, oh yes, they exist. Yeah, they exist. Yeah,
yeah, and they're very good at crying like infants. Yeah. Right. And then the mothers,
the naive mothers come flooding out. The women dominate the universities from the 1960s onward.
It's like, in come the parasites and they're enabled and what are they enabled by?
Fascinating things to me is when parasites are confronted and they laugh. Like one of the things
about academic parasites when you challenge their beliefs, you don't know what you're talking about. I saw this with the anti-Semitism on campus
thing when these women were confronted by these statements like death to the Jews on
campus and whether or not this is hate speech. And I saw it with, I believe it was Josh Howley,
the woman was, he was saying some women can give birth and and some some men can give birth as well like some men
have period like this this kind of like and with I guess you're usually this
line of questioning is very transphobic and open people up to violence right
right with a with a laugh with a laugh and a smile a diminishing of your
position by mockery.
It's contempt, yeah.
What they're saying doesn't make any fucking sense to anybody rational, but they're so
embedded in this system that they really believe that they have the kind of control over Congress
that they have over their classmates.
This is like standard behavior for them, mocking and dismissing other ideas that are counter to theirs.
Right, well and there's plenty of reward for that
disseminated in the universities.
Yes.
And so that's part of their...
How do you fix that?
With Peterson Academy?
No, I'm serious man.
I believe you.
Look, it's not like I'm thrilled about the fact
that Harvard is having a war with Donald Trump,
and I'm less thrilled with the fact that I hope Donald Trump wins.
I worked at Harvard.
It was a great place.
I'm not happy at all that these institutions have become what they've become.
And if I could see a way forward to revitalizing them, then, but what are you going to do? Like, the administration took over the universities
and parasitized the tuition fees and the tax dollars.
Then the woke mob parasitized the administration.
And here we are.
Now what are you going to do about that?
All these tenured professors who are progressive,
and they're way less progressive than the administrators, you're fix that how how even in principle I don't see it
how well so what we decided to do we've been working on this for ten years it's
like well what do universities do well they they educate they offer lectures
they allow they have a place where people can congregate, they
help people mature, they explain the world, they encourage people to aim up, they teach
people to write.
My son runs this essay app, we're trying to teach kids to write.
We're integrating that with Peterson Academy so they can learn to think.
That's our solution. Will it work?
The world's a pretty dynamic place.
It's working real well at the moment.
People need some sort of an alternative to that system.
If you recognize what that system is, especially if you're participating in it and you're
opposed to all of it, and you're trapped in it, and're opposed to all of it and you're trapped in it and it is
vital to your success that you accept some of it, how else can you get through? How can you get this
degree and maintain some level of sovereignty over your mind and your ideas? It's a horrible trap.
I've met a lot of people that I think are very rational, reasonable people that
get at least some of that stuck in their head.
Oh yeah, oh yeah.
Well, when we did some research trying to see what predicted politically correct authoritarianism
was the last piece of research I did before my research lab, you know, ceased to be a
viable entity, let's say. What predicted, so politically correct authoritarianism was that
like hyper compassionate leftism, but conjoined with willingness to use force to put the doctrines
forward, force and fear. So it's tyrannical compassion. That's exactly that. What are the
predictors? Low verbal intelligence. That's the first one. Second one was being female. The third one was having a feminine temperament. The fourth one was ever having taken even one politically correct course.
Wow. Yeah, right. And so I've thought that through for a long time. It's like, well, what's the female
relationship?
Because that's a crucial one. The female dominated disciplines are the most
woke by far.
Why?
So I think it's because of that basic ethos of compassion. All who cry are babies. Well,
look, that's the right default for women. You know, like wise women, my wife is one
of these women. She was a very good mother. She never thought adult men were babies.
Like one of the things that's quite striking about my wife
is that if you're a useless man,
she doesn't feel sorry for you.
You're not a baby.
Now she's really good at taking care of babies.
And so she got to be, she's discriminating in her empathy.
And we're in a situation now where people think that indiscriminate empathy is a virtue.
That's Eve's sin.
See, Eve, literally, Eve wants to put the feminine ethos at the top of the hierarchy
value.
That replaces God, right?
And that causes the fall.
And then Adam, he's such a cuck, that's exactly
it, is that he goes along with her, he doesn't stand up and tell her that maybe she shouldn't
be listening to poisonous serpents. He doesn't. He consumes with her what she delivers so
that she'll be his friend, because you know how useful men like that are. And then when the fall happens,
he complains to God that he made, that God made Eve and cursed him with her. That's the
story. So it's not, it's not just women, it's, and we've got to get this straight,
women with their drive towards indiscriminate compassion so that even the serpents are their
children. It's men too who won't say, they always say, yes dear, whatever you want.
Weak men.
Weak men, weak men who don't help the women set boundaries.
Now you've got to do that as a man, you know?
Like when you and your wife have a baby, for the first nine months, every time the baby
cries it's right, right?
You respond to a baby's cries as if it's right 100% of the time.
Because human infants are so
dependent and
utterly unable to fend for themselves. So that sets up a very powerful feminine dynamic. It's like if it cries, take care of it.
Okay, so what are the men for? It's like if it cries,
take care of it, accept that.
That's a false cry.
And you see that with kids, they'll start playing with that by the time they're nine
or ten months old, right?
Right, right, right.
Yes, of course.
And so you differentiate.
It's like, oh no, that's not a baby.
That's a snake.
Well, are you sure it's not a baby?
It's like, nope, nope, snake, for sure.
Snake, poisonous snake, in fact. Right. Well, I'm feeling it's not a baby? It's like, nope, nope, snake, for sure, snake, poisonous snake, in fact.
Right. Well, I'm feeling pretty sorry for it. It's like, save your compassion for the truly needy.
And leave the snakes to me.
Right. And Adam doesn't do that.
Is it a function of a society that's almost, I want to say, too successful and empathetic and there's too much abundance that you have more of this crying
Look
No, but you have more parasitical behavior
Why well everyone's got pretty comfortable because we've been in a high trust society for a long time. It's like oh everybody's trustworthy
It's like no a few people in a few countries are trustworthy most of the time and it's like, oh, everybody's trustworthy. It's like, no, a few people in a few countries
are trustworthy most of the time and that's really hard. Right. And there's stringent
preconditions. Right. So everyone's trustworthy. And now there's all these piles of wealth
lying around everywhere. It's like a parasite dream, especially when it's unguarded. And
so it's enabled by the women and unguarded by the men.
And both are at fault, right? And you see that in the Genesis account too.
It's like Eve clutches the serpent to her breast, but Adam fails to help her distinguish.
Plenty of these parasitic men as well.
Oh yeah, well they're the worst.
The worst men cry victim and look for sympathy from women.
There was a famous mass murder
No a serial killer who did that the the lawyer very bundy Ted Bundy. You know what his trick was
He had a VW if I remember correctly
He had a cast that he could take on and off so he put his hood up
Maybe it wasn't a VW put his hood up because his car didn't work
and he did it around places where he knew there were young women.
And then he enticed them to stop because, well, poor Ted, because he's crippled and
his car doesn't work.
And then, haha, and then, well, and then the woman learned very painfully the difference
between a monster and a baby.
Right, brutal.
He was a bad guy. There are some bad people and a fair
number of them like to dress in women's clothing, let's say. Yeah. Yeah. That's
really uncomfortable, uncomfortable for people if they have this idea that's
embedded in their consciousness about what's going on to accept that. Of course,
of course it's in fact
accepting that when that reality is thrust upon you, unawares you develop post-traumatic stress disorder.
Right? Because it's naive people who encounter malevolence develop PTSD.
That's the pathway. So if you want to make your children susceptible to PTSD, like all these kids that are triggered by everything,
right, make them extremely naive and then let them encounter malevolence. Right? Because you're supposed to teach them to handle
serpents. Right? To identify them and handle them. And that means they have to learn about
the nature of the world and the girls to differentiate between snakes and babies. Right, right, and babies and men.
And the man who worms his way into your dreams
because he's a dependent infant, he's a snake.
And your sympathy is wasted on him.
Yes, there certainly are.
Man, I tell you, those riots that used to gather around me,
you know, that was mostly 2017
before I stopped speaking at universities
mostly. The women were pretty bad. Harpy city, man, and this self-righteous, feminine, toxic
compassion just screeching at the top of its lungs. But the men that were with them, oh
my God, I didn't even, I didn't want to be within three feet of them. You know, it's like, I'll be your friend. You know, you see those people on the net
talking to children. I'll be your friend. When your family abandons you, I'm here
for you. You know, they don't understand. Not like me. We could be closer than
anybody has been with you. Oh, that just barely scrapes the surface of awful.
Like awful is a long, long ways down.
Yeah.
So, part of what's happened in the universities, and you know, it's a terrible thing to say,
well, there's a lot of things storehouse of wealth radical increase in the number of students served
Radical feminization of the institutions and
Weakness on the part of the men who should have been guardian of the gates all of that and is it repairable? I don't think so
She's I think once the think once the parasites have the corpse,
what are you gonna do?
Are you gonna bring Lazarus back from the dead?
You know, I don't think so.
I think it's time for something new.
You need academic dewormer.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, that's what critical thinking
was supposed to be, Joe.
So you think it needs to,
so something needs to be, Joe. So you think it needs to, so something needs to be emerge
like your academy as an alternative? Well the thing is it already is emerging
right because universities, of course they're gonna do this as they spiral
downward they're gonna turn to cost-cutting. Well they're not gonna cut
the administration obviously because they make the decisions about who's
gonna be cut. So they're gonna turn to cut the administration, obviously, because they make the decisions about who's going to be cut.
So they're going to turn to low-cost alternatives to having courses.
And so they're already doing that.
Let's put our courses online.
Well, fair enough, except they're terrible.
They're terrible.
We got the best professors and the best production quality.
And so you've designed it for online versus just having a PowerPoint.
100%.
Right.
We have a plan mapped out.
We'll have the full equivalent of a four-year distribution
of courses.
We'll have that within, we think, two years, something like that.
Four new courses a month at the moment.
We're putting out 32 hours of original content a month. It's very well people can go look.
It looks great and that's because it's great. Michaela and her husband they're unbelievably
picky about the professors and about everything. They watch the social media, they watch the
look, they watch the images, they watch the ads, you know, we're trying to make
do everything 100% and then we're trying to make it as inexpensive as possible.
Soon we're raising money because we want to translate it into multiple languages
because wouldn't it be lovely to offer that to the developing world? With
free-market economics instead of Marxist economics so that people could learn to be
entrepreneurs that'd be great for Africa especially if we could get energy prices
down then maybe everybody could be rich and not just materially rich right
because that's not enough if you're materially rich and you're spiritually
poor your money just serves to destroy you.
And fast.
So that's not wealth.
And yeah, right, you know that, you've met people that that's happened to.
Money is not the cure for poverty.
No, you're naive if you think that.
No, it's not the cure for being happy, for being discontent either.
But it does offer you freedom freedom if you use it correctly.
And opportunity. And opportunity. So it gives you some relief from stress which
can give you some kind of happiness but it's not the goal. No, no. Well it has to
be put in it has to be put in an ethical framework or it'll just... Look, money's
opportunity. That's a way of thinking about it and if you're going to the
devil and you have money you just go to the devil faster.
I saw that lots of times in my clinical practice.
And you know, maybe if you're aiming upward, then money can be a force multiplier.
And it can be, you know, you can make a good, you can establish a solid institution that provides mentorship and opportunity for people.
And actually that's the most fun to do that.
It's by far the most fun to do that, to make something of genuine value.
Why wouldn't you do that?
Only if you were cynical and unable, why not make something that works?
That's much more entertaining, all things considered.
And so when we're trying to do this with ARC, and it's going real well, you know, and you
were very helpful there too, you know, that podcast that we did, there were lots of reasons
that the climate apocalypse narrative has been falling radically apart, but that podcast
that you and I did was definitely one of them, you know, and I've interviewed a lot of good
scientists who, they're not climate skeptics you know
that's a stupid term and Lombard's a good example of that. It is climate denier
is right up there with vaccine. That's such a manipulative phrase yeah it's like oh you're
like the Nazis who object to Jews being baked that's your argument is it really
that's your argument you scum rat you going to use that as a moral lever. That's your level of ethos. That's your argumentation.
You're going to take the worst slur you can possibly imagine, and you're going to use it to devastate someone's reputation publicly,
because you don't have a leg to stand on, because you're the kind of tyrant who uses fear to monger power.
That's you. There's a psychological interpretation of the climate apocalypse scandal.
And it's killing, it's destroying Germany. It's destroying the UK.
Didn't Germany, like, didn't they shut down a bunch of their nuclear plants?
Yeah. Yeah, and they replaced them with lignite coal, right, the dirtiest burning coal.
So they're in a situation where they pollute more for more unstable energy that's delivered
by tyrants.
Well, outsourcing their industry to China, it's a very bad idea, right, who's building
coal plants at a rate that is so fast that everything the West does to ameliorate carbon is utterly irrelevant.
Utterly irrelevant.
Yeah, and that's an uncomfortable truth.
That these climate cultists just don't, they don't address.
They won't even entertain any information contrary to the narrative.
They won't even let it in.
Of course not, because it upsets the game.
Not only that, most of the people that are involved in the game
don't even understand the game.
They don't even understand what's really, not just at stake,
but the actual facts that they're arguing for.
Well, Carney's a good example of this in Canada, to return to that.
Yeah.
You know?
Is he gonna win?
It seems like he's... The polls certainly indicate that. Yeah. You know. Is he gonna win? It seems like he's. The polls certainly indicate that. Yeah. And maybe with the majority government. And I can
see why. Canadians were accustomed to having everything go pretty well. And we
could be morally superior to you Americans because that was also fun. And
we'll never and we'll never forego that opportunity. And Trump has provided it in spades in the last month so we look at Carney and we don't pay any
attention to politics and we certainly don't read his goddamn book and so we
see someone who looks like a banker from the 1990s when everything was just fine
in Canada and Canadians were just as rich as Americans and the whole country
was stable and peaceful and we think well you know we kind of made a mistake
on Justin turned out he was he was a little incompetent, a little narcissistic, and maybe we shouldn't
have voted for him just because he legalized marijuana, because that's actually what brought
him into power the first time.
And so we kind of made a mistake.
But now, look, we've learned, and we're not going to be fooled by narcissistic pretenders.
And Mark Carney used to be Governor of Bank of England, you know, and that's pretty good.
That's a pretty good resume resume and it certainly looks like that
and yet he believes that 75% of the fossil fuels in the world should be left in the ground and that there's no
There's nothing that should guide your purchasing decision by force other than
Decarbonization, but it seemed to me at least from
Observer from afar that Pierre was gaining steam. Oh, yeah, like he was going to win
Oh, and they seem to have taken two things happen. Well two things happened Trudeau resigned. Oh
Yeah, their liberals were headed for extinction. It was going to be the worst defeat of a governing party in Canada ever
They might have lost their official party status
So it was they were done
well
They pivoted brought in Carney who'd been advising Trudeau
He's put himself up as an outsider a a competent outsider a lot of private
Private experience in the in the private domain, you know a steady hand at the helm
It's like you were Trudeau's economic advisor for ten years experience in the private domain, you know, a steady hand at the helm.
It's like you were Trudeau's economic advisor for 10 years.
10 years. And there's going to be more of the same under you.
And now you're pretending to be an industrialist even though you're one of
the leaders, the world's leading authorities on DEI, ESG, and Net Zero.
That's Mark Carney. All you have to do is read his book, which people don't of course, because it's a book.
You know, first three chapters will do the trick.
Well now, either he's decided that every single thing he ever believed was wrong right to the core and
hasn't apologized or let anyone know that, and now he's actually Mr.
industry, which is how he's presenting himself to Canadians, or
actually Mr. in the industry which is how he's presenting himself to Canadians or or he believes what he's always believed or he's a wolf wearing grandma's dress
yeah he's a benevolent wolf well that's that's why the wolf wears grandma's
dress yeah it's like there's no one nicer than me so how does Canada
correct course? Well people either correct course by waking up or by experiencing severe pain.
And it looks to me like we've chosen the severe pain route.
We already make 60 cents.
We already produce 60 cents to every dollar you Americans produce, even though we were
at parity 10 years ago.
And so after four more years of carny we could easily have that down to 50 cents.
Spiraling housing prices, a lot of social instability in Canada, especially since after October 7th. Do you think that that's all my Jewish friends in Toronto are terrified. Yeah.
That's not fun. I don't like seeing that.
No, it's awful.
It's awful.
And all those psychopaths who've been parading
around their moral virtues since October 7th,
they're plenty emboldened.
Plenty.
Plenty.
And I'll give you a little example of Canada.
So we had the English leadership debate a week ago.
And the powers that be who organized the debate, example of Canada. So we had the English leadership debate a week ago and the
powers that be who organized the debate, the legacy media types with CBC radically
involved, couldn't figure out how to exclude rebel media. You know that
right-wing news, kind of tabloidy news group from Canada, Ezra Levant, who's been
buzzing about for ten years causing trouble like a right-wing tabloid journalist,
which is what he is. Well, they didn't want him in the press scrum for the leaders after the debate,
so they cancelled it. They cancelled the journalists' interviews of the four leading
contenders for prime minister in Canada, because some right-wing tabloid journalists
they've had a newspaper or a media empire for ten years I don't care what you think of it it's not
the point the point is they cancelled they cancelled the journalists scrum after the
English language debate that's so no one complained that but doesn't even make sense like if
You're in if you're a presidential candidate and you're in count or prime minister candidate and you're encountering
Someone that has an opposing perspective. You should have really good answers
That's all look if you're if you're guys leading why ask questions
That's the legacy media in Canada.
It's the CBC. Right. It's state funded, right? Right to the core. 1.4 billion. Think about this,
Joe. This is our bloody state media. It's so funny. $1.4 billion in direct government subsidy
and $600 million in federal advertising per year. $2 billion. Go to the CBC website on YouTube.
You look at their last 20 videos.
I'll guarantee that not a single one of them
has more than 200 views.
Right, which means the people who made the video clips
didn't watch them.
Right, that's what you get for $2 billion.
Now everyone in Canada who's older than 55
watches legacy media. And Poliev said he defund the CBC so you
can imagine they're not exactly covering him in a positive way. I watched the debate where he kept
getting talked over. Yeah, Jagmeet Singh. Fascinating. He's such fun with his pink turban. He's such a fashion icon.
Luckily he's going to lose his own seat and his party's going to be devastated. That's the
socialists. They're going to be devastated so own seat and his party's gonna be devastated. That's the socialists.
They're gonna be devastated so badly that they won't have official party status.
But it's incredible to watch that in Canada where I've always thought at least your discourse is much more polite.
Yeah, was. Was.
Yeah, yeah. We've got a lot of, there's a lot of mopping up to do in Canada. Well, in the country, and you know, the man who started the Reform Party in Canada, so
that was the populist end of the conservative movement 20 years ago, maybe a little longer,
eventually reunited with the conservatives, Ernest Manning, or Preston Manning, son of
an Alberta premier, he was premier of Alberta for like
40 years, he wrote an article in the Globe and Mail which was the, it's the Canadian
liberal establishment newspaper, and I mean liberal by the classic, you know, old school
small l liberal centrist sort of newspaper saying that Manitoba, Alberta and Saskatchewan
should have an immediate constitutional convention immediately on Carney's
Ascension to the throne
Quebec doesn't want pipelines traversing its territory and Quebec one of the I don't know if you noticed this but one of the
Participants in the debate was a Canadian separatist. We literally have a Canadian federal party
federal We literally have a Canadian federal party, federal, localized in Quebec, whose stated intent is to break up the country.
Hasn't that always been the case with Quebec, though?
For a good while, it was provincial, right? I mean, they had a provincial party, like a state party, right?
Okay, fair enough. Have your state, separatist party, it's for your state, oh no, we want to have
a national party.
We want to be represented in the House of Commons as separatists.
Yeah, so the country's in, it's very sad, and I was hoping...
They could be the 51st state!
Well then, well that's what happened, so two things, we're back to that.
That was the big one.
Carney showed up just in the nick of time to save the burning damsel from the train tracks or whatever the hell it is.
And the rhetoric. And then Trump, he just timed it so badly. And he didn't know. He didn't know what would it would do. He didn't know. But that's also... also how do you not know the people have national pride yeah he knew that but he
didn't know what the electoral consequences would be he didn't know
that that would shift them to the liberals so radically and he's gonna pay
for that because once Carney is elected if that happens Trump will not have a
more seasoned enemy in the West. Boy.
Right.
Carney is very well connected.
Very.
Especially in Europe and the UK.
Very well.
So, and...
And Europe and the UK is a mess.
Yeah, you might say that.
Oh, that's for sure.
We've highlighted all the arrests in the UK over social media posts.
And most people have no idea
Constantine kissin is great with you
Explaining all that to people it's so funny when he compares it to Russia
Yeah, he says how many people got arrested in Russia how many think that people you got think got arrested in the UK and most
People are oh none right now four thousand. Yeah, what yeah. Oh, yeah, it's unbelievable
4,000. Yeah. What? Yeah. Oh, yeah, it's unbelievable. There's videos all over the internet. You just see this everywhere.
So they've implemented these 20 mile an hour speed limits everywhere.
And so 20 miles an hour. Yeah. Yeah. Because Joe, that's a bike.
You don't really need a car. Like,
what are you doing that's so important that you need a car?
Like if I have to go to a climate meeting while I get a car, but the peasants,
they don't really
need cars, they don't need heat either, not that much heat. Maybe they can stop
grandma from freezing. One of the fascinating things about Bernie Sanders
is anti-oligarch tour is they're doing it on private jets. Yeah yeah exactly. So
we were in the UK not long ago for this ARC conference and we rented a truck and whenever
it went over 20 miles an hour, it beeped at you just like seatbelt things beep.
And then if you go more than two miles an hour of the speed limit and you get caught,
then that
knocks one third of your license off.
If you do that three times, you don't have a license for a year.
Beep, beep, beep, beep.
Climate, climate knocking.
Climate knocking.
Oh my God.
You can tell tyrants, Joe, they use fear and compulsion and they hate comedians and cars.
Right there's Tyrant Checklist.
Hates cars, check.
No sense of humor, check.
Uses fear, check.
Uses force, check.
Psychopath, right.
I hate to end this on a bleak note.
Well let's end it on a positive note.
Okay.
Okay, so what's
positive? Young people are flocking back to churches across the West and more to
the conservative churches and the only thing we have to buttress us into the
future against the Islamists and the Marxists and the Nihilists and the Hidenists is our
return to our core traditions. Without that we're done. And so that's happening
and in big numbers and so that's really quite something. The back has been broken
of the climate apocalypse narrative. There's plenty of mopping up to do but
half the people know that there's something rotten
in the state of Denmark and that that particular apocalypse is probably not worth giving up
all your freedoms for.
We've seen a lot of progress on the arc front, like a lot of the things that we've been putting
forward, the better story, that's a return to the foundations of Western civilization that made our
our society the sort of place that dispossessed people will go to
voluntarily, right? There's lots of people who are starting to understand that
that's seriously worth preserving, right? Energy executives are waking up, as far
as I can see, to the fact that they could help the world's
poor in a serious way. And if they want to moralize, that would be a... if they want
to act morally, that would be a good place to start. There's lots of people
who are working to produce abundance. Your country, the US, you guys are
unbelievably good at that. Way better than any other country in the world. And you generally deliver in times of crisis and you might just
do that again. And so, and then I would say underneath all that, you know, you said you
you're pretty happy to encourage people. You're very happy when you hear that your show has
been helpful to people. And there's lots of people who are consciously trying to aim up and more and
more of them all the time and if enough of enough of enough people do that we won't
need to learn through pain and we can bring unparalleled success and we need the faith and courage of Joshua and Caleb to do that.
Of course the future is full of giants and disasters, but if we aim up and we speak the words of truth that make good order out of chaos, then anything's possible.
Alright, beautiful. Always enjoy this. Always enjoy our conversations. I appreciate you
very much. I appreciate our friendship. It's been great knowing you all these years and
watching this crazy journey that you've been on. I'm glad you're doing great.
Yeah, Joe. Same thing for you, man. Like, thanks
a lot and thanks for your help with Peterson Academy, too. My pleasure. Very
helpful. Much appreciated.