Behind the Bastards - Part One: Curtis Yarvin: The Philosopher Behind J.D. Vance
Episode Date: September 17, 2024Robert sits down with the great Ed Helms to discuss Curtis Yarvin, the American philosopher of dictatorship whose ideas inspired J.D. Vance. (2 Part Series) Sources: Curtis Yarvin, Political Theorist... - Tablet Magazine Who is Curtis Yarvin, the monarchist, anti-democracy blogger? | Vox Mouthbreathing Machiavellis Dream of a Silicon Reich (thebaffler.com) A Founder's Farewell • Blog • urbit.org Interview with Curtis Yarvin — Max Raskin https://www.seattletimes.com/nation-world/trumps-vow-to-fire-thousands-of-crooked-federal-workers-prompts-alarm/ https://thebaffler.com/latest/mouthbreathing-machiavellis https://techcrunch.com/2013/11/22/geeks-for-monarchy/ https://thebaffler.com/latest/the-moldbug-variations-pein https://glasgowmuseumsslavery.co.uk/2020/11/18/thomas-carlyle-historian-writer-racist/ https://www.unqualified-reservations.org/2008/05/ol5-shortest-way-to-world-peace/ https://newtotse.com/oldtotse/en/ego/cult_of_the_dead_cow/cdc252.html http://www.textfiles.com/groups/CDC/cDc-0234.txt https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/elon-musk-trump-harris-high-status-males-4chan-b2606617.html https://www.unqualified-reservations.org/2008/11/patchwork-2-profit-strategies-for-our/ https://academic.oup.com/book/25370 https://www.commonwealmagazine.org/curtis-yarvin-thiel-carlyle-monarchism-reactionary https://www.amazon.com/Key-Thinkers-Radical-Right-Democracy-ebook/dp/B07LFKWCV2 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Oh my gosh, welcome back to Behind the Bastards, a podcast that you are legally required to
be listening to in at least four US states.
Six, if you have a criminal record and are currently working through probation.
Which four?
I'm, huh?
Which four?
Sophie, I don't have that information ahead of me right now.
I was not prepared for a deeper bit than this.
Oh, well, for some reason I know it's Idaho.
That's because I'm not,
I am not a professional comedic actor,
but you know who is, Sophie?
Oh.
Our guest today, Ed Helms.
Ed, I mean, I don't need to introduce you you've been on the Daily Show
You were a major cast member on the office you were in the hangover movies
You've been in like a ton of things that I'm sure basically everybody watching or listening to this has watched
But today we're here to talk about your show snafu, which is just entered season two. Thank you for coming on the show.
I'm so psyched to be here.
Your show is awesome.
And this is going to be fun.
I hope it better be.
Oh yeah, I wanted to say your, so Snafu season two,
you talk like your show, you talk about like
major fuck-ups in American history.
And season two is about the raid on the FBI building in 1971
that revealed a huge amount of information about how the FBI was conducting clandestine
operations targeting anti-war protesters and civil rights protesters. It's like one of the
coolest chapters in American radical political history. And I thought you guys did a great job
of breaking it down
and bringing on some of the major players talking through it.
Yeah, thanks.
We were incredibly lucky.
It's a wild story as you're getting at these citizens
who were not at all professional thieves or criminals
staged this incredible heist on the night of the Ali Frazier fuck
flight, which is very oceans 11.
We actually got Steven Soderbergh on the podcast to comment on that.
But yeah, and they pulled off this elaborate heist.
They broke into that FBI office in media Pennsylvania, every file and started leaking them to a very
courageous reporter at the Washington Post named Betty Medsker.
They kept it secret for decades.
These documents led to the revelation of Co-Intel Pro, which basically-
Massive.
Yeah.
And demolished J. Edgar Hoover's legacy for good reason and led to the church hearings,
which is the only reason why we have any congressional oversight over the FBI, the CIA, the NSA,
and all the other alphabet agencies.
It was an incredible moment.
It's so amazing to me because you couldn't do it like it was kind of the last
moment you could have gotten away with something like that, right?
There just wasn't the kind of surveillance.
There wasn't the kind of capability for it.
And it was the kind of thing that a group of people was only going to get away with
once before everything changed about how these buildings did their security.
And they picked like the, this was the most important time to be able to get in there
and get files like that.
But it was also kind of the most important time
to break into the FBI, an FBI building
and get a bunch of files.
Yeah, just a wonderful moment people should know more about.
I think it didn't get as much attention.
It doesn't get as much attention as maybe it ought to have
because of how close it was to Watergate.
But I think it's just as important.
And the Pentagon files.
And the Pentagon, right.
The Pentagon papers.
Both of which were giant Washington Post stories.
This was Washington Post as well.
And you're right.
But what's really cool about this one is that it predates Watergate and the Pentagon papers
by just a year or so, it was all the same major players at the Washington Post.
And in a cool way, this was the first time they really confronted the legal issues around
publishing this kind of thing.
And they decided to do it.
And they against, you know, they had the attorney general calling them saying, don't you dare publish these
FBI files?
And they did it anyway because it was newsworthy and it didn't compromise national security
in any way.
So I like to think this is what gave Ben Bradley and the Washington Post brass the dry run that set them up to
do the right thing for Watergate and really, I don't know.
Yeah, it started that kind of, there's this inertia and momentum behind actually, we're
not just speaking truth to power, but prying truth out of powers, grasp and forcing it
in front of the country. Yeah.
Well put. Yeah.
Yeah. And I, uh, so today, you know, the, the, I thought long and hard about what kind
of episodes I wanted to talk to you about. And I, there's a, the guy that we're going
to be talking about today is a fellow who I kind of debated for several years whether
or not we should cover because he's a quietly
important monster.
He's somebody who, you know, if we were just talking about like, you know, the FBI overreach
of the civil rights era, the anti-war years and whatnot, which was very much like a real
authoritarian moment in our country's past.
And we're currently confronting another.
And the guy we're talking about today, Curtis Yarvin, is sort of the prophet of taking America
down a completely authoritarian path.
He is an advocate for changing this country into what is effectively a dictatorship.
And unfortunately, he's a guy who's had a lot of influence in speaking to that.
Have you heard of Curtis Yarman before we started these episodes?
No.
I mean, I read a tiny bit about him yesterday, but that was.
Yeah, that's fine.
That is the case with most people who are not interested, who are not like
actual followers of his philosophy.
But unfortunately you have heard of some of the people who are big fans of Curtis.
One of them is current US vice presidential candidate and hopefully future nobody, JD
Vance, who back in September 20th of 2021 went on the Moment of Truth podcast run by
the conservative organization American Moment, which is an organizational partner for the
Heritage Foundation's Project 2025.
In a wide ranging interview, he accused his female classmates at Yale Law of pursuing
racial or gender equality as, quote, a value system that gives their life meaning, and
then said that value system leads to misery.
At another point in the interview, he asked if certain groups of people, particularly
those from Muslim majority countries, can can quote, successfully become American citizens.
And then he alleged that the reason
so many journalists are angry
was not the rapid destruction of their industry,
but because they didn't have any children,
which inevitably he says leads to psychotic breaks.
Now, a lot of this stuff has come out about Vance.
Since he was-
When was that interview?
2021.
That's really wild because for some reason I sort of thought that like he was kind of
normal and then just saw a very cynical opportunity to get elevated if he endorsed Trump.
And so he did that.
And then everything else has been the kind of a cynical like
trip down the Trump
Rabbit hole just like so many
Republicans have done but that privately like he's kind of smarter than that
but what you're saying now is that
Is that he's like
Trumpier than Trump on his own
He's a little bit so Trump. I don't know how much Trump believes
other than that Trump should have power.
Vance has strong beliefs about the fact
that democracy is a mistake, right?
And that a lot of things that have recent,
most of the last century in terms of social progress,
women getting the right to vote,
the civil rights movement reforming the ability to vote
for people who are not white American men, that that was right to vote, the civil rights movement, like reforming the ability to vote for people who are not like white American men.
That was all horribly mistaken, right?
And it was horribly mistaken because it led to this situation whereby too many regular
people have any say whatsoever in how they're governed.
And like to what I was saying before, it's like in a lot of ways, JD Vance has more extreme views on things,
which is why during the most recent debate,
Donald Trump alludes to not discussing
certain extreme policies that JD Vance claims to have
with JD.
Yeah.
And so he tries to distance himself,
whereas JD is catering to a certain category of human,
but Trump's like, oh, I didn't discuss it with him.
And that's intentional.
Yeah. And it's, it's, what's interesting is that if you're looking at like what
his background is, Vance is a guy whose entire career has been bankrolled by
Peter Thiel, who's the Facebook billion.
He made a lot of money on Facebook, made a lot of money on PayPal, and he sunk
about 15 million into Vance's congressional campaign, which is the most
ever spent on a single congressional candidate.
And Teal in 2009 went on the record as saying he doesn't believe democracy can be compatible
with freedom, by which he means like the freedom of people with lots of money to basically
govern the rest of us, right?
And Teal and Vance, they're not just kind of reactionaries when they express those things.
They are quoting a guy.
They are referring to the work of a political philosopher named Curtis Yarvin, who they
first encountered when he blogged under a pseudonym, Mencius Moldbug, which is kind
of deliberately arch.
But this is the guy who has been like the prophet of a sizable chunk of the authoritarian right.
Teal sunk a lot of money into him.
JD Vance quotes him repeatedly.
So does Blake Masters, who is the guy who's
been running repeatedly to try to beat Mark Kelly in Arizona.
And all of these guys and more are followers of Yarvin,
who's probably the most influential theoretician
of the radical right in the US today.
Curtis has never killed anybody in any legally actionable sense or advocated for murder.
As far as I'm aware, he has never broken a law, but he advocates for the overthrow of
democracy and the installation of a dictatorial regime that would by necessity kill and imprison
large numbers of people.
His influence is great enough that the whole alt-right and everything that came from the art-right
into our current era, right, owes something to Jarvin's work.
So when you're thinking about everything that's happened on the right that's gotten so deranged
since 2015, all of it has bits of Curtis Jarvin in it, right?
And his thinking has had a massive impact even on some guys like Elon Musk,
who several days ago shared a post where a reader suggested
only high testosterone alpha males
and a neurotypical people should be allowed to vote.
This is also a thought with some Yarvin DNA behind it.
Say that again.
Oh yes, this was quite a moment.
That only alpha males, so, you know,
stereotypical like alpha male guys and then
a neurotypical people, people who are not like it.
I have a good lead. Can I still vote? I think I think maybe so, because a lot of these guys
are big about ADHD and making them superhuman, which I also have. And it just makes me really
bad at cleaning my house. Yeah. And occasionally in short bursts me really bad at cleaning my house.
And occasionally in short bursts, very good at cleaning my house.
But yeah, so these are these are the kind of like political ideas that you get when you take too much, read too much Curtis Yarvin or listen too much to the people who have read
a lot of Curtis Yarvin. And he's a kind of guy, because he's so kind of shadowed as a figure,
I had always worried about like, is covering this guy going to bring more attention to him
than is necessary? And now that like one of his followers is maybe going to be a heartbeat away
from the presidency, I think it's probably time to talk about him. I kind of think we have to.
So that's the introduction.
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Curtis Yarvin was born probably in Brooklyn in 1973 on about June 25th of that year.
Likely, his normal wiki doesn't give a birth date, but Google's AI summary bot does.
And it seems to be basing this on a bio of Yarvin in another wiki, which seems to pull
from earlier versions of the original wiki.
It's like this AI slop stuff.
So the gist of it is, I don't know his actual birth date, right?
It's a lot of wiki.
I'm just trying to remind everyone not to trust AI summaries that various search engines
give you because most of them don't have actual sources behind them.
Like most radical intellectuals, Yarvin was born in a place of wealth, comfort, and high
social standing in his own society.
His parents are highly educated.
His dad had an Ivy League degree and worked for the US government as a foreign service worker. His mom was a WASP from West
chester County, the daughter of a prominent lawyer and entered civil service herself as
an adult. Yarvan today describes the social class of his birth as Brahmin, referring to
the highest caste in Hindu society. And he does this because he thinks that inequality
is a fundamental and immutable thing, right?
People are unequal fundamentally.
And so any sort of social stratification in society is justified by that.
And he's drawn to descriptions from other cultures that harken back to other fixed hierarchies.
Sorry, it's justified by its inevitability.
Right.
Exactly.
Like people are genetically, some people are better than others.
They're more intelligent than others, higher IQ than others.
Therefore we are justified in leaning into that.
Yes.
Yes.
And in fact, yeah.
Yeah.
We have a moral responsibility.
Because that's a separate thing.
Like it's inevitability is a, maybe that's a fixed condition of human existence,
but leaning into it, exacerbating it,
that's just a arbitrary choice.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's this idea that like, and it's also this belief
that like something like intelligence is one thing, right?
Like intelligence is a number,
and if it's higher, you're smarter,
as opposed to like, well, you can have an IQ of 180,
but if your car breaks down,
the guy who knows how to fix your car
is a lot smarter than you in that moment.
That's how I tend to think about intelligence
as opposed to like this objective thing.
Like is a farmer smarter than a finance bro in New York City?
Well, when it comes to like making stock choices,
maybe when it comes to growing food, certainly not.
Like, I don't know.
That's that, I think that's a better way to look at it.
It's a weird thing.
Like just the the existence of something is then it makes it okay to then whether wherever
it falls on the spectrum of good and evil because it exists, it is therefore okay to
to do and heighten.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Murder.
Murder is bad.
Murder happens.
It's a fundamental part of the human condition that people get murdered and murder one another.
Therefore-
Yeah, absolutely.
So therefore, I can murder anybody.
Is that a comparable?
Am I making- Is that a comparable logic?
I think it actually is a very comparable comparison, right?
That just because like there are, like individuals are not the same that we should like have
some sort of a, and you're always picking when you're trying to acknowledge that like,
okay, people are not, like people don't all have the same abilities naturally, right?
Like that's a thing that's objectively true.
Michael Phelps was always going to be a better swimmer than me, for example.
But we don't base our society based on who's best at swimming, right?
Yarvin is basically saying, there's one thing that I actually value when it comes to the
ways in which people are different from each other, and it's a very specific kind of intelligence
that correlates to how I think I'm intelligent.
And that's how we should stratify society, right?
Yeah, he's that kind of a dude.
And I also kind of think it's interesting to me that he's so obsessed with this idea
of like identifying as a Brahmin because in Hindu culture, Brahmins are the castes that
like traditionally were most involved
in the priesthood and religious instruction.
It is a very closed loop system, the caste system, traditionally.
But that's not the kind of system that his family succeeded in.
His dad was a member of the US Foreign Service and became pretty highly placed in the government,
but his dad wasn't born into that role.
He was the son of Jewish American communists who came to this country and he had to fight
to make a place for himself in the higher rungs of society, which is a very clear example
of mobility and the fact that we have a reasonably open society that allows for some mobility,
which he doesn't want to exist.
I always find it interesting when guys like that,
you can see a clear example of like,
oh, well you only have what you have
because our society allows for mobility.
Wait, so where is he from again?
Brooklyn?
Yeah, he's from around Brooklyn.
Okay. Yeah.
Because there is also a Brahmin social class in New England.
Yeah. The Boston Brahmins, right? the Brahmin social class in New England.
Yeah, and I think he's referring to his mom. The Boston Brahmins, right?
Yeah.
But that's not what he's talking about.
I mean, it's a little unclear to me because he is,
his mom is kind of like,
you could probably call a Boston Brahmin,
but he's referring to like,
when he talks about his family being Brahmins,
he's referring to the fact that his dad
was also highly placed in the State Department.
And his dad is definitely not a Boston Brahmin, right? Like his parents were
Jewish Stalinists, which is not like a Boston Brahmin thing.
No, right? Because that was like the Kennedys and like that ilk. So that's so interesting.
All right.
Yeah. Yeah. It's a little weird to me the way he kind of like talks about it
but definitely it's it's kind of key to see that a big chunk of his family's comfort at least comes from the fact that like
He his his his dad's side of the family entered into a fairly open society that allows for some mobility
So can I clarify one thing? So absolutely I feel like the and and I don't know enough about this, so I'm glad to be learning as I go.
But I just have...
I've kind of, I guess, I'm realizing that I've assumed that the Peter Teals of the world,
when they advocate for more of a dictatorial structure to our government, they're not saying
that part of that is also a free market capitalism, which presumably
allows for mobility, right?
Social mobility.
Yeah, it's supposed to.
And that if anything, it encourages the best and the brightest to rise.
And that's how they see themselves as the best and the brightest that have risen. So I guess I'm just splitting hairs a little bit.
Like, are you sure that they,
that also they are anti-social mobility or?
They're very much like,
close the door after you get up, right?
Like kick the ladder out from underneath you types, right?
And I think it's because they do believe that like,
there's a, that their success was not
purely based on the fact that they came up in a system where they gained certain benefits
that were the result of like public spending.
Right?
Like all of these guys who made money in the tech industry went to schools that were generally
publicly funded, at least at some point, you know, their parents drove on roads that were
publicly benefited from like the security infrastructure that exists in this country in a lot of different ways.
Their companies all benefited to some extent from government spending and incentives, but
they see that their success was the result of something inherently superior within themselves
and often in a genetic level in some ways.
The fact that they have achieved such success is not the result of a society
that enabled them. It's a result of their members of a natural aristocracy. The best
thing they can do is legally work to codify that aristocracy.
We'll get into some more of how Curtis arrives this, because he's really a big part in kind of lending an intellectual air to this. But that very much is how these folks see
themselves. And he grows up as a kid, you know, his dad's working for the state department. They
travel around the world a lot. He spends a decent chunk of his childhood in like Cyprus and the
Dominican Republic. And, you know, so that's a lot of disruption in his schooling. You know,
he's not one of these kids who stays in the same school
for a long period of time, but he excels in academics.
He skips a grade back before his family goes overseas.
And when they move back to the U.S., he skips two more grades
and he winds up a sophomore at age 12, which I think is probably never a great idea.
Right. That's a little young.
Sounds hard. Yeah. Yeah. Like it little young to be a sophomore. Sounds hard.
Yeah, yeah.
Like it wasn't great being a sophomore at the normal age.
Yeah, that is not when humanity,
that age is not when humanity is at its most benevolent
and kind and supportive.
Yeah, yeah, definitely a mild way to put it.
In one interview I found, Yarvin basically says like,
yeah, it was whack that I was skipped ahead so far, right?
Which-
Was it because of academic achievement
that he bounced ahead?
Okay, so very bright kid.
Very bright kid, very good at,
specifically the kind of academics that like,
the schools reward.
And you can kind of read between the lines
that he was the recipient of a decent amount of bullying.
Right?
And that's especially,
I think it actually might be a little less common
for kids in school now, but like, you know,
even if you didn't get skipped ahead in school,
the high school has a lot of bullying in it.
So I'm not surprised.
That's, we're about the same age, he and I.
And yeah, that was, I mean, that was just like
good old hazing, all the just all the gross,
horrible, traumatic stuff.
Yeah.
Yeah, I'm thinking through some fun memories
that I have myself right now, right?
So we all, it's one of those things,
you could like read
a lot into that to kind of the guy that he becomes.
But also I think we all kind of went through
a version of that.
So maybe it's not super useful to like theorize too much
about what it meant to him.
But what does definitely mean a lot to him is that
in the late eighties and early nineties,
he becomes one of the first online people, right?
This is back before most people know there's an internet.
So he is an early adopter.
I think 1989 is when he first starts
getting online regularly.
Wow.
And yeah.
And this is not, this is the precursor to the internet
that we know.
And he's spending all of his time in a place called Usenet,
which if you remember like web forums
is kind of like the first web forum, right?
It's for you Gen Z kids, it's TikTok without any videos or hot people.
And everyone has very strong opinions about Star Trek audio equipment or race science, right?
Like it's an interesting place to be.
Yes.
Like race science was like they were just getting it.
It was like 4chan or like these sort of dark corners of.
Yeah, there was actually a white supremacist terrorist group
in the late eighties that robbed banks,
stole a bunch of money and then donated a bunch of it
to other Nazi groups that spent it buying computer systems
to link up different white power groups
so that they could share information.
And there's evidence from as early as like the mid 90s
of them talking about going into places
where you can find fans of stuff
like different kind of like sci-fi media
who might be socially isolated
and try to push propaganda onto them.
So that actually does go back pretty far.
And it's hard to say, like, I don't know exactly,
we don't know entirely what Jarvan got up to
when he was on Usenet.
To some extent, that's a bit of a black box,
but his favorite board was a place called talk.bizarre.
And I've spent some time trawling the Usenet archives
for talk.bizarre, which you can find still.
Talk.bizarre.
Talk, that's like the names of,
like there's different talk boards
and one of them is like the bizarre, right?
Okay, okay.
And it's like-
Kinda fun.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I think it's where I would have spent time
if I had been a little bit older.
It's like the first place where you would find
like internet humor, right?
The kind of stuff you eventually you would see on boards
like something awful and then 4chan
and now like all of Twitter culture, right?
So it's it's inside jokes and memes and what we now call shitposting, right?
And and Yarvin is like one of the first generation of shit posters and he says this of his time on Usenet
It was a decentralized system and more importantly it had this amazing form of admission control because everyone on it
was an engineering student or worked at a tech company
or something.
So critically, it's not an open platform.
The only people here are to some extent involved
in academics, involved in the tech industry
and very smart, right?
In 1985-
Just to get access to it at that time.
Yes. You had to have, you access to it at that time. Yes.
You had to be in, yeah.
So they're the elite in a way, right?
And that's how, really how he comes to see them.
And Yarvin is definitely part of that elite.
In 1985, he'd entered a Johns Hopkins study for mathematically precocious youth.
And then he had started taking classes at Brown University.
Even at this early stage of development,
he showed a distinct interest in authoritarian leaders
and just as critically in being very wrong about them.
In 1991, he wrote in a discussion on Usenet,
I wonder if the Soviet power ladder
of vicious bureaucratic backbiting brings stronger men
to the top than the American system of feel good soundbites.
Now, given that the USSR collapsed the next year,
not a great prediction.
Yeah.
This is so, this is like,
you should have had Rainn Wilson on this episode
because you're describing Dwight Schrute.
Yeah, he's got more than a little bit of that, right?
A precociousness and a sort of very specific kind of brilliance and a preoccupation with
like stern leadership.
And can you just imagine Dwight just telling everybody that he entered a Johns Hopkins
study of mathematical precocious youth, that would be brought up constantly. By the way, if there is one way to guarantee
you're gonna get your ass kicked on a playground.
So true, so true.
Precocious mathematics.
You're not even gonna get out the first syllable
of precocious before they start swinging.
Yeah, so while he is at college, syllable of precocious before they start swinging. Yeah.
So while he is at college, Yarvin shows minimal interest in the humanities.
He only takes five undergraduate courses in these subjects focused on history and writing.
Where is he in college now?
Brown is where he starts at college, right?
And he graduates in 92.
He goes on to be a grad student in a comp sci PhD program at Berkeley.
And his goal at that point is to enter the tech industry, right?
Which is just starting to really explode from as the internet.
This is kind of the very, the immediate precursor to the big dot com boom.
And as he moves from high school to college, and then from college to grad school and starts
flirting with big tech, he continues spending his time online exploring his first political ideology.
He is initially a libertarian.
I want to quote from a profile Joshua Tate wrote about Yarvin for a book on the radical
right.
Quote, engineers like Yarvin are typically sorted through competitive academic programs,
which they consider analogous to the competition imagined in a libertarian society.
Their world is rational, rule-bound, and solvable.
Within the subculture, computer software and hardware are the dominant metaphors for society.
Such thinking dovetails with the ironclad assumptions about human and market behavior
of the Austrian School of Economics, led by Ludwig von Mies.
Tech culture systems focus also accords with libertarianism's concentration on efficiency
and solving government."
He's one of these guys who, number one, comes to think, again, I've been sorted into this
natural aristocracy based on my skill that I've earned.
The world around me, he sees, seems so chaotic, but the computer systems I'm working with
are so sensible and ordered. And the world around me, he sees, seems so chaotic. But the computer systems I'm working with
are so sensible and ordered.
And the companies that I am interested in
all seem to be so much more efficient than the government.
Couldn't we fix the government
if we made it more like a computer program
and more like the tech industry, right?
Which you can't because people don't work that way.
But there's always guys who think this way. Right.
And, you know, hopefully most of them, I think it doesn't lead anywhere,
but like some bad opinions on the Internet.
Unfortunately for Yarvin, it's going to go a little bit further than that.
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So we're back.
Right.
Now, the kind of thinking that Yarvin has about libertarianism, about being a part of
this natural aristocracy, is not really congruent with human liberty in the broad sense, right?
Because if you are able to, as a business owner, use your liberty unconstrained by government
regulations to dump poison in a waterway, right? That is, you are more free as the person running that business, but you're also
destroying life and, you know, one would say harming the liberty of thousands of other people
who rely on that waterway, right? So I would say as someone who is like inclined to some libertarian
ideas, I don't really understand why so many libertarians are obsessed with this kind of like ending
of government restrictions on corporations.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And also, and another version of that, I find the anti-union's so hilarious to me because the formation of a union to collectively bargain with a
CEO is the most natural expression of free speech.
It is such a natural and so to be like, you know, free speech, I'm a constitutional, you
know, libertarian or whatever.
And then also in the same breath be like unions are, should be illegal.
It's insane because-
Yeah, the math doesn't add up.
Yeah. Yeah. Unions are a natural growth and a natural oppositional force to exploitation.
Yeah, and I think they also very objectively increase the amount of freedom, right?
If you're kind of looking at it that way, when people have a way to band together to
oppose a much larger, more powerful, more moneyed
interest than they have more agency in their lives.
That's definitely how I look at it.
I will say, Jarvan, he actually is pretty good at not getting lost in this part of the
discourse because he drops this idea that liberty is a value in any way, shape, or form
pretty early on.
Like he's not one of these guys who preaches libertarianism because he thinks that it's,
or because he's trying to convince people that it's somehow better for human freedom.
He's someone who just kind of drops the idea that there's any value in human freedom pretty
early on, right? So there's no point in paying lip service to it, which is at least more honest
than a lot of these guys.
Now the major pivot point, which leads to him dropping his libertarian trappings
and embracing this more authoritarian belief system
hinges on the place that he was
and kind of remains his mental home,
which is the early internet.
The old days of Usenet were a simulacrum
of what is today Yarvin's ideal society.
As I stated before, back then you couldn't post
unless you were someone with a degree of like skill,
money or access to a large institution.
And so you would only get new users in any large amount
every September when you get new college classes of kids
who would get onboarded and start posting, right?
And so for a few years, every September,
the internet would be annoying for a while,
while all these newbies came in who don't know
the social mores, and they would have to get acclimatized.
But there were always more old heads, people
who had been there a long time, to keep the new people in line.
And there was this natural hierarchy
based on age and technical skill.
And then one year, late 1993, Usenet
opens up to anyone with an internet connection.
And suddenly you have what people call eternal September.
It's never ended since 1993 because there's not
been any kind of guardrails to block new people from coming
on after that point.
It's an important moment in internet history.
It's a catastrophic moment for Curtis Yarbon.
And the mental impact this has is key to understanding him.
In one interview with Tablet magazine, he complained,
you had this sort of de facto aristocracy
that didn't know it was an aristocracy,
and then it fell apart.
These are all big Lord of the Rings guys,
so I'll use the Lord of the Rings analogy.
They talk about this like the period of time when the elves ruled everything before
Sauron had his big war, right? Like before the breaking of the world. That's eternal September
that ruins this kind of like more noble golden age and brings about this dirty, grubby age of men.
So-
I'll take your word for it. I'm not a Lord of the Rings guy. I mean, I respect it,
but I just don't have that level of knowledge.
I do.
I'm wearing a Lord of the Rings hat right now.
Can back that claim.
All these guys are big.
JD Vance, his venture capital company was named after one of the Rings in the Lord of
the Rings.
Peter Thiel's surveillance company is named Palantir from the Lord of the Rings.
So this is very much the language that they all speak.
That's funny.
That's also one of Stephen Colbert's obsessions.
And I wonder if they might find common ground
and have like a fun chat on that subject.
I'm certain they could have a chat about it.
I think Colbert would probably be kind of horrified
of some of the things that they're referencing
and they're like, you named your company after this thing
that is specifically a device
that only the evil wizard uses.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But I don't know, that would be an interesting conversation.
So I think this period of time,
this kind of collapse of this natural aristocracy,
what he sees as a natural aristocracy is key to understanding why Yarvin comes to hate democracy,
right? Because it kind of ruined his internet playground, the first place where he ever felt
that he fit in, right? That's sort of what I see as like the er moment of his coming to hate this
kind of idea of any kind of democratic society.
Now, if you're going to claim that you and your friends on the internet back in the day
were like the aristocracy of some long lost utopia of logic, that invites people to look
at what you were posting on the internet back then.
I've looked at some of Jarvan's old posts and Socrates, he wasn't.
He does seem to have spent some of it writing comedy for a hacking and DIY media collective
called the Cult of the Dead Cow.
This is where we get to like the weirdest connection here because if you've heard of
the Cult of the Dead Cow recently, it's because Beto O'Rourke was also a member.
Oh yeah.
He rings a bell.
Yeah, yeah.
So he and Beto have a very strange connection to each other. Now, the cult of
the dead cow was like a complicated thing. It's one Reuters article I found describes
it as the oldest group of computer hackers in US history. I think that oversells how
cool Jarvan's involvement in it is because I think he was mostly, they were also like
a media collective, so they put out like pieces of writing and whatnot.
And I think that's mostly what
Yarvin's involvement was, right?
And the best evidence I have of what he was writing for them
is a satiric piece of Badger-Human-Hybrid-Erotica,
which I think might hold a little bit of evidence
of his future interest in race science,
although it's hard to say.
Do you want to hear some of his badger human hybrid erotica?
Hold on, let me get some lube.
Love me for my genes, says Antonio Neeling.
If you cannot love me for myself,
you must love me for my genes.
I've never told anyone this before.
I've always kept it to myself.
I have always let them think it, but an accident of cruel nature that I have white hair on
my cheekbones and a thoroughly disreputable looking nose.
But the fact is that I am part badger on my father's side.
So I don't know.
I don't know what to say about that.
I know it's a joke.
It's a bit, right?
I don't think it lands. Maybe it was funnier back in the early internet. Although maybe the bar was just a lot lower there
It feels like there's some context we're missing like just just I'm digging hard for some
Here like so am I it just seems like there was some inside joke about
Badger fucking or something that that we're not
that was sort of came before this it had this has to be part of a dialogue that
we've lost pieces of over the years right it is like about two pages of like
badger erotica that is it's weirdly the love me for my jeans line stands out to
me but I may be reading more into that that is necessary. But yeah, so, you know,
that's the kind of stuff he's doing.
He's like, it's pretty lighthearted comedy, right?
Or it's at least a tempting to be.
So he's not, as far as I can tell,
on like the serious hacking side
of what the cult of the dead cow is doing
at this period of time.
Now, Jarvan weathered the fall of Usenet, and not long after the eternal September began,
he dropped out of Berkeley for a job at a tech company.
He started flirting with the specific strains of more authoritarian, money-centered libertarian
ideology as opposed to the old school guys who actually really were pretty focused on
human liberty.
I think the of the last
dregs of those guys are you saw it like a Penn and Teller would be a great evidence of that,
right? Like that, that kind of libertarian was was a lot more prominent back then.
And he sort of Yarvin is sort of right on the edge of the the folks who got a lot of money in the
tech industry and started getting angry that like they have to still pay taxes to keep the roads up, right?
That's kind of where he moves into.
And Yarvin is eventually going to kind of come out of that as a monarchist.
And it behooves us to look at how that happened.
Now there are some signs of his ideological turn in another short story he wrote for the
Cult of the Dead Cow, the year after that badger story in 1994. This piece is
titled The Bishop, and it opens with the lines, no one has come into the cathedral in some time.
It's about an old bishop who exists out of time in a moldering cathedral that no one has visited in
years. And at one point, Yarvin, possibly describing himself, writes, the bishop is a man of logic.
Unlike many older people, he is unwilling to repaint the world
he sees around him, to make it a more comfortable place in which to live. He recognizes unpleasant
facts. Indeed, he delights in them. In the act of recognition, he finds proof that his faculties
have not decayed to that state of contented oblivion, which he believes a sure precursor to
death. And this is kind of noteworthy in part because the term cathedral is going to be really important
for Yarov and he's going to come to use it as a term to refer to the news media, the
political establishment, and academia, right?
Everyone who annoys him, right, is the cathedral.
And this is sort of like the evil regime that he's going to set himself to the task of destroying.
This is how a lot of these guys think.
It's why there's so much focus.
It's why guys like Vance spend so much time attacking schools, attacking professors and
academia.
It's why there's so much hatred of journalists.
These are the people who, in his eyes, are invested in propping up a clearly dysfunctional
failing society, right? And so you have to destroy
the cathedral in order to build anything new. That's what he's going to come to believe, right?
In the early 2000s, the dot-com bubble bursts. And at some point after that,
Yarvin wound up with several hundred grand as the result of a buyout of a company he worked at. So
not enough to retire, but enough to sit around and really think about what he wants to do next.
What year is this?
This would be like in the early 2000s.
So this is all happening sometime between 2001 and 2004.
The dot-com bubble burst sometime after 9-11,
I think is when he gets bought out.
And by 2003 or four, he's kind of sitting around
on a pile of money, reading a lot, trying
to figure out what he wants to do next with his life.
What he kind of decides is that he wants to think about politics and economics.
Now, Yarvin had made some friends during his tech years and he'd gotten interested in Austrian
school economists, mostly because of this University of Tennessee law professor, Glenn
Reynolds, who was like an early blogger who had gotten Yarvin
interested in a guy named Ludwig von Mies.
And eventually through this,
Yarvin gets interested in a fan of Mies,
another theoretician named Marie Rothbard.
Rothbard was a foundational anarcho-capitalist thinker.
I don't really like that term,
but that's what they called themselves.
And he basically believes like there should not be a state, right?
There should not be any power higher than individuals and corporations spending their
money to make things happen.
Right.
That's kind of the gist of it.
Anarchist.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And, you know, I think like a more like an anarchist would argue the fact that you have a bunch of money is like as
much a problematic hierarchy as you know, anything that the state does and not necessarily
like, you can't really be an anarcho capitalist. A lot of people would argue, but Rothbard
is one who feels like basically that the state, the primary reason the state is unethical
is that it stops people from doing what they want to do with their money, right? Whereas an anarchist would be like, well, the reason that the state is unethical is that it stops people from doing what they want to do with their money, right?
Whereas an anarchist would be like, well, the reason that the state is unethical is
that states can do a lot of harm to people at scale, right?
Anyway, none of that really matters to the point, which is that he gets really interested
in this guy Rothbard.
And Rothbard, one of the things he writes about is this kind of anger at the concept
of people advocating for civil rights, right?
Anyone advocating for civil rights in Rothbard's mind
is an enemy, right?
Because the only way to advocate for civil rights
is to advocate for the state to make rules
about those rights.
And that leads inevitably to tyranny.
Rothbard wrote, behind the honeyed
but patently absurd pleas for equality
is a ruthless drive for placing themselves,
the elites at the top of a new hierarchy of power.
And this is something you see a lot on the right today,
this idea that like any group of people
who are advocating for their own civil,
who are advocating for civil rights
because they're being oppressed under the present system
are secretly trying to make themselves rulers, right?
All they really wanna do is oppress you
by, I don't know, getting the right to vote
or own credit cards or whatever.
So that's kind of like a big part
of Rothbard's belief system.
And Jarvan really takes to that.
Now, and that quote that I just read from him came out in 95.
So you get the kind of feeling like
this is the sort of thinking Jarvan is hoovering up
in that period right before the dot com boom and then the dot com bust.
And ultimately his reading of these Austrian school guys leads him to another dude named
Thomas Carlyle.
Now Carlyle has been dead for a while.
He's a Scottish philosopher from the 1800s.
And he's kind of seen as a proto to a lot of these more modern thinkers that he's
reading. Carlisle, he's an authoritarian who believes that you need a strong man to stop
groups of marginalized people from making themselves the new tyrants.
He's also, as we'll talk about, a massive racist. He's one of these guys who justify slavery
as being a fundamentally ethical system
for reasons of like, basically,
certain groups of people are different genetically,
so slavery is a natural hierarchy in society.
So these are the kind of people that Jarvan is digesting
when he comes upon the work
of a fellow named Hans Hermann Hopp. Hopp is
a German born political theorist and a leading Austrian school economist. He's another anarcho-capitalist.
Hopp is a big advocate of monarchy in a way that he defines monarchy as a privately owned
government as opposed to a democracy, which he calls a publicly owned government. Hopp
believes that the transition from monarchy to democracy over the 20th century
was like the big mistake that we made as humans and has caused nothing but civilizational decline
ever since.
And from Hoppe, Yarvin gets the idea that the best way to run anything is to have one
guy be in charge of it, right?
You can't effectively run an organization if there's any power sharing.
The only way to do anything is to have a single person be invested with absolute power, right?
I know that's kind of like a tortured logical route, but those are sort of the ingredients
that eventually cook up to him becoming a monarchist, right?
Now we might say that's not the most logical thing, right?
If you look at what happened to all of the absolute monarchies,
they kind of destroyed each other circa World War I.
And Jarvin would argue, no, no, no,
those weren't real absolute monarchies.
They all made too many compromises
with different sort of like,
democratic instruments within those societies.
And that's the reason why Austria-Hungary fell.
That's the reason why the Tsar fell, right?
They didn't have quite enough power.
I think that's silly.
Well, sure.
I mean, it places such an unreasonable amount of faith
in one person, or in just like the integrity of humans.
Like people, the reason that it's, the reason that you have to embrace a messy system is because people are inherently messy.
Yeah.
I think that's a great way to put it.
A monarchy is a wonderful fantasy, but how do you pick the guy or the woman?
How do you pick that person?
And then what if he gets hit on the head? What if he gets hit on the head?
And right what he's drunk Dalai Lama thing where where it's it's a birthright thing and then like what if
What if they're just like a?
narcissistic
suicidal
or depressive or whatever like
What if they want nothing to do with it?
I don't know.
It just seems nuts.
It's this wild, it's this thing that like everyone understands the frustration with
democracy, right?
Like it's really messy and really annoying a lot of the time.
And like people make a lot of bad decisions, especially even as collectives, groups of
people make really bad decisions a lot of the time, right?
Yeah, yeah.
But then saying like, the solution to this is to have one guy be in charge.
It's like, well, number one, how do you pick that guy?
Number two, like we've all seen it, like people change over the course of their lives, right?
Like what happens if that guy, like his mental capacity gets declined or whatever, or he
gets obsessed with something weird and crazy and dangerous
Which is what happens to every monarchy, right?
They all wind up ruled by like maniacs who make terrible decisions
Which is like why we had World War one you have all these like monarchs who were obsessed with these very silly attitudes
With the and these very silly petty grievances between each other and had made
like generations of terrible decisions when it came to like purchasing arms and building
their military machines.
And like, it just turns out that the bad decisions of one guy are certainly not like any less
catastrophic than the bad decisions of like groups of people, right?
Anytime you've got people who spend all of their time
theorizing about the way things ought to be,
as opposed to dealing with the way people are,
you're going to wind up with nonsense.
And unfortunately, every now and then,
we get to see what that nonsense looks like
when people actually put it in place.
In the case of absolute monarchies like this,
we got the trenches in World War I.
In the case of a very authoritarian communism,
we got Stalin.
And I guess part of why I think Yarvin
is important to understand is that,
as kooky as a lot of this stuff is,
he is a guy who wants to take these theories
that he made himself when he was like sitting alone
in his apartment reading books
and not really interacting with real people.
He's a guy who wants those theories to govern the lives
of hundreds of millions, ideally billions, right?
And that's a real dangerous kind of person, you know?
Like we can, regular people can sit around
and like read their books and talk about like,
well, this might be neat or this might be neat.
But whenever you're talking about like,
I know how to reorder all of society,
you've become dangerous.
And I, you know, that's kind of what Jarvan is doing
during this period of time where he's sitting at home
and he's reading his books.
So the kind of, the system that he pulls out of this period, where he's just reading everything he can
get his hands on, is that a monarchy is the ideal kind of system of government, because
it's the best at maximizing long-term profits within a society.
Because monarchs have to think long-term.
They can't be destructive in the short-term like, you know, leaders
in a democracy are because they have a limited term limit, you know, maybe they only care
about benefiting themselves. A monarch wouldn't act that way because they have no desire to
destroy their own property. And again, I would point you back to World War I. We could talk
about like the Saudi royal family too, right? Entirely propped up by oil. Roman emperors.
Like literally most of the monarchies that have ever been
have like collapsed as a result of the fact
that that's also an inherently destructive thing.
You know, some of that just comes down to human nature,
but he does try to deal with this.
The fact that monarchies clearly don't work the way
that he thinks that they should.
And he thinks that a big part of the issue
is that they all make too many compromises, right?
All of these monarchies that collapsed
around the turn of the century
had allowed some democratic elements into society.
And they had allowed that
because there were revolutions, right?
People like occupied Vienna for a period of time in 48.
Like there were a bunch of like socialist uprisings
in the middle of the 19th century.
And as a result,
a lot of these absolute monarchies introduced reforms,
you know?
And he sees those reforms as this was like a terrible step
that ensured their demise as opposed to like,
well, the absolute monarch chose to make those reforms
because they could not hold
onto power otherwise.
But again, there's never a perfect logical consistency
with guys like this.
Can I ask a question?
Yeah.
So like, if you're an absolute monarch,
are you delegating anything?
You're delegating.
And then who are you delegating to?
Like, what are the struck, what is the,
is the, like, do you have to be just like an insane micromanager to
be?
Yeah.
But I think the key is, the key is to him, the difference would be like a bureaucratic
structure wherein there are other centers of power, right?
Like if you've got a constitutional monarch, but there's still some kind of like Congress
or Senate or whatever that has some things that are within its scope of jobs.
More of a CEO than a monarch.
Right.
He does actually view it as a CEO where they do delegate, but the CEO is ultimately the
guy in power.
Right.
Who picks all the delegates?
I think the CEO in his ideal situation, right?
His ideal system of government that he kind of comes around to is like the way Facebook
is run, right?
Where you do have a board of directors technically, but Zuckerberg has enough control of stock
that no one can force him out.
The buck stops with him.
He ultimately has all of the power in that organization.
That's how Jarvan thinks countries should be run. Right.
In his defense, Facebook is a flawless organization.
Yeah. We all know nothing ever goes wrong there.
So the final straw for Jarvan's tolerance of democracy came in 2004
as a result of the Swift Boat Veterans
for Truth scandal.
You remember this, I'm sure, right?
Oh yeah, of course.
This is back in the 2004 election, John Kerry was the Democratic nominee.
Kerry had been wounded three times in Vietnam, and then after he had left the service, he
had become an anti-war activist.
He testified in Congress.
This was a really big deal. Number one, as a result, conservatives had never really forgiven John Kerry for,
as they saw, betraying the country in Vietnam. Also, obviously, Bush was running on the back
of two wars that he had got in the country, and Kerry had been against those. There was this
pretty hideous conflict
in the way that a lot of folks on the right chose to,
like particularly those within Bush's campaign
chose to respond was by arguing and bringing up,
people who claimed, people who had served in Vietnam
who claimed that Kerry had lied about his service, right?
That he hadn't really done the things he'd done,
that his purple hearts were essentially like
due to exaggerations and none of this was true.
And in fact, like when journalists actually talked to people who had served with Kerry,
they're like, no, he was like a very good soldier who was wounded repeatedly doing his
job.
But the propaganda campaign largely worked, right?
And Yarvin, critically, he bought the propaganda campaign, and he was angry that the media
in his eyes worked to protect Kerry, which proved that it was fundamentally evil and
allied with academia and what people now call the deep state career government employees,
operating this sort of shadow government that really ran things, right?
His attitude is that because John Kerry didn't suffer enough
from the Swift Boat scandal,
that means that the whole media complex
in the United States was corrupt and needed to be destroyed,
which is a crazy thing to lead you to that conclusion.
Like it's just, it's one of the, it's interesting to me
because this guy really does,
he tries to portray himself as this like dark philosopher,
this like esoteric, almost political madman.
But when you get right down to it, he's like your crank uncle who's angry about John Kerry
on Facebook.
Well, also the Swift voting, it's a weird thing to, it's a weird thing to take from that whole chapter of American political history because
Swift Boating worked.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And the media, by the way, took the bait and just amplified the story.
And if they tried to protect Kerry, which I'm sure a few journalists probably wanted.
Certainly individuals. Yeah.
They failed. Yeah, it didn't work.
Like that's like and that's how I would say is like, I think if you're saying
what happened, the swift boating thing is why I lost faith in the media.
That's reasonable, but not for the reason he did. Right. Yeah.
But anyway, that's what that's where he goes, right?
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So now the years that Jarvan is kind of doing his, having his like period in the wilderness
coming up with his political ideology, largely like 2003 or four to like 2007 or so are the
years that the tech industry like that brings us web 2.0 is starting to emerge.
You get Google, you get, you know, Apple had been around for a while, right?
But they, you know, we start to see like the,
what's going to become the smartphone era,
like grind towards, you know, coming into being.
Facebook also starts like 2006 or seven, I think,
is like when it very first starts out.
So like, this is kind of the early birth
of the Web 2.0 era,
which are all of these founder-driven startups,
for the most part.
And Yarvin comes to see this system that gives us Google
and Facebook as inherently better than the system that
governs the country.
And it's more akin to his kind of idealized absolute monarchy.
So by this point in time, around 2007,
Jarvan has more or less come across all the ingredients
of his new ideology, this kind of reactionary monarchism
with Austrian economic tendencies.
The problem is that none of these philosophers
that he likes, these guys like Rothbard and Hop
have quite gotten it right.
And so he decides, I've got to start
putting my ideas out there.
I've finally figured it out, I've got to start putting my ideas out there. I've finally figured
it out. I've consolidated the contradictions between all these systems. And now I'm going
to start putting it out for people to see. Right? So in 2007, he breaks out of this kind
of chrysalis of reading that he put himself in. And he comes up with a blog under a pin name,
minceous mold bug. And it's under this pin name that he's going to start writing a bunch of essays of political
theory.
In an interview with Max Raskin, Jarvin describes the origin of this nickname, Mincius Moldbug,
this way.
It came from two different handles I was using in different places.
I would post occasionally on Reddit or Hacker News.
Sometimes I would get banned and I would choose the name of a new classical figure, and I
just happened to land on Mincius. And then I was doing some economics posting and
I posted something about gold, but I said mold instead of gold because I was talking
about something with a hypothetical restricted supply.
So it's just kind of like a foreign name, but it sounds like a little bit sinister.
And it's interesting to me, Mincius, the first name, comes from a Confucian philosopher from the 300s BC,
who was a major figure in that kind of thought.
And he had, during the Warring States period,
interviewed a bunch of different kings
and written a book about what he'd learned about ruling.
Now, Mencius was focused on getting
monarchs to act more benevolently towards the poor
and the downtrodden.
So he's not really a figure that has a lot to do with the kind of politics Yarvin is
about to espouse.
I think he largely picked the name because it makes him sound kind of sinister.
But he starts putting out his new thoughts on politics in this blog in a series of essays
called Unqualified Reservations, all geared at getting his readers on board with the idea
of reorganizing society
away from democracy and towards a kind of enlightened one-man rule that he believes
is going to work a lot better.
Unlike most philosophers, Yarvin peppers his essays with casual slurs.
In reading one where he talks about World War II, he refers to the Japanese repeatedly
by a common slur at the time, and in another he makes a satiric statement about how the
indigent poor should be destroyed
and turned into biodiesel fuel.
This kind of stuff, it has an impact of getting like, on the rare occasions in these early
days that like major news outlets will look at his work, they'll kind of decide to ignore
him because it's this guy dropping a bunch of racial slurs and crude jokes.
He's clearly not a serious thinker. But the other thing that this style of discourse does
is it's very attractive to young men,
particularly young kind of intelligent autodidacts
in the tech industry,
who spend a lot of time reading the internet, right?
And it is kind of in the same way that a lot of like
the way people talk on 4chan is going to be attractive to these kinds of guys, right?
And what you're seeing in these early mold bug episodes with this use of slurs and these
kind of like joking, not joking statements about killing poor people is the precursor
to the way the alt right is going to talk about issues, right?
And use kind of humor and jokes that aren't really jokes to kind of push more extreme ideas, right?
Moldbug is really the guy who starts doing that in,
I don't know if you'd say he was the first,
but he's certainly the first with a platform
to be doing that in a way that's really influential
to a lot of these people.
Can I ask a, I have two questions.
Yeah, yeah.
One is, are we sure we're pronouncing minceous correctly?
Is it not minches?
I think it is minches, sorry.
Minches.
Yes.
But it's spelled, yeah.
The other way.
And I have no idea.
When you said it was a Confucian, suddenly thought, well, maybe...
Anyway.
Yeah, I think it is mentions. Yeah.
And then my second question is, to what extent I find the humor aspect of this fascinating
because it raises the possibility or I guess my question is like, where on the spectrum of like just kind of like very mendacious
and angry person who wants to reshape the world versus like all the way to the other
end of just being like a really giddy shit stir, gadfly with who just wants to throw
crazy ideas out there and, uh, and get a reaction out of people the way like 90% of Twitter
is like where on that spectrum is he?
Cause it's at, it does sound like there's like, like, you know, churning up poor people to create biodiesel
is a tasteless joke.
It's like a Swiftie, Thomas Swift,
or it's like Jonathan Swift type joke, right?
Like, you know.
But it could be construed as just like trolling, right?
Right.
Well, I think that's kind of the key point.
So like what you're talking about is like, the term we use for it is shitpostlling, right? Right. Well, I think that's kind of the key point. So like what you're talking about is like the term we use for it is shitposting, right?
And Yarvin is very much a shit poster, right?
But he's also using that as a tool where he understands that this is how young men particularly
talk on the internet.
And it is something that inherently if you're talking this way, if you're engaging this
way, you have more credibility with them
than people who are trying to be more respectable,
who largely, like this chunk of folks,
doesn't think highly of, right?
These kind of like, these traditional sort of like,
intellectual elites, academics and journalists and the like,
they have a lot of disdain for,
but they trust someone who
communicates like them. By basically peppering and trolling language in these very serious
articles arguing for anti-democratic politics, he makes himself credible to them. There's also
a sense that because he's including some of this stuff that is a lot racier, there's
something almost forbidden knowledge about the stuff that he's putting out that makes
them want to share it with each other.
That's very much a factor in his success.
What he's doing here is very much intentional and very intelligent and very effective.
If you want to look at the ultimate evolution of these tactics, I think a great touch point
would be the Christchurch Shooters Manifesto, which included a lot of these inside jokes,
a lot of forum troll language wrapped around serious arguments for why people should carry out white supremacist
attacks.
It's a kind of tactic that is really what gave us the alt-right as a political force,
and it's still very much how these people communicate.
Now, I think it started to hurt them recently.
The weird stuff that Tim Walz began pulling out has actually been a really effective thing
because when you actually take the way these people talk
amongst each other and put it up in front of an audience,
it's deeply off-putting to most people.
But it also kind of led to this establishment
of an internal language for these folks
that kind of led to an ossification
of their ideological tendencies, right?
We're all using the same kind of terms and words
that we've come to recognize as like dog whistles
for different things.
And Yarvin is really doing that in a very organized way.
He's good at developing terms for people to use
that get adopted on a large scale.
The best example of this would be his term,
the cathedral,
which he uses to mean this nexus of everything
he doesn't like, the liberal media, the university system,
academia, career government employees,
everything he considers bad, and everything his ideal monarch
would destroy.
In his ideal world, there's not going
to be an independent academic community.
There's not going to be newspapers or journalists, just a king in an aristocracy.
Of course, he's going to be a natural member of that aristocracy, right?
He does, the last piece of this ideology he's putting together is he has to explain why
a lot of these real world feudalist governments that fell apart, all fell apart.
And part of it is obviously they gave too much freedom
to people who weren't the monarch.
But the other thing he comes up with is that
old monarchies denied citizens the freedom to exit.
And so in this ideal world, he supposes,
countries will be small, like the size of a city
in most cases, and they'll compete with citizens
who would have the freedom to leave, right?
So it's fine.
Now, there's a lot of questions that aren't answered here.
Like, how do you make a society like function that way
and a world is interconnected as ours?
How do you stop, you know,
one monarch from repeatedly taking over other?
Like, how do you stop?
Why wouldn't they use force?
Why would people just let valuable subjects leave?
How do people leave if the monarch can stop them
from taking their assets out?
All of these things that would be actual problems
if anyone tried to do this sort of thing,
there's not actually an answer to this.
But that's kind of his idealized version of a society,
is a bunch of small monarchies all over the world
that people can theoretically
leave and move between the way people leave companies and go to work for other companies.
So like, you know how much everybody loves work.
That's how the whole government should be.
That's it.
That's wild.
I hadn't thought of it as on such a small scale.
Here's another question. In the same way that a company will have a board that can oust a CEO, is there any stop
gap measure for a disastrous leader?
No.
Or let's say someone has a brain-eating worm.
Yeah, right, right. But they are showing no symptoms when they are appointed or ascend to the, the monarchy.
But then over the next five years, they become like absolutely batshit crazy.
Is there any, any stopgap there?
The only stopgap he builds in is the idea that well theoretically if the if the
If the rulers bad everyone would be able to leave and then their system. Oh right, right. Oh, it's that thing
Yeah, it's like it's that thing where it's like well, but what if he wants to shoot people who try it's like Rand Paul saying like yeah rights are are dumb because if you put like a
Whites-only sign in front of your store are dumb because if you put like a whites only sign
in front of your store, you're gonna lose business
and you're gonna go out of business
and the market will keep you from being racist.
Meanwhile, like,
the three hundred years of-
It didn't back when people did that.
Yeah, back when people did that,
it was, it didn't work until the laws kicked in.
Yeah, yeah.
No, and it's this, it's this weird mix of like naivete
and like starry-eyed thinking that to a degree,
I think he's just kind of being dishonest with the naivete.
Like he knows any state like this
would just be a dictatorship,
like enforced through violence, right?
But that's what he wants
as long as he's a part of the aristocracy.
And he's just kind of built in this,
well, people would just leave if they didn't like it
because he has to have some answer for it, right?
But I kind of think he knows how ugly a system
like this would be in practice.
He's just more or less fine with it.
Right.
Now, the last kind of ingredient
to the ideological system Yarvin is cooking up is of course racism.
And I want to read a passage from an article in TechCrunch about Yarvin and his followers
and how they are, quote, obsessed with a concept called human biodiversity, what used to be
called scientific racism.
Specifically, they believe that IQ is one of, if not the most important personal traits
and that it's predominantly genetic.
Neo reactionaries would replace or supplement the divine right of kings and the aristocracy
with the genetic right of elites.
Right?
So this is another element of how he tries to justify, well, my system's smarter than
the old school of monarchies, right?
It's not just these bunch of families are the people who are in charge.
Our aristocracy is people who naturally are superior because of their IQ.
Because obviously that tells you everything about a person.
Right.
Emotional IQ?
Are we?
Yeah.
Is he talking about emotional IQ?
No, no, no.
That's not worth much to these guys.
Absolutely not.
I'm for that.
I'm for people with very strong emotional IQs being in charge of things.
Yeah, yeah.
No, no, no.
That's not the system we're gonna have.
Just a bunch of guys who are really good at coding,
running everything, you know?
That way everything can finally work the way Uber does.
Oh, so I'll feel unsafe all the time.
Okay, cool.
So it's probably not surprising.
Moldbug's theories take off among specifically a lot of Silicon Valley
young men, right, who are excessively online.
And it also starts to take off.
He begins being spread by a lot of like far right folks on the Internet
and kind of the mid aughts who find his work and share it amongst themselves.
It's just two years after Moldbug starts his blog that Peter Thiel gives a speech about
democracy being incompatible with liberty.
And Thiel starts putting money Yarvon's way, right?
He's probably the number one guy sending money towards Yarvon backing.
He backs a tech company that Yarvon starts and he's just generally sort of like his early
sort of money backer, right?
And Jarvan kind of as a result, he starts getting shared almost like people are like
handing out drugs to each other.
Like, we want to keep this on the down low.
You don't want like people, too many people to know publicly that you're reading mold
bug, but like, have you read this latest article?
If you checked out this blog, right?
And he starts getting invited to give talks, uh, and he starts saying things in these talks
that like speeches at these schools to these conservative clubs and the like, like if Americans
want to change their government, they're going to have to get over their dictator phobia.
There's really no other solution.
And that's kind of the thinking that is going to lead directly into the alt-right and its embrace
of Donald Trump.
Yarvin is one of the key ideological pieces there.
He is building a bridge that is eventually going to lead to how a lot of these people
think about what Trump should be.
It's part of why there's a lot of this joking, not joking talk about wanting Trump to be
like a god King, right?
It's a lot of these guys who are knowingly or unknowingly parroting thoughts that kind
of came initially into the right from Yarvin.
And yeah, that's part one.
In part two, we're going to talk about how he actually gets connected to politics and
kind of where we are today with this guy.
But yeah, how are you feeling, Ed?
I'm a little rattled.
It's dark stuff, right?
Yeah.
That's the right reaction.
What happens if he is like in the court,
the high court of this monarch, and gets a stomach flu and throws up during
a ceremony of some kind and is sent to a dungeon for the rest of his life at no fault of his
own.
Which is a very reasonable expectation of a monarch whole system. And
so is he then sitting in the dungeon saying, it's still the best. This is still the best.
This is still the best system.
I don't think he thinks that could happen because I think he doesn't believe something
that you and I believe in that I think most rational people believe, which is that like
power corrupts.
So like, even if you are not the kind of guy
who would throw people in a dungeon,
when you become king,
just the fact that being a king is deranging, right?
Having that kind of power,
you will eventually get used to exercising it
and doing things like punishing people who just annoy you.
And we know that this happens
because we have a lot of examples of like when people are
made dictators, how folks who were at least more normal at one point become like more
violent and dangerous to be around, right?
Like this is a very well documented thing that comes with power.
And I think he doesn't believe that fundamentally because he thinks that power naturally accumulates
in natural systems of elites, right?
So it can't be bad for them.
Or I suppose an argument might be, well, if I started to see those tendencies in the leader,
I would then go to a different monarchy with a better leader.
But what if it's like, what if you're the first one, what if you're the first example of that, that model?
Of the guy going crazy?
Yeah, of the guy going crazy.
I think it's also like a failure. These guys all consider themselves historians, but they don't study history in any kind of like rigorous
academic fashion and like every time I hear this argument about well people would just leave. I think about like
academic fashion and like every time I hear this argument about well people would just leave I think about like
What happened to Jewish people in Nazi Germany where if they wanted to leave the state would take all of their property?
Effectively right some people did get to leave but they didn't get to take their assets with them, right? Like that was a theft was a part of the system and it's a thing that a state
part of the system. And it's a thing that a state operated by a single man with absolute power and a grudge
can do.
And there's no reason in his system that it wouldn't happen to anyone trying to leave
a bad, you know, CEO king, right?
But I either again, he's just not bringing this up because he doesn't care about the
people he thinks this would happen to, or he just isn't read enough on
the kind of history that's actually relevant to how a system like this would work in real
life.
You know, that's what I would kind of suspect.
Yeah.
Yeah.
People have tried this, Curtis.
Which he may very well be fully aware of and just kind of trying to do a little sleight
of hand here, right?
Because he's more or less fine with who he thinks would be the people targeted unfairly
in this system, which is like, he's one of these guys who is annoyed with the left and progressives,
right? He hates social justice and advocates for social justice. So if those people get targeted,
he doesn't have a problem with it. I think part of it's just not believing you could ever be the
victim of the system you seek to put in place, which, you know, statistically, you want to look at like what happened to the early Bolsheviks after
the Bolshevik revolution. Most of those guys did live to retirement. Right. And, you know,
you want to talk about like the first generation of Nazi street fighters. A lot of those guys
didn't wind up retiring either. Anyway, Ed, let's retire for this episode until part two.
People should check out your podcast,
Snafu, season two is out now.
And yeah, we'll be back on Thursday.
All right, see you then.
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