American Thought Leaders - The Woke Movement Has Peaked. What’s Next? | Andrew Doyle
Episode Date: December 27, 2025Have we reached the end of “woke”? Comedian and writer Andrew Doyle thinks yes. But he believes new forms of what he calls the “authoritarianism impulse” will follow.He’s the author of “Th...e End of Woke: How the Culture War Went Too Far and What to Expect from the Counter-Revolution.”Doyle is the creator of Titania McGrath, a fictional ultra-woke activist whose X account became hugely popular and currently has over 700K followers.Doyle has also published satirical books under Titania’s name, including “My First Little Book of Intersectional Activism.”In our conversation, we dive into the many ways woke ideology has transformed Western societies and explore growing restrictions on hate speech in Europe. In the United Kingdom, dozens of people are arrested for speech-related offenses every day, Doyle says.Views expressed in this video are opinions of the host and the guest, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
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To literally sacrifice children on the altar of your ideology,
I think it's kind of unforgivable,
but it does show how far some decent people can go
when they are ideologically brainwashed.
I think it means that good people end up doing,
well, purely evil things, frankly.
In this episode, I'm sitting down with writer and comedian Andrew Doyle.
His latest book is titled The End of Woke,
How the Culture War Went Too Far,
and what to expect from the counter-revolution.
Sweden had the highest level of trust in Europe,
for a long time.
And then since the migrant crisis, there are grenades going off in the streets and there are gunfights.
Where is Western civilization headed?
Will DEI initiatives and gender ideology be replaced by something else?
I mean, if you look at all the various definitions of hate speech across European statute books,
none of them agree.
No one knows what it is.
We have a police force that is trained by a quango called the College of Policing,
and they've trained the police in our country to believe that it's their role to monitor speech and thought and to
and thought, and to arrest people for offensive speech.
This is American Thought Leaders, and I'm Yanya Kellick.
You know, I was incredibly disappointed.
I had scheduled this interview with Titania McGrath
and you came instead.
She's not available.
She's busy. She's always busy.
She's a workhorse.
It's not me, no.
She was just the character I created to mock,
as you know, mock the woke movement.
But you'd be surprised how many people,
accuse me of impersonating a woman online, which suggests to me they don't understand the
concept of an author creating a fictional character. It's quite a flaw of that.
There's something about how people will intentionally misunderstand certain people
understand in a highly inappropriate ways, other types of people. And this is central
to what you're writing about, actually. Yes, that is true. The will from misunderstand
Well, willful or I always like to assume that people mean what they say.
And so if someone mischaracterizes me so wildly, I mean, I'm sure you've had it as well,
but the sort of wild mischaracterization, the ascribing of views to someone,
I've seen it about myself.
I mean, I've read paragraphs about myself and I think I don't recognize who they're talking about.
I don't believe any of those things.
I don't say any of those things.
I've never said anything remotely close to those things.
So where is this fabrication come from?
And then it comes down to a question of, do I believe that they believe that?
or is this a lie an attempt at defamation?
And I don't know, obviously.
I imagine more often than not it's willful.
But then sometimes I think people do get into a kind of,
particularly in the culture war,
which is, of course, what I've been writing about.
You get into this kind of, it's a kind of hysteria.
I mean, one of the things I say in my book is
that the culture war is really a case of imaginary hate.
It's people imagining fascists in the shadows.
It's people imagining this world of venom and bile and vitriol and hatred.
And there's some of that, but that's not the world.
The world is not that simple, you know.
But because of the technology that we live in, the media, people end up being siloed in
these very small groups that all agree on particular points, and they sort of imagine,
in many cases, that this is the whole world.
You know, when you come across someone who's, they strike you immediately that they
have never encountered the opposing views to their position.
They've never even read them.
They've never had the curiosity to seek them out.
And so to them and even entertaining an opposing point of view is just baffling the very
common.
Why would you do that?
You know, why would you not be sufficiently secure in your own worldview that you would, you
know, why be open to challenge?
Why be open to a dissenting voice?
Those people fascinate and terrify me a little bit because I think it's a kind of, I mean,
I spend most of my time reading things I don't agree with.
Firstly, because it's much more interesting.
Firstly, because I want to know if I'm right or wrong about various things.
I assume I'm wrong about most things.
So doing that is a good exercise.
And then, but the idea of just, I understand the comfort of it.
You know that thing where you read a book or an article,
which effectively summarizes everything you think, but better than you can.
And it's such a fun feeling, isn't it?
It's so warm.
And I enjoy that, but it's like all forms of enjoyment.
For me, it's always tinged by a sense of guilt, you know, because it's too easy.
Oh, look, I'm right all along because this person, this learned person in print says that
I'm right.
But that's a boring way to live, I think.
Much better to talk to other people and listen to their views.
You might be a little bit rarer than you think in terms of how you think about things.
I don't think so.
But what's important, no, well, that's, so that's interesting because, you know, you make a case, of course, that we may indeed be approached
the end of woke or at least hitting having hit the inflection point.
Yeah. But I'm I'm actually quite concerned about the fact that our
technologies exist today that are used constantly as far as I can tell volitionally
or not volitionally that kind of would prevent the end of polarizing information
being pushed into the ecosystem constantly. But that's always been the case. But as you
say, I suppose the technology amplifies it now. So, I mean, yeah, I mean, one thing I know I've
called the book the end of woke, but you know, having looked at it, that I don't mean it's
over, let's have a party and go home. I mean, the case I'm making very clearly is that woke
is the latest manifestation of the authoritarian impulse that recurs throughout human history.
And so therefore, wokeness was just the latest version of it, but there's going to be some
other version. The concept of authoritarianism can't go away because it's so deeply
embedded in the human condition. So the title, I suppose, might be ill-advised. Maybe there should
have been a question mark. But I'm really saying that this stage of authoritarianism, this
wokeness, too many things have changed now for it to retain the stranglehold that it once had on
society. That's sort of gone. But yeah, sure, absolutely. Other things will happen. Other
movements will take its place and other examples of disinformation and misinformation,
people just getting it wrong and not thinking beyond these very narrow parameters.
That will happen as well.
It probably, well, it certainly has been accelerated by social media and the digital age.
I mean, that's happened.
That's why wokeness became a thing, you know, that's a movement which has never enjoyed the
support of the population at large.
The more in common initiative found that it was between 8 and 10% of the population
of the US and the UK, even at the height of wokeness, supported it.
So if you think about that, that means this was a top-down imposed belief system
that no one ever bought into.
You take the example of the Latinx phrase,
and every single poll and study shows that Hispanic people don't use that phrase
and a lot of them don't even understand the phrase.
And don't like it.
And they don't like it.
But you have these privileged white people saying, no, that's what you should be called
because it's a more inclusive version of Latino.
You know, just put the little X at the end.
So it's better for you.
So much of the woke movement has been about very, very privileged people, very paternalistically saying they know best for the masses, for the plebeians, you know.
I very much see the woke as Coriolanus incarnate.
I would say what you say about one thing that does concern me, I mean, yes, the social media aspect, that's not going anywhere.
And I've fallen for it.
You know, sometimes when I see something online, I've got into the habit of double checking and triple checking every single story.
And I have made mistakes where I've said to people, oh, did you hear about that?
And then I found out the whole damn thing was a concoction, wasn't real.
That's bound to happen.
It does force us to be more sedulous, I suppose.
It forces us to be more diligent and vigilant.
And as we consume information or as we read this stuff, that's a worry.
AI similarly worries me in that respect, insofar as it provides too many shortcuts.
for thought and the temptation will be oh you know chat GPT just tell me what's the best way to do
this what's the best way to phrase this what should I think about this even and those shortcuts are
deadly I think I you know I think you need to train the brain like a muscle not that I train any
other muscle and I'm very lazy but I would say the brain I do try to train at least I've got that
even if I'm sort of this sort of flabby mess, at least I'm thinking, and thinking to me matters more than
anything else.
You know, I keep thinking about all of this in the context of media.
And you point out, you know, I was reading your chapter that's specifically on the authoritarian
impulse.
Yeah.
And you talk about how the fact that we, despite all the, everything that's happened, we do
have a free press.
But, you know, I would argue many, many of the big media that I would call the leg
media have kind of transitioned into a different kind of journalism, what they themselves
would call activist journalism, which is, you know, you assume the correct view ahead of time
and you contort the facts and the picture of the facts into what that is. If that's indeed
the case and so many of our media do function this way, I don't know if we really have
a free press anymore.
Well, we do, well, that's where the social media and online can provide a benefit
it, you can get a corrective to that.
You're absolutely right.
The legacy media is so ideologically captured, one way or the other, that it does, the
opposite of the, you know, how the scientific method is to try and disprove your own thesis
and then reach a conclusion.
And the legacy media doesn't do that.
You're absolutely right.
By and that sounds like a terrible generalization, because there are good journalists still.
Yeah.
No, and 100 percent there are, 100 percent there.
But if you take an institution like the BBC, there are excellent journalists.
at the BBC. There are journalists who've been tearing their hair out over what's been going
on. But for a number of years now, there has been an LGBT desk at the BBC. All stories relating
to sexuality or gender orientation or anything like that had to go past this desk first
for approval. They effectively had the power of veto over stories. If the stories, for example,
the W-Path files, which were leaked by Michael Schellenberger and Mia Hughes, which are one of the biggest
medical scandals of my lifetime.
W. Path is the World Professional Association of Transgender Health.
It is the leading international body on what they call gender affirming care.
It is the body of self-proclaimed experts and professionals who advises across the globe
medical institutions, including the National Health Service in the UK.
And so has incredible disproportionate influence.
And they are very supportive of this notion of gender affirming care.
In other words, a vulnerable person, a child can come and say, I believe I am.
am this, I'm born in the wrong body, and that the initial response must be to affirm that,
even to medicalize that, so that this individual's perception of themselves aligns more closely with
their body. Now, that in itself is a controversial, unscientific position to take. But what makes
matters worse is the leaked memos from W-Path, which were released in the W-Path files,
prove that individuals, senior individuals at W-Path and people that were working with them.
were fully aware that people, a lot of these vulnerable people could not possibly give informed consent to the treatment that they were receiving.
That's very, very dangerous and dodgy.
I mean, you have these doctors talking about how, yeah, these kids don't even, they don't even have biology at high school.
They won't understand.
They can't possibly understand the concept of being, you know, of losing the capacity for sexual pleasure in later life or infertility in later life.
How can a prepubescent even understand what any of that means, you know?
So they knew all of this.
Those leaked files should have been front page of all the papers for weeks.
It's that big a deal.
BBC hasn't mentioned it once.
I contacted the BBC over five times, must be five or six times,
to their press office asking why they are omitting the biggest medical scandal of our lifetimes.
And they first ignored my requests,
even though I was working for a news network at the time in the UK called GB News.
Then when they finally did get back to me, and I think they only got back to me because I managed to find a way to contact someone high up in the press office, and I was saying, this isn't good enough.
But you're the state broadcaster. You have a responsibility to answer these questions.
And I eventually got a one-line response, which was news editors make decisions about the stories of the day, you know, depending on various factors.
In other words, go away. We don't want to answer your question.
And I gave them some time. Even when the White House, there was a big story about the White House because they discovered that Rachel Levine,
had effectively put pressure onto W-Path
to ensure that there was no lower limit
to the age of transition,
which is a big story.
Even the White House talked about this.
Even after that, even after the cast review,
the BBC just didn't mention it,
as though it never happened.
I contacted them again.
I got the same line back
as they were robot,
an automator,
just written the same message back to me.
So there's an example of
not just a network,
but the state broadcaster omitting a major story for partisan ideological reasons.
And I don't know why, but one assumes it's because the LGBT desk said, no, we can't report on this.
And every report, no matter how good they are, had to defer to the power of veto.
And that shows you how ideological capture works.
It isn't that everyone working for an organisation
suddenly is in lockstep over these issues.
What it is is that a certain contingent
who are sufficiently powerful or sufficiently empowered
by those in charge, which is what's happened,
which is why Tim Davy, the director general has resigned,
it's why the head of news has resigned,
ostensibly because of this false editing of a Trump speech.
But really, there's a lot more going on here.
There is a deep ideological rot at the heart of it.
You absolutely need a free press in a free society.
You point that out.
Do we have one really when so much of it has this ideological capture to precisely amplify certain narratives
which are convenient or compatible and eliminate ones that are not?
Okay.
So if you start with a conclusion and seek to find evidence for your conclusion,
because of confirmation bias, you're likely going to find it.
And that's not to say that, I mean, journalists are human beings,
so you're all going to have your own prejudices and expectations, et cetera.
But there's a way to do it, and there's a way to be professional and ethical.
I mean, I did a two-hour special on the W-Path files on GB News
because no other channel would bloody touch it.
And I was looking into it, and I was contacting W-Path.
I think we sent over 50 requests to W-Path members to appear, not one agreed to.
We contacted all sorts of people.
Now, during the course of those investigations in preparation for that show,
if I had found incontrovertible evidence that gender affirming care was actually a good thing
and was actually beneficial for the patients,
then I would have revised my opinion and reported accordingly.
No such evidence exists, of course, which is the whole problem.
In fact, the evidence all goes the other way, as Dame Hilary Cass's review showed.
So that although I had my views about what the evidence was likely to materialize as a result,
that if I were proven wrong, I would have the humility to report in the honesty.
I am absolutely certain you would have because, again, your approach is different.
You are seeking, you're a truth seeker.
That's part of the reason why we're having this conversation.
Why wouldn't you?
Right.
Well, well, this is exactly the point.
This is exactly the problem.
That's surprising, isn't the idea that even when you are confronted with evidence, it's
a thing called belief perseverance when evidence is presented, which completely obliterates
your point of view, but you still cling fast to the evidence.
Well, and not to, you know, hack on the UK that much, but I just, the obvious thing to think
about is this grooming gang scandal, right? Yes. So, I mean, the Jay report,
found that over, what was it, over 1,200 at least, or over 1,400, at least.
I mean, we're probably talking many more thousands of victims of children sexually assaulted
and raped, even in rare cases murdered, you know, children who had gone to the authorities
who had parents complained to the police, where figures of authority, social workers,
police officers, politicians deliberately obfuscated or said, you know, we can't look into that
because the perpetrators were predominantly Pakistani heritage men.
I don't know where you begin with that, because that is, well, firstly, it's antithetical
to the principles of a liberal democracy.
We live in a society where the law has to be applied to everyone equally.
You don't have a parallel rule of law dependent on ethnic origin.
That's nonsensical.
And also kind of racist.
I mean, if you look at the latest report, the latest review, found that the ethnic heritage
was tipxed out in some of the documents.
I don't know if you have tip-ex in America, but it's a, maybe you call it white out.
It's this paste that you put over words to delete them.
And it'd been actually erased as though it wasn't a factor.
Well, of course, it was a salient factor, not least because, culturally speaking,
a lot of these men felt that these white girls and Sikh girls as well were just trash.
And so the rules didn't apply to them.
This is because they'd come from a misogynistic culture.
And that was key, and they called them white sluts.
white girls, they were very clear that there was a racial motivation behind a lot of these
attacks. So it's really important. I mean, the recording and recognizing that the ethnicity
and the heritage in that case is important, not to say, as I think some people feared,
that you are making racist, essentialist statements about any given category of human being,
but rather that, because it's a cultural question, not a racial question.
question.
It seems obvious to me.
But yeah, the fact that it was effectively covered up by people in authority, the fact that
you had cases such as, was it the Times reporter, who reported on the police showing up
at a house where there are seven men of Pakistani origin with a naked, drunken, 13-year-old
girl, and they arrested the girl because she was drunk and disorderly, and they didn't
even question the men.
Any human being would have a few questions for those men.
those men, you would have thought. But so great was the fear of being accused of racism,
so great was this sense that we have to have community cohesion, that they were willing
to allow the mass rape of children to preserve the myth that multiculturalism has been
a success. Multiculturalism, wherever it has been applied, has been a failure, a catastrophic
failure. You could argue that this recent election in the United States was a kind
of a repudiation of woke and censorship and all sorts of these kind of related, related
things. But that hasn't necessarily been replicated in other places like your home country.
Well, no. But we, I mean, look, we have a very authoritarian government in the form of
the Labor government. But then the vast majority of the woke movement was presided over by a
right-wing conservative government. So, wokeness infected both sides of the aisle. You know, it's different
with Trump, is different with the MAGA movement because there is an explicitly anti-woke
tinge to that. I mean, their most successful advert was the one with the strapped line that
Kamala Harris is for they, them, Donald Trump is for you. Because Kamala Harris have been talking
about the importance of funding transgender prisoners in their sexual transition transitional
surgery, which is a preposterous notion anyway. And then Trump came in with that slogan,
slogan, which I'm sure he didn't invent, but his advertising team, and I think it actuated
a 2.7 shift in his favour among those who saw that advert, which anyone who's involved
in political campaigning will tell you is a massive game-changing shift. So to say, you know, this was
the woke election, you know, when people say the culture war doesn't matter, well, it won an election
in the biggest, the most powerful country in the world. So actually, it's pretty key, I would say,
but yeah, you're right, it hasn't been replicated in the UK because in the UK, really the
Labor government got in on the back of fatigue, sort of mass fatigue, people were fed up with
the Conservatives. They'd been in charge for so long. They'd failed and reneged on most of
their promises. You know, they promised to deal with the migration issue. It escalated massively
under Boris Johnson. So they'd failed hugely. Then there was the some, the party gate, COVID,
you know, various, some controversies.
What actually happened is Keir Stama was elected him with a massive majority.
And you look at that on paper and you think, wow, there's suddenly mass support for Keir Stama.
It was such a low turnout for him.
He won fewer votes than Jeremy Corbyn did when Jeremy Corbyn lost in 2019.
So it's not like he has an incredible mandate.
I think it's like roughly around 27% of the electorate or something's very low.
He hasn't got an overwhelming mandate, but he has got a massive stonking majority in Parliament,
which is why he's able to introduce.
I mean, he took the online safety bill,
which was a conservative idea, and just ran with it.
So now we have this ridiculous situation
where the internet is supposedly regulated by offcom,
which is a regulatory body in the UK,
who have been writing threatening letters to rumble
and American companies saying you're going to have to censor
otherwise we're going to find you.
That's how hubristic.
Offcom is and how hubristic the British government.
government is, they still think they have an empire of cyberspace, right? It's insane, actually.
Are you not worried about talking about things this way, given that you're, well, I guess
you're here, but, you know, I understand people are constantly being arrested for speech
violations. Well, in the UK, the Times Freedom of Information request, the Times of London,
which is a big newspaper, found that 12,000 a year are being arrested in the UK for offensive
things they write online. Now, some of those are going to be connected to other crimes like domestic
abuse, but it's still going to be in the thousands. This is still a very serious situation. 30 a day
being arrested for speech crime. The Online Safety Act has made that even worse. We have a police
force that is trained by a quango called the College of Policing. Unelected Quango, it's got no
authority, no accountability. You can't vote them out. And they've trained the police in our country to
believe that it's their role to monitor speech and thought and to arrest people for offensive
speech. So that's so deeply embedded. The only way you're going to deal with that is to
abolish the College of Policing, which no politician seems to have the guts to do, but of course
it should go. It's not fit for purpose. It's an activist body. And everything trickles down from
that. Now, you don't have that in the US. Firstly, you've got the First of the First Amendment as
this barrier to the imposition of authoritarian rule.
I mean, you know, you know full well that the Democrats would have introduced
authoritarian measures on speech if they could.
I mean, we know that because Tim Walts in the vice presidential debate with J.D. Vance
literally said, explicitly said that the First Amendment doesn't cover hate speech
or misinformation.
Actually, it does.
You're allowed to say things that are false.
Free speech also covers lying, by the way.
And yes, it covers being hateful.
if you want to be.
That's called living in a free society.
So the fact that the Democrats don't understand the First Amendment,
someone as high up as someone who was running for the vice presidency,
that's pretty chilling, isn't it?
But we don't have the First Amendment, we don't have a codified constitution,
we don't have these protections in place.
What we have is hate speech laws encoded in the various acts.
We've got, it would be the Public Order Act, 1986,
and the Communications Act 2003.
and the Malicious Communications Act as well.
We've never had a government in recent years willing to tackle this problem.
Just as we're talking here, you know, it doesn't feel to me, given all of these things
even, and, you know, whether in the US maybe, right, but certainly not in many other countries
that we're sort of hitting, that we've hit peak woke.
In some cases, it feels like it's accelerating some of these ideas anyway.
And so, but, but I'm open-minded.
I want to believe that, I want to believe that it's happened, right, actually.
So this is, so this is, hence we're here.
Yeah, but you can't put, you can't post-cast review that, I mean, for instance, the gender
issue.
Yes.
You have seen various sporting bodies around the world saying, you know, we're changing that.
And I am so grateful to hear this.
Yes.
And the Supreme Court in the UK ruled that sex in the Equality Act means biological sex.
It doesn't mean this esoteric notion of gender identity.
That battle is being won.
And all of the various pieces on the chess board are in place for a complete victory.
It's just going to take a while because the ideology is so deeply embedded.
But because the ideology was always based on a fantasy, the idea that human beings can change sex,
which they, as a matter of fact, cannot.
You know, it was never going to win out, ultimately.
It couldn't, in the same way that flat earthism couldn't win out once we had the technology to photograph the earth from space.
You know, there comes a point where falsehoods do die, and that was always going to, that was always going to die.
So that's one thing.
The DEI thing, you know, diversity, equity, inclusion, all of that is being exposed to what it really is.
The $8 billion a year industry racket that it is, that is very racially divisive, that does the opposite of what it claims to achieve.
On this point, I want to just develop this very briefly.
I did read a number of reports that showed when this type of training in this.
this standard model is applied, it actually increases the pull, you know, this is supposed
to create more unity, create more understanding, but it actually goes in the other direction.
Can you just explain those studies or you seem to know a bit more about that?
I mean, can anyone honestly say that since the Black Lives Matter protests and riots
of 2020 and that hysteria that followed where there was this sort of frenzy of conformity
and everyone had to post the black squares on their accounts and all the rest of it, can anyone
honestly say that race relations have improved since then? No, of course not. We've become
more racially divisive. We've been going backwards. We were actually doing pretty well.
The liberal project was doing well in terms of it was tackling inequality as and when it occurred.
It was tackling racism as and when it appeared. That has been replaced with individuals such as
as Robin DiAngelo, the author of White Fagility, who basically claims that racism is more powerful now than it was.
in the era of Jim Crow, which is something she actually says, because it's invisible.
And the only way you can find it is you need experts in whiteness like her to come along and detect it.
All of this is very, very damaging for race relations.
It's all got a lot worse.
The implementation of things like unconscious bias training sessions,
which studies show if it has any effect at all, it is typically making the workplace more racist.
people become hyper aware.
It's not a good thing
to be hyper aware of race.
It's not that you don't notice it.
I mean, when the dream of color blindness
isn't a dream of
we literally don't see
the difference between white people,
black people, whatever.
It's that we don't care.
We don't care.
We don't care.
We treat it as,
I mean, as Sam Harris,
he made the analogy of ginger hair
or brunette or whatever.
You know, you would,
you see it,
but it doesn't bear,
have any relate,
bear any,
relation to how you treat someone.
So that's the dream and it's obviously the
goal.
But Robin DiAngelo
in her book, White Vigility, explicitly
lists colourblindness
as a white supremacist ideology
explicit.
Which is, you know, I can think of no one
who has expressed that dream
more beautifully than Martin Luther King
in his, I have a dream speech,
that we judge people by the content of the character,
not the color of their skin.
And here you have Robin DiAngelo, a white woman, basically saying that Martin Luther King's idea is white supremacist.
That's how perverted the DEI industry is.
There's a lot of fraudulence.
There was a leaked screenshot from one of her training sessions at Coca-Cola.
And on the screen, it says, try to be less white.
So you've got these corporations paying a fortune for these individuals to come in
and Hector their white employees
and tell them that they're racist
even when they know they're not.
But that's losing now.
But I think we'll get back on track now
in terms of the ongoing liberal project
which is just treat everyone the same,
give everyone the same opportunities,
stop caring about race,
when you encounter racial prejudice, stand up to it.
But don't imagine it's there when it doesn't exist.
and persecute people on that basis that that was the um the terrible legacy of critical race
theory which started out you know which is a legal discipline from the late 1980s ended up being
applied to everything you know and um particularly education where it's particularly dangerous
and you know the question at the heart of critical race theory was a good one which is now
that we have equal protections for all people irrespective of their ethnic origin
in why does racism still persist in society?
That's a good question.
The answer that they gave, which is that we have broad systemic injustice and that this
is a white society created by white people for the benefit of white people, and therefore
all white people are inherently racist, and that the only way to rectify past discrimination
is present discrimination, that's just authoritarian bilge.
And as has been shown, I believe, ends up with a more racist society.
Well, and, you know, you might even argue that this is indeed the purpose of polarized groups
and have them fight each other, and then, you know, believing that the other is an existential
threat to that society. And so, you know, there's always this, you know, equal and
opposite reaction. You push one way, you know, the project over the last however many
years, the great march to the institutions, as it's called, right? It's been a, this leftist,
you know, communist, Frankfurt School, whatever you want to call it, project. Yeah.
Critical social justice project, kind of created this backlash, right?
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah.
This is one of the things you struggle with in the book too, which is, you know, people believing that, you know, we kind of have to stop this and maybe we need to use a heavy hand to do it.
Yeah, a lot of people are making that case that liberalism has failed.
Well, that's the case the woke we're making as well, remember.
I mean, you know, their entire thing was liberalism has failed, so we need to introduce our authoritarian measures.
Except liberalism hasn't failed.
I mean, I'm just remembering Douglas Murray in his book, who wrote something like, you know,
the minute that we achieved some semblance of, you know, everything's working, suddenly we
discovered that everything was that was horrible, right?
Yeah, he has an analogy for that.
I forget he said exactly.
He talks about, I think it's in his book, The Madness of Crowds.
He talks about a train coming into the station.
And the train comes in, and just as we're almost at the destination, the driver slams on
the accelerator and it bursts, I can't remember, I think it's something along those eyes.
And he's right, you know, we were going, you know, when I grew up, you know, we'd reach
that sort of sweet spot where we just, you know, I watched TV and I wouldn't even notice
the skin color of the characters, you know, I wouldn't, it just wouldn't even cross my mind
to comment on it.
And now we are hyper aware of race all the time, which is really, really damaging.
We were going completely in the right direction.
Nothing was perfect because nothing could ever be perfect.
The reason why the woke got it so wrong about liberalism and said liberalism has failed
is because they assume because they think the world.
are in the, they see the world, I suppose, in utopian terms.
They assume that liberalism is a project with an end goal, and it's not.
Liberalism doesn't say that the world can be fixed.
Liberalism acknowledges that we are fallible because we're human, and it will always be
a negotiation, and that you fix problems as and when they arise.
So the liberal project doesn't have a utopian end goal, but similarly, the same mistake
is being made by a lot on the anti-Woke side who say, well, you know, liberalism clearly
didn't work because woke appeared, you know, and in fact they've gone so far as to blame
wokeness on liberalism as though liberalism can possibly be culpable for its antithesis.
I mean, what's so fascinating about that argument is it's a complete misunderstanding what liberalism
is. To say that wokeness is a form of liberalism or is the inevitable end point of liberalism
is to have no concept of what liberalism means. Everything about wokeness is anti-liberal,
not just explicitly in terms of the way its chief cheerleaders say that liberalism has failed
and they're against it, but also because inherent in wokeness is authoritarianism,
inherent in it is censorship, a mistrust of freedom of speech, a demand that ideas should be
imposed on a society that doesn't want those ideas. All of that is about as far away from
liberalism as you could conceive. So it doesn't wash.
Well, I think the idea, you know, this is very a glib summary, but is just that liberalism is weak.
And so these other things come in, and that's the problem.
But it's not. It's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's a sign of strength, because it is tough.
Authoritarianism is the easy way. You know, you know, you know, if, if society isn't going away the way, the way you want it, you just slam down your jackboot and you make sure everyone does what it you want, whichever way that is, and whoever
is doing it on the right or the left. That's so easy. What's so much harder is recognizing
the imperfectibility of humankind and society and attempting to cultivate a society
in which different viewpoints can live together. That's harder, but it does take strength.
You know, you can't have a liberal society, for instance, without the rule of law. The rule
of law is absolutely key. I mean, I think a lot of people who criticize liberalism are really
criticizing liberal universalism, as in the idea that they think liberals believe that you
can just transplant anyone from any culture to another, and everyone wants the same thing,
and everyone wants freedom.
Or that all cultures are equal.
Or that all cultures are equal, which cannot be the case.
Morally, they're just not.
A culture that believes that mutilating the genitals of children is acceptable is not as good
as a culture that doesn't.
I mean, I don't think that should be controversial.
a culture that believes pushing gay people off buildings is not as good morally as a culture that doesn't do that, right?
So, and I have no problem with saying that, that shouldn't be a controversial position to hold.
So the perception that liberalism is all about the idea that everyone wants the same thing, every culture is equal, you can open all the borders, that's absolutely not the case.
Every major liberal thinker in history has always understood the importance for rigidity when it comes to the rule of law and tradition.
and culture, because they know that without those things, without the nation-state, frankly,
liberalism cannot work. So this idea, I mean, it's a complete wild misunderstanding.
This is one of the contentious issues today. And this is, for example, what the
Nat-Con movement is, you know, is basically saying nationalism is not a bad word. It's not
national socialism, which is, there was kind of this, you know, equivalency created after
World War II. There was this nationalism that caused all these problems.
So we're gonna get rid of nationalism.
But nationalism is actually tied to liberalism
you're saying as kind of telling the opposite story.
Yeah, that's not true.
I mean, excessive jingoism and worship of the state
is what got us into those problems.
That's not the same as national pride.
You take someone like George Orwell,
if you read his essay, The Lion and the Unicorn,
you know, this is a socialist left-wing thinker
who understands the importance of tradition
and patriotism and a love of one's country.
Because he knows that without that,
well, for start, the working classes are screwed,
are screwed. You know, you can't have any defense whatsoever. Democracy's gone. You know, he gets
all of that. It's, yeah, that to me is the strangest misapprehension. That idea, I suppose the
best way to see liberalism is it has to be cultivated over a long time. This is what I say,
it's not easy. You can't just magically make it happen. It takes decades and centuries.
You know, we've, in the UK, fought for centuries to get free speech.
We're at the Magna Carta in 1215.
We had the Bill of Rights in 1689, which guaranteed parliamentary debate.
We have, you know, the Magna Carta itself is a radical notion that the king should be subject to the rule of law.
That's at the time hugely radical.
You know, the king was bullied into it by the barons.
You had to fight.
Common law, English common law.
the great tradition of common law
none of this came easy
it was very easy to destroy
you know
when the first thing that Hitler did
when he came to power
was get rid of freedom of the press
it's the first thing you did
you know that's what you
that's what authoritarian do
they destroy that's long
fought for thing so
one of the arguments I'm making the book
is that for a liberal society to exist
you have to cultivate
not just the rule of law
which is always open to dispute of course
because there can be and are unjust laws
but also tradition, you know, culture, shared values, all of those things, which is an ongoing,
complicated, social contract, which is open to continual negotiation and revision.
That doesn't come easily.
So when you say, okay, well, you know, liberalism didn't work,
wokeness turned up, so now we need a sort of strong man society, we need someone to just
deport anyone we disagree with. You know, we need to outlaw certain points of view,
censor certain points of view to make sure that that never happens again. I don't buy it.
You're just repeating the same mistake.
You're just reminding me of, you know, Dennis Prager, and we said, I mean, this is a paraphrase,
but one of the biggest frauds or subterfuges or something was that the leftists
convinced the liberals that they were on their side.
Right. Oh, that's interesting. Well, there can be liberals on the left and there are liberals on the
right. I mean, liberal is not a right-left dynamic. Maybe that's the complication. As far as in
America, people think liberal just is a synonym for left wing. Well, it's used that way often.
I don't think Prairie does, by the way. But no, but this is the point, right? Exactly.
He creates that distinction just in what I said. What he says was that, I mean,
The way I read that, right, and then what I understood from it, and it was fascinating
and actually helped me understand a lot, is that somehow, you know, when whatever the liberal
movements there were, let's take feminism, okay, it starts with the idea, you know, you get
suffragettes, you want to get the vote, all these things, very, very reasonable things.
And then it somehow gets turned into by leftists, it gets captured by the leftists and
turned into something else. But that goes far beyond the plan, right, of equality or...
That's the key phrase, isn't it? Something else. It's not the same thing.
Like, so you could say that there were authentically liberal-minded people in the woke movement
who perceived injustice and wanted to resolve it.
The second they started saying, and the way we're going to do that is through taking away
other people's freedoms, then they're no longer liberal.
By definition, they're no longer liberal.
So to say that wokeness is because, wokeness is what happens when liberal values are not adhered to.
So it would be like saying that divorce exists because of marriage.
Divorce is the fault of marriage because without marriage, divorce wouldn't exist.
Well, that's true.
But because you failed at marriage doesn't mean that marriage is to blame for your failure.
Does that make sense?
Yes, of course.
And that's sort of what I'm trying to say with the, I mean, the, yes, that's an interesting perception.
A lot of, I mean, a lot of left-wing people just simply aren't liberal.
and never have been.
This is something that you actually mentioned in the book as well, which is that, you know,
the straw men make up the bulk of political discourse.
I think you say something like that.
That's exactly right.
Right?
And it's kind of a funny thing because I was just talking about this earlier with a few people
that we're just talking across each other.
Absolutely.
I wanted to be at no end.
Yes.
I can't bear it.
So, but it seems crazy to be like, well, let us make sure we define our terms before we have
this conversation.
I mean, I've spent, there's a whole chapter in the book where I spend my time, I define
what I mean by liberalism.
Because liberalism is defined so differently by so many different people, I'm saying, okay, I accept
that.
But what I don't want people to do is come along and say, yeah, but my version of liberalism
is what I think you mean.
So, you know, yes, defining our terms is really important.
And the other thing we could all really do, I know it's time consuming, but when we're in an argument
or a debate with somebody who disagrees with this, is to take the time to say, okay, this is
is what I think your stance is and reiterate that person's stance to them, to their satisfaction,
and then the debate begins. Because I actually think everyone is arguing over each other.
You get two people in a room. One person says, trans women are women. And someone else says,
no, trans women are men. Well, one person there believes that woman is a biological category.
And one person there thinks that woman is an identity category. So they're arguing about
completely different things. So that conversation can go nowhere.
because you've got one person imposing what they think their definition is on the other person
and interpreting that person's words accordingly.
So you can't get anywhere.
The straw man thing is, yeah, it is a waste of time, you know.
That's why when I'm, if someone attacks me online by putting into my mouth ideas that I do not hold,
I just block them.
I can't be bothered with that.
What's the point?
You're not arguing with me.
You're arguing with yourself.
So you don't need to tag me in.
Go away and argue with the imaginary Andrew Doyle in your head.
You don't need me there.
You know, so the straw man thing we have to be very, very aware of.
And so when people talk about liberalism and wokeness, they're talking about something
else. Wokeness cannot be liberal by definition.
So when people start talking about wokeness as a form of liberalism, then already there's
no level playing field on which to have the game.
You may as well just leave it aside.
Was, you know, going back to Titania McGrath for a moment here.
Sure.
Was this, was the original idea of this, of creating this character?
Was this just like a release valve for yourself?
Partly, yeah.
I mean, I was so frustrated by, by, you know, one thing was that in my comedy career,
and I'd done stand up for a long time, is I'd always mocked every side,
and I'd always mocked foolishness and folly and power in whatever form it took.
And all of a sudden, there was this movement, incredibly privileged, largely upper middle class,
lecturing everyone else, including people much, much less privileged than them,
bullying people online.
I hate bullies so much.
Most of this is about my hatred for bullies, really.
And so, but I thought, why is no one mocking this?
You've got a closed system of thought that comedians have always mocked,
whether that be politics or religion or whatever it might be.
Any closed system of thought is the obvious target for the satirist and the comedian.
No one was touching this.
In fact, they were complicit with it.
You had comedians saying, you can't joke about that
because, you know, that's offensive to this group
and, you know, trying to police each other.
Well, that, to me, is already funny.
And so, yeah, I mocked it because I was just seeing
it was annoying me that people were giving
this movement of free pass.
Well, because it made me think in most cases
they're worried about their careers.
Sure.
Yeah, so there's a number of things.
A lot of people don't mock radical Islam
because they don't want to be decapitated.
it. A lot of people don't mark
wokeness because they don't want to
lose the opportunity to get booked on panel shows.
That's not really a good enough reason, is it?
I mean, I think
yeah, a lot of comedians are careerists first
and they're not really vocationally comedians.
So, you know, yeah, sure.
Well, maybe it's just comedy, right?
I mean, for you, maybe not, though.
But I mean, people who say, it's just comedy.
It's not, you know, not want to risk your life over it
or your career over it.
But wait a second, it is my career.
Well, and I do get that.
You know, not all of us can afford, you know,
it's only the very rich, the super rich that are uncancellable.
So, you know, you've got to get on with the business of living.
Comedians need to make a living.
But I kind of think, why are you even doing it if you're going to...
I mean, I think it is cowardice, to be honest.
What's the most outrageous thing?
I keep thinking about Titanic.
I'm obsessed with her.
Yeah, yeah.
You wish she was here and said, yeah.
I could have worn a week.
Well, no, but that was my plan, as I mentioned earlier.
Just, you know, she-
Yeah, maybe I should have dressed up full drag.
Yeah.
But there were examples where your posts were taken incredibly seriously.
Oh, yeah.
Well, people believed them.
I mean, that still happens, which is weird.
I don't tweet anywhere near as much as I used to as her.
It's just every now and then.
But when I, when I tweeted after Trump's election victory,
that went viral because, you know, she said
I just had to fire my immigrant housekeeper
because even though I explained to her
why Donald Trump is evil, she still voted for him.
There is no place for racism in my house.
And so now, that was actually a paraphrased version
of something that I had seen someone genuinely say,
the punchline I added.
But, you know, and so many people believed
that it was real, that they got very angry.
Cruz, quote, tweeted it, saying, can this be real?
So even he wasn't sure.
And it got people very angry and got people very agitated.
But that's what I like about, you know, embodying a satirical character online
is that you end up mocking both sides because you're mocking the woke movement and
everything they stand for.
And you're also mocking the other side who fall for these tweets, which, you're
are too absurd to be true there like the way to the way I try and judge it is that I try to
just slightly exaggerate to the point where you should know that it's there's something wrong
there you know but the trouble is that the woke can outdo you every time they can end up
saying even more ridiculous things than you do you know I mean Titani was going on about
you know don't don't say good boy to your dog
because you shouldn't assume the gender of your dog
you shouldn't impose heteronormative expectations
on the canine trans community or whatever
and this was years before suddenly
I saw articles about vets who were genuinely
including gender identity as a category
on the on the forms that you fill out for your dog
because when I wrote that
I thought well this is too absurd for anyone to actually do
but then they do it and you think are
Oh, in Titania McGrath's first book, because I wrote two books as her, in the first book, she said she problematized Helen Keller as this woman, deaf, dumb and blind, but she lectured the world and wrote books, staggering white privilege. That's what she said. And then an article came out of someone doing the same thing, problematizing Helen Keller for her white privilege. So, and I actually did a thread of all the times that Titania's tweets have been then replicated by. In reality. In reality. Yeah.
by the mainstream media.
I mean, she was arguing for not putting male or female on birth certificates years before
medical journals started saying the same thing.
So that's the problem with that kind of satire is you're mocking something which is self-satirizing,
I suppose.
I think someone might have read those and thought, hey, that's actually a good idea.
I hope not.
The only one where I thought that might be the case was when she said,
she did a tweet to white parents,
saying if you really want to prove that you're not racist,
you need to send your teenage daughters
and unaccompanied walking holidays in the tribal regions of North Pakistan.
And then Forbes magazine, just two weeks later,
put an article about the same thing.
Of course women should be able to just wander,
young women unaccompanied through an area where they are clearly at risk.
you know because of cultural differences you know the censorship and this whole kind of realm of
speech policing i don't know i think the jury's out on that one but that's not that's not specific to
wokeness is it yeah that's every authoritarian regime in history it's just that the free speech battle
is the hardest battle i mean that's the one that you never win you can only you can only keep
trying to persuade people like you argue liberalism is the whole liberal project is indeed like that
Right.
Yes, exactly.
I mean, you know, I wrote that book, Free Speech and Why It Matters.
The arguments in that book.
And by the way, you wrote it at a time when it was a lot, I think it was a lot more controversial
than right now, right?
Isn't that?
Yes.
Yeah.
I don't remember when it was, but I remember thinking this guy has some guts to publish
this right.
Which was weird because it shouldn't be controversial, but that was the reason I wanted to write
the book.
Partly because I wanted to restate the case for free speech, so the arguments aren't original
to me. These are arguments that have been reiterated by much smarter people than me throughout
history, but I wanted to reiterate them in a short, succinct, accessible way because I think
we have an obligation to do so. I think every successive generation has to make the case for free
speech because it's not something that's won and then it is in our grasp evermore, it's always
at risk. Every day, you know, you read an article about people trying to eliminate free speech
or draw their own exceptions or carve out exceptions. That's why the First Amendment, even though
it's a great protection, it's not invulnerable to attack or modification or misinterpretation.
You know, all of that can still happen. That's what a lot of campaigners and activists want.
but you look at the danger of that.
I mean, they want hate speech to be, you know, exceptions to be carved out for hate speech.
No one can define hate speech.
No one knows what it means.
And human beings hate.
That's an emotion that has developed in us over many, many years.
You can't wish away a human emotion with a stroke of a pen.
You may as well try and legislate against envy.
It doesn't make sense.
So, you know, and when you try, I mean, you feel.
If you look at all the various definitions of hate speech across European statute books, none of
them agree.
No one knows what it is.
The real only way with this is to cultivate strong moral code.
Quite.
Which is part of this social contract that I've been talking about in the book is, you
have to develop, you know, what you're aiming for is a high trust society.
A high trust society only comes about through generations.
of that negotiation of that social contract.
That's the only way that it can exist.
And look how quickly it can dissolve.
It can come apart.
Well, and that's one of the kind of criticisms too, I think, of liberalism.
I mean, I'm just today, actually, I was thinking about Japan.
There were a few people posting on X about Japan and just, you know, how remarkable.
And one of the things I noticed, my wife worked there for years, she speaks some Japanese
enough to kind of get by and took me for the first time. I've always been infatuated with
the country and the culture, but this was, you know, it's just wonderful to be taken there,
but it's just an unbelievably safe country. And so was Sweden. I mean, Sweden had the highest
level of trust in Europe for a long time. And then since the migrant crisis, where they had this
reckless migration policy, 20% of all Swedish citizens are now not born in Sweden. That's an unsustainable
number and there are grenades going off in the streets and there are gun fights and you know
there are I had a friend of mine a Swedish comedian texting me six years ago saying there's
bombs going off in my road there's this is happening all the time and no one in the media is
talking about I mean Sweden's a very good cautionary tale but everyone else um if you had a liberal
system you would say we will have controlled migration at a pace that we can ensure assimilation
Well, exactly. This is the part that I think, well, I think most countries gave up on, even if they thought it was right at one point saying, look, here are our values. We require you to live by these if you want to live in this society. Yeah. No one said that. The Swedish government didn't say that. They said you can import your own values. And this is the evil of multiculturalism. We're going to allow parallel communities. You should make citizenship conditional.
on assimilation, obviously.
You know, if you import significant numbers of people
from a culture that thinks women are trash
and are just objects for your own satisfaction,
then you can't be surprised if things go wrong.
It's just not sustainable.
And that, again, is not a racist point.
That is acknowledging the differences in culture,
which is completely true.
And if it weren't true, by the way,
you wouldn't have Iranian feminists
risking their lives by taking their veils off and dancing in public, they are not going to be
very, and they are not, I've spoken to Iranian women on my show in London, and they are appalled
at Western so-called progressives who don't understand that they are on the wrong side here,
that they are siding with the most ultra-reactionary, patriarchal, if you will,
aspect of Islamic countries, you know, out of what, some misguided sense that we don't want
to be considered racist. How about you stand up for the rights of female Muslims or gay Muslims
or Muslims who don't go along with this theocratic nonsense? How about them? Why are you siding
with the powerful majority there? And how can you square that with being progressive and
being anti-racist, doesn't make any sense to me. You know, the big question of women's rights.
You can't just say women's rights are key except for women in Islamic countries. They don't matter.
How can you say that and think you're on the right side of history? That's insane.
You mentioned education as one area. Yes. That it was very compromised. I mean, you have
dramatic reductions in the U.S. Again, I was looking at just beginning to look at a report on
this, whole school systems, in some cases, elite schools who threw out their, you know,
requirements for in, whether actually grading, but the results are some of the worst outcomes
in, you know, 50 years.
They think group identity is more important than meritocracy.
I mean, you should never hire someone on the basis of their skin color or sexual
orientation.
I mean, this goes without saying.
You hire people who are best for the job.
You don't, you know, you admit people to top universities who are the best and most capable
students.
I mean, Harvard and the other Ivy League had a genuinely authentically, system where they
discriminated against Asian Pacific people.
So that's, you know, I oppose racism, so I think those sort of things should be stripped
out.
Which is hilarious to me that the people who complain about systemic racism didn't complain
about it where it actually was.
just ignored that.
Yeah, and the education, and obviously because so many teachers and particularly academics
are now activists first and educators second, so they think it's their job to energize and
galvanize politically their charges, it's all gone wrong.
Yeah, the universities are in a mess at the moment.
The question is, do you, is it really, have we reached that inflection point on the side of education?
Education affects every area.
We're talking about medical schools.
You know, I've heard about some crazy things in medical schools.
No, education is my big worry.
I have a chapter on education in the book precisely for this reason because I think that
education is the key to everything.
I think we need a major overhaul of the educational system starting from very, very young,
the whole thing.
And, you know, my generation were poorly educated as far as I can see.
I didn't have the education that my parents and grandparents' generation had.
They had much more rigorous education.
One thing that really bothers me is this, this, I mean, I, you know, this low expectation of children,
when I was teaching at a school in Ipswich, I wanted to teach Dickens to the 11, 12-year-olds,
and I was told they wouldn't understand this, so there's no point.
Well, hang on, my parents understood it at that age.
You know, why aren't we teaching Shakespeare to primary school kids?
You know, children are hungry for knowledge.
They're at that point in life where they are desperate to write.
to the challenges that you set for them.
I had to teach this terrible play.
I don't want to say the name of it
in case the playwright's still alive.
But it was so bad and so lame
and so unchallenging
that the kids were all bored
and maybe that was partly my fault.
I can't bring to life.
I couldn't disguise my contempt for this play
and I couldn't disguise the fact
that I thought it was trash.
And I couldn't disguise the fact
that I wanted to be teaching The Tempest
instead. But then I went to another school and I got to, I was asked to direct a play for the
year sevens, the little kids, you know, the 11 year olds. And I did a version of the Tempest with them
in. And what was good about that is when they didn't understand the language, which they,
there are many, you know, adults don't understand a lot of the language. You have the
conversation. And then by performing it, they, they, they learn it and they love it.
Children need to be not patronised.
I know that sounds counterintuitive, but that, and obviously there are different levels
of intelligence and there are different nations. You don't give children a copy of Finnegan's
wake, but you do, you do give them texts that they can, that will push them.
But, you know, I, on this show regularly, I go into educational institutions that are trying
to correct the problem that you're discussing at various levels, at the university level,
at the grade school level, middle school, all of it. And there's just really,
really wonderful things going on.
And it is absolutely young kids can be learning Shakespeare and all sorts of stuff and
reciting it.
And I mean, I've seen wonderful stuff.
So there's a hopeful area, but it's a relatively small effort thus far.
It's things like that.
Like my parents' generation, they still have fragments of poetry in their mind that they
can just rattle off because part of the, part of the curriculum was wrote learning.
You'd have to learn poems by heart and you have to learn your times table and you'd have
to learn your facts.
I did a show with John Cleese recently.
I produced his show in England.
And he was able to, I mean, we filmed the show in a Norman tower, a Norman building.
And I told him the date of the construction of the building.
And he said, King John.
So that was when King John was on the throne, straight away, without missing a bee.
And I asked him about this.
And he knew the dates of every single monarch in English history, the exact dates, the order, everything.
and he knew, he knew them so well, he could just skip between them.
My generation, no one can do that.
We cannot do that.
How much easier would my life be if I could?
I don't know.
I promise you, things like that.
Things like that, to have those facts just to grab out of the air is so much better for you.
And the mechanics of education, there's been an emphasis now too much on what the child feels,
what the child thinks they want.
It doesn't matter what they want.
They're kids.
What you need is that kind of rigorous,
wrote learning, drill this into you,
and then the creativity comes.
I mean, one of the cases they're making the book is,
is this very point that it is,
it might not be right for every child.
But if you take someone like Shakespeare,
he had the most rigorous grammar school education
where wrote learning was just baked into it.
He learned, you know, Ovid and Cicero,
and plautus even, even the Roman comedies.
He had these texts, you know, he had to recite them.
And that's why he was able to produce works of genius
that no one has ever matched.
Because he had that bedrock of knowledge
from which he could create.
Giving kids a bunch of, you know, potatoes and paint
and saying, you know, create something.
beautiful, that's amazing. Well, it's fun. That's a recreational thing. And I think kids should do
that. But it's not going to teach them to be great artists in order to be a great artist in
later life or indeed a great mathematician or scientific, whatever. You need to have that
bedrock, which is baked in through a tough, disciplined education, which I still kind of resent
that I didn't have. I think I was failed by education. I'm constantly catching up. I'm constantly
reading books. I think, oh, I should have read that in school.
But no one told me to, and when they did, I ignored them.
And because there was no discipline, I never did homework.
I used to turn up late.
I never did homework.
Not once in my school career did I go home and write an essay.
Because I could get away with it, because I was lazy.
And I hate that.
And I resent myself for it, but I'm not blaming the teachers.
That was the culture.
But, you know, how much better would it have been for me
if I was in one of those cold classrooms
forced to recite poetry in the times table and getting caned if I didn't get it right.
I think I probably would have been, I'm actually not pro corporal punishment,
but I think I would be a smarter, more interesting person today.
To me, one of the most important things that people don't talk about enough is the arts,
and I've got a chapter on the arts, and I've got a chapter on comedy in the book,
because the arts can only ever flourish with patronage.
They can only ever flourish with people in power with lots of money,
trusting the artists to get on with what they do.
And that hasn't happened for a long time, really.
In the UK, we've got the Arts Council.
But if you apply for a grant from the Arts Council,
you effectively have to be woke,
and you have to be ticking various boxes ideologically.
They are effectively funding propaganda, not art.
The fact that we live in this culture, the woke culture,
means that no great art is being produced.
It can't be.
So I would like to see, you know, the problem is the people who've made a lot of money are often quite, you know, entrepreneurial, capitalistic, but they don't, they see the arts as a kind of, you know, frivolity.
It's just film, it's just books, it's just, it's fun. It's fun. Well, it is fun, but it's also the bedrock of civilization. And all of our problems are downstream of, of, of arts, I think. And I think the battle for,
I mean, this is one of the reasons I came to Arizona to work with Rob Schneider and Graham
Lenehan and Martin Gawley.
We set up a production company.
It's early days, but we want to create stuff that changes the culture, not because not new forms
of ideological indoctrination, but things that are anti-ideological, as in they don't have
an ideology.
Great art doesn't have an ideology.
So I think that needs to be a conversation that needs to have.
happen. You've no idea. I mean, that Hollywood and the BBC and all the streaming services,
they're all so captured by ideology that nothing of value is being produced. The reason why
Shakespeare was able to flourish was because he had very rich patrons who trusted him to get
on with it and didn't tell him what to write or how to write it. That's not going to happen
now. So I think that's something we should probably be talking about more. The other thing we
should probably be talking about if we are at the end of woke or at the inflection point how
do we bring along those people who are completely truly lost i mean i was at uc berkeley last
week for the uh the last stop on charlie kirk's tour and i was invited to do it to be on the panel
um and one of the reasons i wanted to do it is because i don't think i don't believe
murderers should have a veto like i'm i think turning point should be really congratulated for
for carrying on with the tour rather than canceling it.
But then the protests outside that event,
you know, we're just on stage talking about various ideas
and it was so cordial and so nice.
And all the kids in the audience were enjoying it.
And it was so civil.
And outside people are setting off smoke bombs, fireworks,
throwing glass bottles,
screaming at police telling them to kill themselves,
screaming at people trying to get into the event.
mocking Charlie Kirk
beating people up
someone got beaten bloody
a guy wearing a freedom t-shirt
trying to break through the barriers
these are like toddlers who've escaped from the crash
and they were all screaming about fascists
there
I mean so I don't know how you break through that
mass hysteria
that's that's delusional
That's what that is.
And then I wrote an article about that for the Washington Post.
And there are over 1,800 comments on that article.
And they're all kind of crazy.
And they're all saying the same thing.
Yeah, but turning point are fascists.
And not one of those commentators knows what a fascist is.
The reason why this bothers me is that it's not just that a few students or a few Antifa idiots
don't know what facts are so historically illiterate
that they don't know what fascism is
and they've imagined these goose-stepping monsters
into existence.
They've conjured these enemies into existence
so they have something to fight
so they have a purpose, right?
That I kind of get.
It's sad and pathetic and infantile
but fine, some people are sad and pathetic and infantile.
But when you have people who read the Washington Post,
middle-class professionals
who are politically informed
all making the same category
error, all having the lack of critical capacity to re-examine their views and see just how wrong
they are.
I mean, these are factually wrong statements.
I'm more for being challenged.
But if you don't know what fascism means, let's not have an argument about fascism,
because you're already far, far behind.
That worries me, because that suggests a kind of mainstream problem in America.
I mean, one of the best things people could do is learn what a fascist is.
And let's retire the phrase.
It was very uniquely part of the early 20th century.
Neo-Nazis do exist, but they couldn't fill this room.
There's hardly any of them.
Let's just get back to the real world.
We have to sort of engage with what reality is.
All of these people out there who interpret mainstream conservative values as fascism,
you know, maybe you can tell me, I don't even know where you begin with that,
because that is so untethered to the real.
world, it's like chatting to a madman. How do you reason with a madman?
So as we finish up, what else do we need to be thinking about? You know, an anecdote that
Rob Schneider recounted at that event that you were just describing and then also at this
fundraiser where you and I met for the first time for Epoch Times, I think there's a hint there.
You know, and this is also, I think, Charlie Kirk's approach actually, which was, you kind of
to have to do it with love and compassion as much as when the person you're looking at really
doesn't like you very much, just to put it nicely, and, you know, thinks you're evil person
for some reason. But they're actually just mistaken. Yeah. I don't know there's, there isn't
another solution. The other solution is, all the other solutions are grossly illiberal solutions.
Yes. Let's say ultimately, if you play them out, right? So. Well, I have, I have, I do,
I do have compassion for, if someone is screaming, I'm in a venue and people outside are screaming
fascists. Now, I know that's not about me anyway. They don't know who the hell I am. I was just
one of the many people who appeared at the event. But I also spoke to all of the speakers that
night. None of them were fascists there. You know, so they're screaming at nothing.
No, I'm sure. I, of course, there were no fascists there. The point is that turning point for
them represents fascists or something like that. Yes. And that's the reason they were yelling that,
Right. Yeah. Well, I'd like them to, you know, could you, all right, well, this is an interesting experiment. Could you sit down with one of those people that were screaming fascists and other things, which I won't say, because I imagine you don't want me to swear. Could you sit down with them and say, okay, explain your position? Why are turning point USA a fascist group? What exactly is that? Whenever I've seen people try to explain that, firstly, they uncover pretty clearly that they don't.
know what fascism is. Secondly, they uncovered that they don't know what turning point
stands for. You know, it was the same in the aftermath of Charlie Kirk's death. People saying,
oh, he said that gay people should be stoned to death. No, he didn't. Oh, he said this, he said
that, like, just factually incorrect things that they just want to believe is true. That's the weird
thing about this anti-fascist lot is I've never seen people more keen on fascism in a weird way.
They love it.
They can't exist without it.
They want it to be everywhere.
So I think sitting down with those people
and getting them to really talk through
where they're coming from.
I'll tell you what I think the argument boils down to,
from what I've heard them say,
is that, yes, okay,
Turning Point and Charlie Kirk and people like that,
they don't say overtly fascist things,
but they either secretly believe them
and are masking them,
or they will become, these are the seeds.
So what starts with mainstream conservative values
ends up at fascism.
That, by the way, is the exact fallacious reasoning
of Brutus in Julius Caesar.
He has a soliloquy where he talks about,
he effectively says, I know that Caesar is into tyrant
and doesn't appear to have tyrannical tendencies,
but anyone who becomes too powerful will become tyrannical.
He uses the phrase, so Caesar may, and that's very revealing.
He may.
So in other words, the entire justification for Brutus murdering Caesar is because of
something he might become.
This is this identical reasoning.
And Shakespeare is doing that to show you how, what folly that is.
And of course, it leads to civil war and everything falls apart, right?
And in trying to prevent a tyrant or a king from a ruling Rome, they end up with a de facto king in the form of an emperor, Augustus, right?
So, you know, he's making that clear.
Those who believe that mainstream conservatism is nascent fascism are making the same mistake, they think.
It's like the, what was it, the no king's rally.
That's stray out of Julius Caesar.
the whole concern in Julius Caesar is that he's going to be a king
and there was a real fear of kings in the Roman Republic
because they didn't want to go back to the time of kings
I mean that's a kind of delusion isn't it
it's what Trump may become
it's what it's what the the Republicans might turn into
you can do that with anyone
you know I would argue that there's more
clear examples of authoritarianism
on the Democrat side
But I think it's there too on the Republican side.
I think authoritarianism is baked into every mainstream political party in the West.
I think it's a question of degree, and it's a question of reining it in when you see it.
But could we have that conversation?
Could I sit down with someone who is convinced that they're a fascist in every shadow
and ask them to tell me why?
And would they be responsive if I could persuade them that it's not true, that they are suffering from a mass delusion?
do these people still retain the capacity
on reflection to admit,
yeah, I got that wrong.
I was screaming at phantoms of my own imagination.
And do they, or are some people so lost?
Has the culture war driven people so mad
that they're forever lost?
And I've kind of reached the conclusion,
which might be a bit dispiriting.
But I think you have to reserve your energies
for people who are still capable of argumentation
and let the others just rage into the void.
I might add that,
but I think that most people are that way.
Like most people, I think, are reachable.
That's what it seems like to me.
Yes, I would like, I think that's right.
And I think the, even at Berkeley,
one of the points that someone very rightly,
you know, after I'd written the Washington Post piece,
someone wrote into the Washington Post,
a professor at Berkeley,
and the message was forwarded to me,
and I don't know if they're going to publish it or not,
but they should.
And he made the point,
that most of those protests,
or a lot of those protesters were not students.
They were from outside.
Now I knew that, and he's absolutely right
to pull me up on it, because I should have
made that clear in the article.
It wasn't a deliberate omission. I just didn't
make that point, which I should have done.
There's still a lot more left-wing people
on the side of sanity, you know.
The thing that really
upset me was after Charlie Kirk's murder
was the thousands of people online
celebrating that murder, gloating
about it. People who
themselves progressive dancing on the grave of an innocent victim and that really shook me
because it made me think there's a real problem at the heart of that movement where there's such a
lack of basic humanity but even then you have to remind yourself those are the ones you've seen
online i would say it most i like to think most left-wing people were equally disgusted
about the murder of charlie kirk the problem is so few of them felt they could say it i know
Chunk Yuga did. A few others did. I know Ezra, um, is it Ezra Klein at the New York Times?
He wrote a piece saying he was mourning for him. He got attacked for that.
But the problem is it's not, it's too prevalent in that movement. The glee about murder.
To the extent where most leftist commentators just didn't say anything. That's how you know that's got a
powerful, uh, so it may not be the majority, but it's a cancer at the heart of that movement.
And, uh, it really is incumbent on leftists to cut.
out, I think, to deal with those people.
You know, most people are, well, firstly, you've got to remember, I think most people
want the same thing.
Most people are decent human beings and most people want other human beings to have a fair
shot of things.
And we might disagree about, you know, fundamentally me and the woke, although we're
antithetical, agree on the fundamental principle, which is we don't want anyone to be
mistreated because of their immutable characteristics.
So, you know, we want justice or we want justice.
want, you know, we want a world in which people are happier, to put it very, very simply.
We just disagree about how to get there.
They think the best way to achieve that is through authoritarianism and tyranny, and I think
it's through freedom and liberty.
I think I'm right, but they think they're right.
So, yeah, I think, but it's the ones that are so, it's the ones screaming at fascism,
screaming at fascists that don't exist.
screaming at a specter, that, I hope you're right.
I hope that's just a very minority thing.
But if it is a minority thing, it's a minority that seems to be tolerated by the majority.
At best, you can say that.
It's not being dealt with sufficiently.
That's what I would say.
Andrew, I've absolutely enjoyed this conversation.
And final thought as we finish?
The thing I would like to reiterate and emphasize is that we shouldn't expect authoritarianism to die of natural causes, that it takes eternal vigilance, that it takes continually pushing back against.
And don't, and I suppose be very cautious about tribal thinking and assuming that authoritarianism won't emerge on your own side.
I'm making the case in my book that actually authoritarianism is the default of human nature.
That I believe we have this kind of, I suppose as Thomas Hobbes said, we have a kind of brutish pre-civilizational state of nature that not the Rousseau idea that we're all born, innocent and sweet and wonderful, more like the Hobbes idea that we've just got to be, that's what civilization is.
I think civilization is us building up armor against this brutish aspect of human nature,
taming it.
I think that's what civilization is all about.
And I do worry when these groups come along and saying we have all the answers.
I think anyone who says they've got all the answers is wrong.
and anyone who says that
if they can impose their wishes on society
everything will be perfect
that's what every ideologue in history has said
and not one of them have ever been proven right
so if I'm going to summarize in a final thought
I would say I want to make the case for liberalism
I want I want liberalism to be properly understood
and probably thought about
and to have those discussions and those debates
too many people are jettisoning the principles
that we'd all kind of collectively agreed on over many, many decades,
what I would say is jettison the principles of liberalism at your peril.
Well, Andrew Doyle, it's such a pleasure to have had you on.
Thanks for having me. It's been fun.
Thank you all for joining Andrew Doyle and me on this episode of American Thought Leaders.
I'm your host, Janja Kellick.
Thank you.
