Decoding the Gurus - Douglas Murray: Can indulgent dinner conversation save OUR civilisation?

Episode Date: January 22, 2021

Douglas Murray is a British conservative columnist, social pundit, and veteran culture warrior famed for his biting wit and eloquent intellectual speech. But just how much of that is actually down to ...him having a posh British accent and a tendency to rant about whatever 'bloody' topic he's took a fancy to? Join Matt and Chris for their latest therapy session as they try to process what they've done to their brains by listening to an indulgent and meandering 4.5 hour conversation between Douglas and the IDW's über guru Eric Weinstein. Along the way you will learn the *real* truth about the coronavirus, the value of memorising Shakespearian sonnets, how embarrassing it is to eat bats, and just how sacred dinner tables actually are. ...GUFFAW...LinksThe Portal Episode 41: Douglas Murray- Heroism 2020: Defence of Our Civilization

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello and welcome to Decoding the Gurus, the podcast where us, two academics, we listen to content from the greatest minds the online world has to offer, and we try to understand what they're talking about. How's it going there, Chris? Yeah, pretty good, Matt. I don't know why there was this psychic energy that I just had a feeling there might be some improvisation in the intro coming, but it didn't come. Just my psychic abilities are, you know, letting me down. I don't know why I felt that.
Starting point is 00:00:43 I don't know why I felt that. Yeah, yeah. I'm desperately trying to find interesting ways to spice up the intro. And some days inspiration does not strike. Is it? Well, as long as the inspiration is not just novel ways to insult me,
Starting point is 00:00:58 then I'm done with that. Yes. Yes, that's right. I can't keep insulting you the same way every time i need to think of innovative new ways to insult you and that's the tricky bit that is outside the box you need to go for you know the lesser hit targets anthropologist northernerish accent to mainstream give me your niche guru of my personality flaws yeah everyone knows those ones that's right they're splashed all over the internet so yeah next you'll be pointing out i listen to stuff i dislike
Starting point is 00:01:34 too much obsessive chris obsessive okay so we've got a few little things to get through before getting into our topic today. We're going to start off as usual with our shout outs to the Patreons. Yes, that's right. We have another five in this sheet that I've just closed down and I'm furiously trying to open. Oh, there it is. Okay. So yes, our Patreon continues along the unbridled success that it is, and we have shout outs to give. So the first is to
Starting point is 00:02:08 Madhav, who is a galaxy brain guru. Thank you, Madhav. Thank you, Madhav. You're sitting on one of the great scientific stories that I've ever heard, and you're so polite. And hey, wait a minute. Am I an expert? I kind of am. and hey wait a minute am i an expert i kind of am yeah i don't trust people at all chris i've been getting some feedback from our listeners we've been getting some negative feedback about that chuckle it's yeah it kind of drills into your soul i i know i feel the same thing, but if it's in my consciousness, it must be inflicted upon everyone else. So sorry about that, Galaxy Green.
Starting point is 00:02:51 I agree. That's what you get for supporting us. The next is Justin Brisley, who is a conspiracy hypothesizer. Thank you, Justin. Thanks, Justin. Every great idea starts with a minority of one. We are not going to advance conspiracy theories. We will advance conspiracy hypotheses. And next, Timur Dunayev, who is a friend on Twitter. And yeah, I guess it's him. And I, unless there's another Timur in the world,
Starting point is 00:03:25 which obviously can't be true. I believe there's only one. And also I clearly revealed I can't pronounce his surname, but that's going to be a recurring motif. So get used to it. And Timur is a revolutionary genius. Yes, of course he is. Yes, that's a pretty high level.
Starting point is 00:03:46 Maybe you can spit out that hydrogenated thinking and let yourself feed off of your own thinking. What you really are is an unbelievable thinker and researcher, a thinker that the world doesn't know. I've often said that about Timur. He is a thinker the world doesn't know. I've often said that about Timur. He is a thinker. The world doesn't know. Is that like a dig?
Starting point is 00:04:12 No, no. This is praise. Praise Matt. And moving swiftly on, Austin. Thank you, Austin. You beautiful conspiracy hypothesizer, you. Every great idea starts with a minority of one. We are not going to advance conspiracy theories.
Starting point is 00:04:32 We will advance conspiracy hypotheses. Yes. And our very last minority of one, Robert L., another conspiracy hypothesizer. Much obliged, Robert. Every great idea starts with a minority of one. We are not going to advance conspiracy theories. We will advance conspiracy hypotheses. So we will.
Starting point is 00:04:56 And that's our shoutouts done for today. So if you want to join that illustrious group, you can check out the Patreon. Yeah, so it probably is worth noting that these different categories galaxy bringer conspiracy hypothesizer and whatnot are based on the tiers that people are subscribed to so it isn't just me assigning random titles to people yes these are important tiers there is a science to it there is a science quite so quite so all right so next up let's cover a couple of reviews actually we've got three reviews because they're very short and we don't have any really insulting ones which is a shame that's it well you're letting yourself down listeners get on that yes uh okay let's start off with one from jojo brazil 777 titled love and hate this pod let me start off with one from Jojo Brazil 777 titled Love and Hate This Pod.
Starting point is 00:05:46 Let me start by saying that I hate running. I am an academic, so built for comfort rather than speed, but I've reluctantly started running during lockdown. To make it less bad, I listen to this podcast on my runs. The content is great. Great, Chris. And the ones on episodes are a particular treat and the analysis is sharp. The problem is is is that
Starting point is 00:06:06 it makes me want to go for a run for which i will never forgive matt and chris so congratulations on a great podcast but screw you both for making me want to run wow i like that review and thank you very much but i share his sentiment about hitting the run i really hate exercise like running on a treadmill or just running around the park. Cause I always end up feeling like, why am I doing this? Like, I know why I'm doing that, but I just, I hate it. So like the only way I can get exercise is to be doing something else. Like, you know, doing martial arts or, or doing some class or something basically i have no self-will power i have to be in groups that's so yeah so i i feel you're paying jojo brazil yep me too i haven't even
Starting point is 00:06:53 considered running for decades i would won't even count that's the idea let's uh go to the next one and the next one is james 314-159-2654 and i must say chris is not going to say this but um immediately after reading that that out chris said oh that's pie which i was very impressed by you're a very clever man chris very how do you know i wasn't gonna say it ma that might have just said it again and appear profane no no i know you have too much respect for yourself to do that so i i did it for you you're wrong you're wrong but uh yeah it is pi look there's one thing i know i wonder if it's james lindsey you know he's a mathematician he likes by his review from i don't think it's james lindsey given the comment which is quite polite and friendly so let me read it out i really
Starting point is 00:07:47 appreciated the even-handed analysis of the weinstein brothers the hosts are clearly fascinated with the subjects but unlike most idw critics they're not coming from a place of malice well at least in my case acros uh their their commentary on eric was particularly insightful and at times laugh out loud hilarious that's good i admit i was was on the Weinstein train for a few months, but this episode proved beyond all doubt that the Weinsteins are really just entertainers, fabulists at best, unhinged conspiracy theorists at worst. Can't wait for more episodes.
Starting point is 00:08:20 So, yeah, like I say, I think that is from James Lindsay and it's nice of him to give us this kudos. But yeah, you know, one thing I will say, Matt, is that I think, honestly, if you take the three episodes that have addressed Eric Weinstein and Brett Weinstein's content, right, the first episode, the one about the community management and the intro essay. That package, I really think it would be hard for somebody who is even a big fan to listen to it and not to recognize that there is a lot of conspiratorial and self-aggrandizing stuff. So I'm kind of content that we have put out this content that digs through the Weinsteinian mythos in a concise way, kind of concise, just like five hours or whatever. Yeah, I think it is particularly nice to get those comments from people who at least were at some point fans of the people we cover
Starting point is 00:09:20 and might still enjoy their content and be fans. And I've been pretty surprised and delighted really because i expected to get a fair bit of online flack from doing this podcast with you chris but i have to say to the credit of the people who follow these people they they either are not paying attention which is probably the most likely thing, but to the extent that they have noticed, they've been pretty cool about it, really. Yeah, agreed. And I think this falls into the category that people don't listen to long form content that they don't like, except for, you know, badly mentally damaged people. So there is you know an audience selection issue but but it is also
Starting point is 00:10:08 true that the feedback we've received including from people that are sympathetic to the gurus that we cover has been favorable apart from apart from the reviews that we've read out here you know yes okay we did find one that wasn't entirely positive so this is from final anti negativist that's a good name actually final anti-negativist um i like the double negative the title is great podcast fake podcasters love the podcast but i'm concerned that neither australia nor northern Northern Ireland are real countries. Will, brackets, hosts address this? Chris, do you have a response to this accusation?
Starting point is 00:10:53 Never. We'll never address it. That's it. That's going in the memory hole along with our white, middle-aged, cis male identities. Never to be addressed. Ever. Ever. Yeah, that reminds me, cis, male identities. Never to be addressed. Ever. Ever. Yeah, that reminds me of Ian Paisley.
Starting point is 00:11:10 There's a Northern Irish cut for you. But yeah, it will never be addressed. Take that, Final Antinegativist, and your five-star review. I'm wondering if that is a reference to the Flat Earthers, some of whom, at least purportedly, believe that Australia is not a real place and is entirely fictitious well northern ireland doesn't usually come in for those uh criticisms
Starting point is 00:11:30 so yeah no no no anyway we'll have to leave it as a mystery but a delightful mystery at that so that's good so that's the shout outs done thank you all for the nice reviews if any of our haters feel so inclined please leave your negative ones so we we can balance our self-indulgent citations. Thank you. Yes. Yes. Definitely love the hypercritical ones and the ones that are parodies of gurus. Just as long as they're five stars, then frankly, the text doesn't matter except to amuse us.
Starting point is 00:12:03 That's right. All right. The text doesn't matter, except to amuse us. That's right. All right. So one thing, event happened in the world since the last episode that we recorded. Well, quite a few events happened in the world, but one that was widely noted was that there were a kind of minor insurrection, possibly, or at least a incompetent uprising and rioting around the Capitol buildings. I think I saw something about that.
Starting point is 00:12:30 I think I saw something about that. There was a bit of a minor scuffle, I think. Yeah, a little bit. From a bunch of very well-dressed and polite individuals with very coherent policy issues that they wanted addressed. That's what I saw, Matt. Yeah, just looking to participate in the great democratic process. Yeah, so this is the, you know, the sarcastic reputation that we have garnered unjustifiably. So yeah, a bunch of morons and conspiracy theorists and victims of partisan ideology stormed the Capitol in significant part, thanks to the exhortations of one Donald Trump
Starting point is 00:13:18 to try and come. If there was a strategy to it, it seems to have been to try to force Mike Pence to invalidate the confirmation of Biden's being selected as the next president. But he didn't even have that power anyway. So it was all incoherent fury, but it caused quite a mess because they actually got into the building and went around vandalizing things and taking selfies and there's been hot take after hot take after hot take available yes over this issue um and so are you hinting that there's no need for us to spend like an hour giving our hot take on this event well what i'm actually going to say like that is, should you want our hot take, we
Starting point is 00:14:06 did give an hour long response to it on the Patreon. But it definitely seemed an event that we should probably mention in passing because I think it is an illustration. And I don't think this should be controversial or require hot takery to note that conspiracy rhetoric was a significant part of the events, the motivation for the events and the talking points that Donald Trump likes to invoke. So these topics that we talk about, you know, with gurus and the rhetorical techniques and their anti-institutionalism and conspiracy mongering, I just think it's another illustration
Starting point is 00:14:53 of how far it has penetrated into the mainstream and not for the better, that the kind of things that we talk about are actually more relevant than they used to be. I don't think it's a good thing. That's my take on it. Yeah, I agree with that take that it's not a good thing. Also worth noting that Trump is in many ways the guru to end all gurus. guru to end all gurus. And when we sat down and figured out our science of gurometry and figured out those themes that we tend to see cropping up in these gurus, it really stands out
Starting point is 00:15:35 how Trump exemplifies quite a few of them, including the self-aggrandizement and narcissism, most obviously, but also the anti-establishment positioning, the grievance mongering. Galaxy brand-ness. Yep, the conspiracy theories, obviously, and even the grifting. He's raised something on the order of $160 million to support his nebulous further campaigns to stop the steal. So that puts the previous record holder that springs to mind of the London Real scamming about $1.6 million from their followers. That really puts it into perspective, doesn't it?
Starting point is 00:16:20 Are you throwing shade on Trump St and trump university matt you don't think those are worthwhile products and services because if so you know i'm not sure i'm on board with this uh ad hominem attacks on a upstanding businessman yes yes yes very heavy-handed heavy-handed goodness there chris well you know we're filmed my people are filmed for our subtle sarcasm and uh wry sense of humor so i yes i thought that might have passed you by the famous northern ireland sledgehammer wit all right cool anything else you want to say on the uh on the capital no Northern Ireland sledgehammer wit. All right, cool. Anything else you want to say on the capital? No.
Starting point is 00:17:09 Yeah, I don't have anything insightful to add. And I think that many of the takes available online probably don't add that much either. It just doesn't seem to be an event where there is a huge amount of mystery about what happened and that you need you know some deep insight to work it out like no it seems superficially clear uh it does seem pretty
Starting point is 00:17:33 clear yeah so let's just hope there's not going to be another one a second one in the near future the next thing coming up is to mention our upcoming interviews which we're very excited about we have locked in ty newen a professor of philosophy at the university of utah we came across oh interesting fact mart utah the south plains there that That's where the intro scene to Knight Rider was filmed. Oh, cool. That's very cool. Yep. But you know... Very relevant as well. I just want to say, you know, it isn't just the IDW that give you these interesting insights and, you know, lesser known information about YAML creators. Just letting you know, Knight Rider intro recorded in Utah.
Starting point is 00:18:24 Okay. That's fine. We've still got Mad Max. So, you know, Knight Rider intro recorded in Utah. Okay, that's fine. We've still got Mad Max, so, you know, we're still winning. The thing to say about Ty Nguyen is we came across Ty on Twitter in a very interesting chat about methods of persuasion and the online incentivization. Well, I'm a Ty Nguyen hipster, Matt, because I'd already come across him before you, Fred, because of course he was interviewed on Embrace the Void podcast.
Starting point is 00:18:55 Yes. Actually, I misspoke. Well, Chris, actually, it sounds like I'm backpedaling here, but I misspoke because I did actually follow Ty before then. Oh, you were a Ty Noon hipster as well. I was hip to Ty. I was hip. Sorry.
Starting point is 00:19:12 Sorry. We're really doing a lot of damage. Our credibility. This is not. Anyway, long story short, Ty does research on this stuff and has written some very interesting papers and have a very interesting manuscript right in front of me that he's working on entitled Seductions of Clarity. So those themes and more will be explored in that interview
Starting point is 00:19:39 because there's a lot of great overlap between the stuff that we focus on with our gurus and the stuff that Ty is working on. So that'll be good. Would you like to mention our next? Oh, sorry. I was getting my segue sledgehammer ready. Okay. So we're also looking forward to interviewing Stuart Ritchie,
Starting point is 00:19:59 who is a lecturer at King's College London and has written some very good books about the practice of science and where science goes wrong. Would you like to say more, Chris? No segues. Yes. Self-described as looking like a startled hedgehog. So, which I've met him in person,
Starting point is 00:20:19 I can also say is accurate in the flesh. Maybe it's you, Chris. Maybe you're startling. I am. I'm a striking, my striking visage, you know, often makes people look like startled hedgehogs. But even said another side, he has a hedgehogish quality to him. So sorry, Stuart, for spending so long on that. Stuart for spending so long on that. But yeah, Stuart, friend of the pod and person with many insights on scientific fraud and issues in modern science, the problems, various problems related to
Starting point is 00:20:57 replication crisis and so on. And so we haven't, we haven't sat down yet exactly when we will do this, but we will do it in the near future. And I think Stuart will have some interesting views about where actual researchers, actual scientists can slip into guru-ism or where there are overlaps or distinctions between the kind of figures that we might focus more on who tend to be on the outskirts of the scientific mainstream and the people that are actually embedded and yet, you know, engage in some of the same issues. I think it would be an interesting topic to explore where the parallels and where the divergences are and maybe what solutions might be. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. We've mentioned Stuart before in the context
Starting point is 00:21:45 of comparing certain gurus' critiques of academia unfavourably with someone who is bona fide and actually understands what's going on and is making good critiques of academia, which land a lot better than the ones made by our gurus. So that should be good. Yeah, I wrote a long chapter by chapter tweet review of his book, Science Fictions, and one, it's a great book, but two, like you said, just flew into such dark relief how, dare I say, low quality the criticisms of academic institutions are amongst
Starting point is 00:22:28 the guru set, where if they just frigging parroted Stuart, they would have a lot of really good lines to attack academia and scientific institutions with. So they should just pay more attention to Stuartward he could teach them how to do anti-institutionalism you know correctly agreed agreed so we're not going to do the state of the gurus because tracking the gurus can get a little bit depressing but we will mention stuff when funny stuff happens so i think something something slightly amusing came up in your feed. Chris, would you like to share that with us? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:10 So we've talked, I think, before about how the Decoding the Gurus feed is a horror show. Like we only follow the people that we cover. So the timeline there is just a pit of despair, really. But James Lindsay features prominently on there because of the amount that he tweets. And like I said, we're not going to cover every nonsense tweet that Lindsay does every week, but it is notable when there's overlap between our gurus.
Starting point is 00:23:37 And there was a case of Galaxy Brain's butting head where Eric Weinstein bumped into conceptual James's ego. So he was doing his both-siderism things about Trump is bad, but other people don't understand the reason why properly and blah, blah, blah. And he was actually pointing out a point that we often make that Trump saying that people should protest peacefully and patriotically doesn't really mean anything because of what he was actually encouraging people to do. So it's more like a disclaimer. And James quote tweeted Eric and said, he literally said peacefully and patriotically, to which Eric responded, Trump has a limited form of genius. Here he easily gets conceptual
Starting point is 00:24:21 James to teach me that Trump said to be peaceful. And James is a smart guy. Yes, James, I agree. Because the dime always lands on its side. It's a strategy. Always balance the dime. I've covered this already, which led to James then responding to Eric. I'm only smart, not very smart, capitalized. So this, you know, this requires guru linguistic interpretations. But I think this is a case of galaxy brains colliding. Eric tried landing, you know, the little flattery, James is a smart guy. But because he was still saying that, you know james isn't properly grokking the situation it wasn't enough so james had to be upset that he's not capitalizing you're very smart he's not a galaxy brain like eric so yeah they're just it's just egos colliding in the night and revealing
Starting point is 00:25:20 their intellectual sensitivities for the world to see yeah look at that's a nice little anecdote it highlights a couple of things doesn't it first of all there's that split where eric weinstein has his patented galaxy brained both siderism whereas james is become a full-throated mega partisan so i keep saying partisan like i actually heard douglas murray say in the episode that we're going to cover yeah exactly i never normally say it like that i don't know why but anyway so yeah so there's that there's that divergence going on but the other thing about it too is the social psychology of these relationships between the gurus because this is a pretty typical kind of thing with these big, excuse the language, big swinging dick.
Starting point is 00:26:09 Big swinging brains, Mark. Big swinging brains. Big swinging brains. Big swinging brains. Sorry, like rubbing up against each other. Forgive the imagery there, people. And the relationships are fascinating because they're characterized by this flattery but it very but it's always quite fractious and there's always one-upping going on and they very
Starting point is 00:26:35 quickly deteriorate and there are these spats which then need to be resolved it's uh yeah it just it just keeps following that same pattern yeah I noticed in a lot of the content that we cover when it's an interview format, unless it's like an actual interviewer, like the Jordan Peterson episode, but when it's another guru, it's often like a competition for who can have the most. Yes. That's interesting. But did you consider, I like this episode that we're going to cover with Eric and Douglas is a very good illustration of this,
Starting point is 00:27:09 but yeah, the need to be the biggest brain in the room is quite something. And like you say, I think the notable feature here is Eric tried to do the thing which usually works, which is, you know, say some fawning praise or even if you're correcting someone, well, I really respect things inside, but maybe he hasn't considered this.
Starting point is 00:27:34 But because James has become full-on Trump apologist, that didn't work. So it's a good illustration of the fractionating of the IDW sphere into these more extreme and less extreme wings that I discussed with Aaron on Embracing the Void. So it's interesting from that respect as well as the just interpersonal drama of it all. Yeah, I feel like that one-upmanship happens on this podcast too, Chris, where you correct my pop culture references in a blatant put down. But, you know,
Starting point is 00:28:11 I try to be the bigger man and just let it go. Well, often, Matt, you know, I've often thought that way that we are able to have these conversations and that we offer such insights, and that we offer such insights. It's rare in this environment, you know, to have people as thoughtful as us who are able to communicate despite our differences. These are just, the listeners are lucky. I really respect you having the courage to say that, Chris. It was, it is hard to say.
Starting point is 00:28:40 And the thing is, you don't hear this kind of thing on the mainstream media or other places places it's it's really only a long-form podcast that you can you can get this kind of heterodox yeah i think literally the only people standing up and saying this kind of thing uh you know you and me and um several of our friends it's it's it's a sad state of the world anyway yeah well i'm glad you had the time already to say that man so thank you thank you anyway that's enough of that sorry everyone that's enough uh let's yeah that's right that's look we shouldn't be doing the parodies we expect you guys to be doing the parodies do the parodies put them in the reviews and send them into us i have to say, this has been a parody heavy, too long intro segment. I feel, I feel I may have let my sarcastic snarkism go too freely. So, so I apologize for that. And I just want you to know, Matt, that I'm a big enough person to apologize.
Starting point is 00:29:38 Stop, stop, stop, please. I can't do this. okay all right so let's let's get to the grist of the matter let's introduce who we're covering today it is of course douglas murray noted british fucker chris chris we have a reputation for even handedness to maintain please yes sorry sorry yes i noted i did i say fuck i meant public intellectual sorry yes okay public intellectual slash um fuck up so um he's the author of several books chris you've read at least one of them haven't you yeah i have i've read two of them and the author of many books including lesser known ones like was it In Defense of Neoconservatism? Or Neoconservatism, Why We Need It.
Starting point is 00:30:30 That's one of his earlier books. But the two that he's most famous for are The Strange Death of Europe, Immigration Identity, Islam, a kind of anti-immigration book focusing on Europe, and The Madness of Crowds, Gender, Race, and Identity, which is essentially a culture war book. Kind of bemoaning and kind of reveling in the culture war. So yeah, those are his two most recent books and probably the books he's most famous for. And he's also a journalist, writing columns for The Spectator
Starting point is 00:31:03 and a couple of times Wall street journal and so on so yeah a noted public intellectual being interviewed by our favorite guru eric weinstein in a non self-indulgent four and a half hour podcast yes. So an apology to everyone for taking so long to get this to you, but it has been a slog, to put it mildly. And just to also emphasize
Starting point is 00:31:34 the non-self-indulgent, non-backpatting nature of it, the title of this episode, The Portal, episode 41, is Douglas Murray, Heroism 2020, Defense defense of our own civilization. Heroism, 2020 defense of our own civilization. And who would he be referring to in describing these heroes, these defenders of civilization, Chris?
Starting point is 00:31:59 In a thing which is impossible to parody, he's referring to himself and douglas murray it's it's true it's it's not even there isn't some sort of you know weird take on this he's just saying douglas and him are heroes that's a bold it's a bold way to title an episode so yeah so that gives you a sense of where the conversation is going and Murray's background. So yeah, this would be great. Let's get into it. Just before we start, it's probably fair to say that he's the right wing conservative commentator who most often gets invoked as an intellectual powerhouse amongst critics of the left that Douglas Murray is, whatever you'll say about him, somebody that you have to take seriously. And there's a particular love affair with him amongst
Starting point is 00:32:54 the intellectuals within the intellectual dark web. This title is an example, but it's really hard to overstate how far they regard him as their own political guru who is cutting through the bullshit, delivering to the American and Anglo sphere world the truth of the modern era that we need to heed to. might take issue with us including him in the guru sphere given that you know he's more out towards the journalist side of things but i think we'll see that especially for some of the gurus that we cover he is a guru he's a guru of gurus yeah i mean eric himself describes him in very flattering terms and very clearly regards him as an intellectual heavyweight and a big influence. So, yeah. That might be a good clip to start with. But the last thing I will also say, Matt, is that we decided that because this episode is equally filled with Eric-isms, it's at least, it's maybe 60% Eric talking.
Starting point is 00:34:08 with Eric-isms. It's at least, it's maybe 60% Eric talking and that involves him saying lots of, you know, lots of Eric Weinstein-ian stuff that we could spend hours on, but we will forego that. And we've agreed to basically try to avoid focusing on what Eric is doing. And we will, we will keep that into a little condensed segment where we are allowed to indulge in looking at some of the worst things that Eric says during this four and a half hour interview. But we're mainly going to try and focus on the man of the hour, Douglas Murray. Good plan. Let's do it. All right. So speaking of Murray being front and center, I think a good place to start is where Eric positions him. And we will see that he's a central figure in a topic that we often end up talking about.
Starting point is 00:34:53 But now I'm going to reveal something on this program that I've waited to reveal. People always ask me, well, you named the IDW. Who is in the intellectual dark web? And you were patient zero you didn't know it but if there was anyone in the intellectual dark web i realized after the charlie ebdo situation it was you and i viewed that as really heroic and so on it goes on so, what do you think about that? Douglas Murray is the alpha and omega of the intellectual dark web.
Starting point is 00:35:30 Yeah, that's definitely how Eric sees him. Eric is not stingy in his praise and definitely looks up to Murray. And yeah, sees him as a pretty pretty big deal that's a fair fair summary yeah and i would say there's a tinge of anglophone admiration chucked in so this is eric uh pointing out murray's role within the british intellectual sphere and here's the weirdest statement i can possibly make if i just take the anglophone countries and I think about the UK as central to the Anglophone group, the Five Eyes, as you said, you're about the only voice that sounds like I remember and like I expected. Yeah. So we're going to get into why he's the only person that sounds like Eric remembers. And he's talking about intellectual giants of the past and Christopher Hitchens. Yeah. I feel like we shouldn't editorialize too heavily at the outset, but I think we're going to hear a lot more of this, which is that Eric really does lay it on pretty thick with the flattery and i feel like he does come on pretty strong with the flattery it's almost as if i hate to be cynical
Starting point is 00:36:56 here but it seems like a strategy where he does see douglas murray as somebody with a lot of cachet um and someone he wants to be flattered by and it feels a little bit like this is a way of building himself up by you know rubbing shoulders with the right people yeah and like i know we said we're not going to focus on eric if we've started oh my god but listen there's a good reason because we're letting Eric introduce Douglas. And so as a result, you know, it's impossible not to talk about the intellectual bromance that is blossoming in front of our eyes here.
Starting point is 00:37:37 And I do want to highlight one thing and then we promise we'll move on to focus on Murray is that the admiration, it's not put on. It's genuine because there's a couple of instances where Eric actually starts imitating Douglas's accent. And that's an indication usually of close friendship or admiration of the person. And let me just play it for you because it was really noticeable to me.
Starting point is 00:38:09 But I think that holds. Oh, yes, I guess it was after Shabbat. Yeah, but my point holds. Okay, that's one. You heard the, you know, oh, and this is the second one. And that's the breakdown of the situation. By pussy, I should say that Douglas actually means cowards. Correct?
Starting point is 00:38:29 Very much. Absolutely. Very much. In a very real sense. Yeah. The love is real, Chris. The love is real. I'm never going to imitate your accent, not in a million years.
Starting point is 00:38:42 I'm waiting on that. Suppose you're Belfast broke. You've gone up here, guys. Where are my backpacks, Matt? imitate your accent not in a million years i'm waiting on this where's your belfast bro gonna break right um where are my backpacks matt like i feel after listening to this conversation that i really don't get enough praise no no no well you know you could you, you could become a hero of mine. I just have to work for it a bit more. Yeah. And like, so we've talked a little bit off air about the fact that this conversation,
Starting point is 00:39:14 it's a little bit hard to analyze because in some sense, it's a super indulgent four and a half hour conversation amongst two guys that are friends and who largely agree with each other. half hour conversation amongst two guys that are friends and who largely agree with each other. And as such, it's kind of like analyzing somebody's, you know, dinner table chat. Yeah, yeah. But the thing that elevates it beyond that is the themes that they end up talking about and the claims they make, right? I mean, this is the defense of our civilization. It's not just a dinner table chat.
Starting point is 00:39:48 Yeah, like this is, I mean, you're completely right about that. This is largely typified by emptiness. The conversation doesn't really go anywhere and just sort of touches on things and then moves on to unrelated anecdotes and analogies. moves on to unrelated anecdotes and analogies but this is exactly the kind of conversation that it feels like people will point to as the real serious talk where courageous people get get to grips with the serious issues so we almost have to look at it to check whether or not they do or not are you saying long form podcasting is the defense of civilization the last line keeping us from the barbarians at the gate is that what you're
Starting point is 00:40:33 implying yes yes i'm definitely implying that definitely implying that yeah well. So let's move on and see if all these laudits, plaudits, plaudits, plaudits that Murray is receiving are justified. that we look at is the coronavirus and the response to it of institutions and elites, and in essence, the failure of that. So maybe I'll start us off with a clip to get a taste of where Murray is coming from on this issue. I have this very concerning thought that the pandemic was a wonderful first period. It was a period at first that was wonderful for science because it showed that science was perhaps the only thing left that we trusted. And that actually when the scientists appeared with the politicians then we thought okay they're serious this isn't like a newspaper columnist appearing with the politicians but then yes something happened all right we'll keep going oh that's it
Starting point is 00:41:55 maybe the the follow-on clip would be necessary i i didn't i'm guilty of this i didn't spend much time thinking about pandemics, if any. And so when it came along, I like, I think most people thought, well, I'll trust the people who know. I do have now a very serious set of questions, I think we probably all do and concerns, not least on the fact that first of all, the people who I and most of the rest of the public trusted, turn out to have been wrong in significant ways i'm thinking of things like the imperial college study that predicted um mortality rates at a level which you just haven't seen in any country whatever the country's policy is you don't see these figures in Italy. You don't see them in Sweden.
Starting point is 00:42:50 And when it turned out that those same people who I trusted and my fellow countrymen trusted had pulled the same graphs out with BSE, for instance, I started to get a sense of ennui about this. Oh, that's a shame. Yeah. So he's got serious questions and concerns that ultimately are giving him a feeling of ennui i'll let you go first on this chris to take the reasonable position or the kind of strong version of the argument right everybody acknowledges that various institutions and governments didn't react perfectly, right? Mistakes were made,
Starting point is 00:43:28 policies were put in place that were counterproductive. And there's a range of debates that you can have about what the appropriate response is, right? It's a complex situation. There aren't one size fit all answers. That's a given. sure but what douglas does goes beyond that and it strays into the realm of jp sears and other people we've looked at where he basically suggests that scientists got this completely wrong they expected this to be a serious issue and it just hasn't turned out that way. The virus is not as bad as predicted, people are overreacting and basically scientists just have constantly revealed how wrong they are and that's not true. You've got that exactly the wrong way around. The public are currently thinking we we did trust the scientists.
Starting point is 00:44:27 They turned out to have led us into significant error. We're not listening to them again. It's quite, at this stage, it would have to be the plague, a child-slaying plague, the Black Death, to make us listen to the scientists again. That's not true. No, I mean, given the situation, the number of people dying per day
Starting point is 00:44:54 is the idea that the science, the mistakes in the early modelling and so on led to an overreaction and overestimation of the threat seems just totally absurd to me. Like that seems like a terrible take. Am I missing something? No. I mean, especially now, right? Because we're in a period where the UK and the US and a bunch of other countries are in severe difficulties. And there's tens of thousands or in some cases, hundreds of thousands of cases, right? So the claim that this worldwide disaster has not materialized is not true. It has materialized. It's already killed over a million people and infected much more than that and this is something
Starting point is 00:45:47 which didn't exist a year and a half ago and in fact with 2020 hindsight it's it's obvious that the initial reactions if anything were an underreaction we would have been better off doing things like having much greater controls on international flights much earlier. Things like that would have helped an awful lot. And we got there eventually after a few months. And countries like Australia are, with those controls, managing to avoid the large-scale infection and death that's happening elsewhere. So if he's hinting at the scientists causing an unnecessary overreaction, that just seems absurd. But the two things that kind of grated on me, Chris, is first of all, this thing that our friend Aaron at Embrace the Void has called cheap talk. And that's using these phrases
Starting point is 00:46:42 like, I've got these serious questions and concerns about such and such. Well, that's a very vague kind of statement and it covers the whole gamut, doesn't it? It sort of hints that there's something fundamentally wrong and all the experts are wrong and you can't trust the institutions and so on. But it also is vague in general enough to to encompass a whole spectrum of reasonable questions and concerns yeah the the other thing the other thing that so what exactly is being said and not nothing really and the second thing that's annoying is the is this holding the experts and institutions to a standard of infallibility so we just constantly see this where you know it's it's obviously it was obviously a very novel fast evolving situation
Starting point is 00:47:34 limited information you know the fog of war type stuff and the picture gradually clears as time goes by meanwhile you have politicians talking a lot of nonsense in many cases, just terrible takes, right? And you've got the public armchair opinionators like Eric and Douglas giving any number of nonsensical hot takes. But that's not the standard by which they're evaluating the scientists and institutions. The standard that they're evaluating them at is just perfect infallibility. And any mistakes, and there are mistakes and things that are wrong, that's what research is like when you're doing it in a hurry. But they point those things out as if they're like a smoking gun,
Starting point is 00:48:19 which they're just not, in my view. Yeah, and it's noticeable that there's a double standard where when it comes to discussing Trump, for example, and the information that he pumps out, they'll tend to take a very charitable view to say, well, he didn't actually say you should inject bleach directly. You know, that's an exaggeration of what he said. So there's charity available, but it tends to flow along either right-wing partisan lines or another way to put it would at least be along contrarian lines, right? If everybody is criticizing Trump for handling the coronavirus badly, then you will take the position that, well, actually. And the point you made about the public and institutions,
Starting point is 00:49:07 so here's a little clip making the contrast that Murray wants to draw between those clear. We can notice that everybody who went on the protests doesn't appear to have spent the succeeding weeks in bed gasping for breath this means that the people seem to know more than everyone who's speaking to them including those in authority who are then left repeating a mantra that the public less and less believe. It is striking if they can't deal with the complexities. It's worrying when the institutions can't be as complex as the public are.
Starting point is 00:49:56 So the institutions don't have the capability to issue nuanced messages, but the public could certainly consume them. And I think that reflects like, it is the case that sometimes messages are simplified down and don't provide enough nuance. But the notion that, for example, saying vaccines are not safe, but you should still take them, that first cause for most people who don't understand what you're qualifying by saying not safe, right? And it doesn't mean that you shouldn't admit that there are side effects, but you have to be careful in the way that you word things not to give the impression that
Starting point is 00:50:36 vaccines are dangerous. Yeah, yeah, I know. Like, I think I must be in a, I'm in a kind of grumpy mood this morning, this afternoon. So I'm probably less inclined to hold my punches here, Chris, because honestly their point of view is nonsensical. It seems like these guys would like public health messaging to be this like six-page technical document with definitions and caveats and, you know, these long intricate explanations, all of this nuance that they want, for instance, providing the nuance that, oh, you know, drinking water is technically isn't safe. You know, that's terrible advice. That's just stupid.
Starting point is 00:51:18 From public health messaging. Yeah. From a public health messaging point of view. I'm also going to say it's contradictory because when you look at the advice issued by the World Health Organization or the majority of public bodies in the coronavirus, the fundamental advice has been relatively sensible. Social distancing, good hygiene practices, they were ambivalent or maybe too hesitant when it came to masks because the clinical evidence was mixed and they didn't want to create a rush on medical supplies. But that was only for a month or two. And, you know, people take that as apologetics, but I see it more as, you know, as a complete layman, as a person like Douglas and Eric sitting there, yes, I think that public health bodies should have advocated mask wearing due to the principle
Starting point is 00:52:12 of caution. And because I'm in a country where it's normal, but I also can appreciate that when you have mixed clinical evidence and you have different cost benefit analysis to, you know, what you put in your public messaging, that some bodies reach a different conclusion. And it doesn't have to be for nefarious purposes or for a desire to mislead the public. It can just simply be that they made a different judgment call. And you can criticize that, but you shouldn't act like it's inexplicable. Or, you know, Eric previously, and Douglas has done so in various articles, imply that it's due to a conspiracy related to China controlling the World Health Organization. Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:53:01 I'm just going to play a clip of them specifically talking about the World Health Organization because I think it helps clarify why we might be frustrated. A relatively small number of people knew that the World Health Organization was another of those international organizations that wasn't exactly what it called itself. But now a very large number of people know that uh and again we have this issue of residual institutional trust um you saw this famous
Starting point is 00:53:33 video with the i guess a hong kong journalist trying to ask this person from the who and he's pretending that he can't hear and then she says shall i ask it again she's like no let's move on that's right and then he reaches for the the kill button yeah this is a bad magic show that i'm forced to sit through i know that's eric bringing up that example but i've heard it on so many of the podcasts we're listening to that is a really good illustration to me because you know that's that famous clip that went viral where a WHO official was asked about Taiwan's response, right? And badly flubbed trying to avoid that question. Essentially tried to avoid making any political statement about the status of Taiwan and its response in comparison to mainland China. And the person who made that was somebody that was
Starting point is 00:54:25 involved with organizing the response or investigating the response in mainland China. Okay. The health official. Now, when I saw that, like everyone else, I saw how transparently the person was trying to avoid answering the question, right? But I also took that as, what did you expect? Like he could have done it much better, but this was just somebody who is a health specialist wanting to talk about the virus in an interview and get messaging across. And then he gets hit with a question, which he correctly recognized could become a political talking point. And he tried to avoid it. So it's just to me, it's not remarkable. That's completely understandable why someone would do that.
Starting point is 00:55:11 But it was taken as, well, that shows that the WHO can't be trusted on anything. And you know that that inference doesn't follow. Yeah, it seems like the standard procedure for these kinds of conspiracy theories. It's a bit like with the American stolen election. So much rests on some video in some counting office or something, which purportedly shows something damning. But it only shows that if you've got these special goggles on making a whole bunch of inferences it's a complete non-secretor so yeah i agree with you i haven't seen that particular video but that kind of reasoning and complete overblown interpretation of a relatively innocuous event is very familiar
Starting point is 00:55:58 to me yeah and in case people think that we're being unfair and reading too much into the sentiment that is being expressed, like you could read it as, well, you know, look, they're just being critical of institutions. Don't you defend the status quo unthinkingly? So let me just illustrate how strong their anti-institutional sentiment goes. And then you get on to the institutional one, which is that nobody, as you know, nobody in an institution now can tell the truth.
Starting point is 00:56:32 And it's slightly worse than that, which is that... I'm used to my saying stuff like that, and then people calling me an extremist. Do you believe what you just said? Yes, I mean, I don't doubt that there are some... My phrase is, almost everybody, particularly in an institution, is lying about almost everything, almost all the time. That's where I believe we've gotten. Right.
Starting point is 00:56:53 There we go. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So in the previous clip, Douglas uses that cheap talk, hedging his bets. He uses the phrase, oh, we realized the WHO wasn't exactly what it called itself. You know, it's this nice vague language. But yeah, it's nice for them to be explicit.
Starting point is 00:57:14 They're nice and explicit at least sometimes. Well, that's in the third or fourth hour. So I think many people have tuned out correctly by then. But at the beginning, they're not that explicit, but I thought that is just, that just summarizes the anti-establishment, anti-institutional philosophy of gurus and Douglas and Eric Sherritt. The difference is just in the tone and the way that they express it. Eric is more direct, but the sentiment is the same.
Starting point is 00:57:46 Yeah. I think it feels very self-serving as well because it relates to their previous point, which is that the institutions, the experts, won't pay the public enough credit and won't give them enough credit and respect their intelligence by giving them a sufficiently detailed and nuanced account that truly respects their intelligence by giving them, you know, a sufficiently detailed and nuanced account that truly respects their intelligence. And also they lie all the time and are completely captured
Starting point is 00:58:11 by various nefarious interests. So these techniques really are all about carving out their own legitimacy because who do you turn to when there's no one else out there who can or is willing to tell you the truth? Yeah. I think there's also an element that because Douglas Murray has an accent, which is an upper-class British accent, that, you know, that's the prototypical accent associated
Starting point is 00:58:41 with intelligence and... Yeah, and education. So, you know, I'm not just engaging in anti-British sentiment or the well-trodden ground of Anglo-Irish relations here, but I definitely think it does a lot of work that Murray sounds so well-spoken and educated, even when he's making a really bad point. So let me just illustrate this. Still on the subject of coronavirus, here's Douglas talking about how he worked out
Starting point is 00:59:13 that maybe the virus isn't as serious as we were told. I had friends at the beginning of the virus who got it. I have a friend of mine who's 94 who got it. And I just thought, oh, hell. And after a couple of weeks, you know, she called me back and told me she was better. Yeah. And then that was one of the ones for me that made me think, oh, that's interesting. Because if it was what we thought it was, that wouldn't be possible.
Starting point is 00:59:39 So, okay, before we talk about the accent, this is – Yeah, what the accent is saying is what's important. Like that last phrase where he says, oh, that's interesting. You know, it's, I mean, sometimes they are explicit, but most of the time it's just constantly hinting that it's all a lie, that we're not being told the truth. It's actually not that serious. I mean, that is the subtext that underlies so many
Starting point is 01:00:09 of the points they make, even though they don't follow through on it. Most of the time they just restrict themselves to saying, oh, hmm, that's what I thought. It's just not quite what it seems, not quite what we thought it was. The WHO isn't quite what it calls itself. So they tiptoe around it an awful lot. But if you listen to the whole thing, it's all pointing in the one direction, which is quite an
Starting point is 01:00:30 extreme comment, given that we have like thousands and thousands of people dying every day from this. Their point that they're making is that it's really not that serious and that it's beat up by the institutions for some nefarious purpose. It's just, oh, it's so irritating. But to get back to the accent, I mean, I've said this about Douglas before, that he delivers daily male opinions in a Times accent. And it's quite amazing what the accent does. And this is another thing with gurus that Eric included, and that they do have rather nice voices.
Starting point is 01:01:01 I know that upper class English accent doesn't do anything for you chris but for the rest of the atmosphere and uh and the united states for which is the major audience here um it does sound it does sound nice you know they sound very good and it could be sometimes difficult to put that aside and pay attention to really the quite nonsensical things that they're saying or hinting at yeah and i've got some clips that i think show murray somewhat leaning into almost a stereotypical caricature of the upper class british elite we should get on to violence shortly by the way but but um but before we do can i suggest that i mean there are you can take
Starting point is 01:01:43 over the show you can do whatever you want. No, no, no. I'm dreaming of it. Do you know how much work you would save me? Can I suggest that... But I will say that he's pretty much a master of innuendo. Like the point that you're making that he doesn't always directly come out, just raises a point and says, hmm, that's interesting. I don't know if you've seen the Dark Crystal, Matt, the Jim Henson. Yes. Yeah, I have seen it.
Starting point is 01:02:11 You know, he sounds much more sophisticated than it, but it's a little bit like the Skaggsies guy, you know, that, hmm. It's the same effect. At least for me, you know, the upper class British accents don't do it for me. So yeah, I'm inoculated. But I can still tell that there is something very appealing about the 94 year old friend who didn't die. It's not just the innuendo there. The logic is terrible, right? Because the fact that you have someone that gets a disease and they don't die from it doesn't tell you anything, even if they're in a high risk category, that should be something that seems really straightforward and obvious. That's like somebody getting a severe cancer diagnosis and going into remission when they're in their nineties. And then someone saying, well, you know, cancer, they said it's bad, but this wouldn't be possible if it was what they said it is. And the logic there is bad, right? Well, it's too, too yeah i know it's almost too obvious to point out why it's bad but
Starting point is 01:03:25 it um arguing from anecdote and not and not an actual data set is absurd and it's it's actually yeah it's funny to hear these um logic and reason science guys uh doing such a just an obviously stupid thing arguing from anecdote yeah and okay before before we touch on a different subject, I just want to play a clip related to the National Health Service in Britain and how the reaction to the coronavirus has been overblown, right? So this was a couple of months ago, but just listen to this. The beginning of this whole thing, certainly in the UK, I think in America to some extent, we had this thing of we must protect the health service.
Starting point is 01:04:08 We must protect the hospitals by not being ill and going into them. Of course, I mean, I and others said at the time, actually the health service exists to protect us, not the other way around. It isn't that we form a ring of steel around it,
Starting point is 01:04:22 but that it's meant to form a ring of steel around us. And then, of course, you started to hear that a grateful public was sending doughnuts to doctors who had nothing to do other than spend their day eating doughnuts. I'm not saying in all cases. At the beginning, there was certainly a fight on the front line, but since then, our health service has been moribund.
Starting point is 01:04:44 Well, lucky, Douglas, that it's not moribund now. Yeah. But, you know, that's the same sentiment as look at the doctors dancing around. I thought this was supposed to be a crisis. Right. And it's the same logic that when people show projections and not all projections you know were accurate but ones that were suggesting okay if we don't do anything this is going to be very very bad very quickly and then when things are tamped down via restrictions and and various measures that just good luck or even just some good luck you know yeah? Yeah. Or even good luck, you know, certain features of the virus or the well or, you know, whatever it is mean that the worst doesn't come to pass. But their reaction
Starting point is 01:05:33 is, well, then we didn't need to take any of these mitigating measures anyway. And like we're seeing now, the health services are not doing fine and managing fantastically, right? Where that happens, it's because of efforts to prevent the health service from being overrun. And if we weren't taking steps to do that, that's what would happen. Everything would get clogged up with coronavirus cases. Yeah. Yeah. I know. I mean, I had to go to the hospital for some reason, I forget. That's right, I broke a toe. And, you know, this was right at that point where there was a lot of fear and a lot of uncertainty in Australia. And the people were avoiding going to hospital and probably
Starting point is 01:06:15 maybe even being advised to avoid it unless necessary. And it was empty at that particular time. And fortunately, in Australia's case it turned out that the various measures that were put in place here actually worked and are still working so that's good you know that's good that's like setting up like a mash field hospital just before a major offensive and finding out that you actually didn't need it that much that doesn't mean i realize i'm making the same point you did but it should be obvious yeah good enough to be made twice i think yeah well look there's another aspect of this where, like, Douglas gets credit, including from me, that he is good at pointing out excesses of the left and inconsistencies and overreactions,
Starting point is 01:07:16 right? And I think he does have a way of leveraging his outrage. We'll get examples of it in a bit about him going on rants. And he's good at that. But from listening to this episode, and I knew this from his book as well, but it was really clear in this episode, there's a lot of strawmanning of alternative positions. So let me just play one clip, which is related to people who were supportive of lockdowns so this is him trying to get inside their psychology we had a poll recently that said 70 of the public wanted curfews i mean either this plays to some deep sexual fetish of the British nation, which wants to be. Well, you have many.
Starting point is 01:08:06 Don't need to tell me. It is either some desire to be dominated by the government and told you're bad and locked down. You know, I won't extend the metaphor. I think you should because our ratings will soar, sir. They also might be banned from YouTube for explicit content. What? We're headed that way anyway, I'm sure.
Starting point is 01:08:32 But it's either that or, and this is how I read it, people tell the pollsters this. They even tell their friends that. But they really think that the lockdown, that the curfew is for other people yeah and like the guffawing there's actual these are actual people who guffaw i i i haven't come across that many people in my life who guffaw but they do but the the notion that people are supportive of curfews or lockdowns or that kind of thing because of a desire to be dominated or because of a weak character rather than just they have a fucking genuine concern about a global pandemic
Starting point is 01:09:11 killing their relatives and destroying the health service it's it's such a caricature but they present it as if what could explain this bizarre psychological quirk that people would be willing to make sacrifices. And that actually fits with the NHS point because Murray reeling against, you know, the NHS and we are supposed to be the ones protected by it. It actually feels to me, he's pretty out of step. You know, he's claiming to speak for the people, but speaking as someone who grew up in the UK and who watched the reactions at the beginning of the pandemic and throughout it, people treat the NHS as a secret value, as something to be proud of that is associated with Britain. That's why it featured so heavily in the Olympics opening thing.
Starting point is 01:10:07 And Murray presenting it as people are resentful, that actually they didn't need to do anything. And it's really the NHS's job to protect us. No, I think the clearer public sentiment is that people respect what doctors and nurses are willing to do. And they want to help them by making sacrifices if they can yeah it does feel like he's channeling that what feels like a modern conservatism sort of sentiment there which is kind of dismissing those traditional values of
Starting point is 01:10:38 contributing to the community and making sacrifices for the greater country or community or whatever. It seems to be talking to that modern or postmodern conservatism, which is really one of entitlement and one of resentment that the country isn't delivering enough to you that you deserve and you shouldn't have to do anything to support it anyway. No, I agree. do anything to support it anyway. You know, I agree. You've made this point before about the loss in modern conservatism of this sense of civic duty.
Starting point is 01:11:12 Yes. Right. It's somewhat ironic because a large segment of this discussion between Douglas and Eric, is waxing lyrical about the stiff upper lip and people having the chance to demonstrate their formidability in the face of a crisis. To demonstrate their British spunk, Chris. When the pandemic first came and we did all think, or a lot of us thought as we were told that, you know,
Starting point is 01:11:43 we'd be losing a lot of our loved ones, that that was an even more important impulse. Okay, this is going to sort some of the wheat from the chaff, you know, this is going to reveal the Stoics in our society, you know. Right. And I can't say that I was entirely gloomy about the prospect, but I thought in some ways, that's a generational challenge in that case. And it's an invitation to seriousness, apart from anything else.
Starting point is 01:12:15 It'll clear debris away. It'll give us greater clarity. And then, of course, among much else, the fact that the virus turned out not to be what we thought it was at the beginning. Yeah. And I think this gets to a thing that you found interesting about memorizing classic literature or poetry in order to steel yourself against the vagaries of modern society. So here's Murray outlining that. My point is that the knowledge that you'll need stuff, that it'll fortify you through your life,
Starting point is 01:13:00 is a very deep instinct with me. And so when people say, you know, it's worth memorizing in order that you keep your brain going and it's a useful cognitive exercise, it's not just that. It's, you know, part of the purpose of it. In fact, the most important purpose is you need to steal yourself for what's coming. Steal yourself for what? Yeah, kind of a test of character or something. Yeah. And this leads to quite a few examples during the conversation where both Eric and Murray, it feels a little bit like they're competing against each other to quote lyrics or snippets from classical text. So I'll just play a short little montage of some examples of that.
Starting point is 01:13:52 A favorite version of the question, the biggest question, which comes up in Rilke in the Arduino Elegies. Rilke says somewhere in there, does the outer space into which we dissolve taste of us at all? Oh, that's beautiful. I don't know that quote. Oh, and here's Eric. You know, there's a lyric in a Bob Dylan song, which I'm very partial to, where he says, buy me a flute and a gun that shoots tailgates and substitutes.
Starting point is 01:14:25 And then the line is, strap yourself to a tree with roots because you ain't going nowhere. And I think about this idea of the tree with roots. What is it that has survived two world wars? I love the indulgent, you know, yeah, that is a deep, you know, makes you think, but one more. Pasternak, by the last day, everyone says, you've got to say something.
Starting point is 01:14:47 And Pasternak gets up onto the podium and says one number. And everybody rises. It's the number of the Shakespeare sonnet, when to the sessions of sweet silent thought I summon up remembrance of things past. And past, they did the translation of this into Russian, which they say is as beautiful as any of the words in English.
Starting point is 01:15:15 Yes. So that's just, those are just, you know, a little snippet or a sample of the recitations and references that you get in this. And and they're all being used to make a point but it definitely does feel like a big part of the point is i can remember and recite things with gravitas yes that really is that um at one point douglas recites a large part of a shakespearean sonnet. And, you know, that's nice.
Starting point is 01:15:48 And it was tangentially related to what they were talking about. But, yeah, it really does feel like a lot of what they're doing is just to create that impression amongst the listeners of what erudite and fascinating people they are. They're quite kind of relevant, but they don't really serve much of a function. For instance, when he quotes that sonnet, the broader point they're making is that it's a shame that people are using their devices so much these days and the internet and just Googling information.
Starting point is 01:16:26 internet and just googling information it's really important that we memorize knowledge and and be able to just store it in our brains because if you ever find yourself locked up in a gulag or in a prison or something like that then you'll have the ability to you'll have the mental resources to keep yourself entertained that that sounds like I'm being unfair in summarizing your point, but actually that was the point. So quoting Shakespeare to make a pretty dumb point like that. Yeah. Yeah. For one, let's hear Murray explain that point because there's a beautiful thing which happens shortly after, which I just felt was poetic justice. So I'll play that now, the first of them. Particularly since the pandemic,
Starting point is 01:17:11 I have found myself telling my friends to put bloody phone down. Yeah. No, I don't want you to show me the thing on the screen. I want you to tell me. Yes. Okay? I don't need to see the video. I'd rather
Starting point is 01:17:25 that you described it to me it'll be more fun i haven't i haven't encountered this oh yeah yeah yeah so he goes on a little bit of a rant about you know people losing the art of face-to-face interaction and conversations but later i just enjoyed this because he's basically saying you know people don't memorize things they just they just rely on technology and the it's i've lost art and then uh this happens um what is it um um the uh the 1937 writers conference in moscow um and Writers Conference in Moscow, the Russian novelist who now, why have I blanked on the name suddenly? I have to edit that. I won't let you look it up.
Starting point is 01:18:16 You know that. Yeah. Oh, you know. God, I hate it when this happens. God, I hate it when this happens. Author of Dr. Zhivago. Why have I lost the name? Pasternak?
Starting point is 01:18:35 Pasternak. Why have I lost Pasternak? That's bad. There's mental deterioration. Don't worry. Press on, sir. Mental deterioration right there. Poor Douglas.
Starting point is 01:18:44 Yeah. Eric is torturing him there but it's it also feels like yes because you know if you just typed it into your freaking phone you could get it in like five seconds i know i mean like i would never like i've got the worst memory and i would never make fun of someone for not remembering something. But the fact that they just, it just made such a, that both made such a demonstrative point of showing off what wonderful memories they've got and how, and really how it illustrates what marvellous human beings they are. It was pretty funny.
Starting point is 01:19:20 It's just like maybe that's why people look up the thing, right? To avoid that painful, uncomfortable silence while you are like, I could get the answer so easily, but I'm not alive. We have to give credit to Eric for not editing that out. Yeah. Well, I think Eric enjoyed it. You know, I won't let you. That's right.
Starting point is 01:19:43 And again, we heard Eric like adopting the kind of British accent in there. It's, I don't know, you know, part of it might on occasion be intentional, but I think a lot of it is just mirroring. Yeah. Yeah. Look, it is mirroring and it's not, it's not even particularly unusual, is it? No, but it's just noticeable. I mean, I think it might be because I'm slightly reactive to, you know, posh British accents,
Starting point is 01:20:08 but to hear Eric putting on a fake British accent is even worse. Well, okay. A thing which I think follows on neatly from there is another rant that actually ties in to the point about phones is Murray complaining about people putting politics ahead of friendships over dinner during conversations and in particular when they're at these dinner parties, which apparently everyone else is having except me. so let me play murray outlining what his problem is with this yeah well maybe part of the problem of this is that everyone is currently behaving as if they're in permanent campaign mode yes when it's not their bloody job you know i mean this is what's so infuriating particularly america at the moment is like what
Starting point is 01:21:06 do you think this dinner table is is it a place where friends congregate and we exchange ideas or is it some some low-grade version of the veep debate exact this is the quality of our relationships at the table are so much higher than the quality of our relationships at the table are so much higher than the quality of our relationships with these things I call creatures who have fused with their parties that they've fused with their institutions. It's like cyborgs who are no longer human, but part man, part machine, right? So yeah, so having a big talk there about how it's so terrible that people are letting their personal relationships get damaged by politics and it's so important for us to just come together as human beings and converse and share ideas like like human beings yes and i also want to note matt that
Starting point is 01:21:59 they are highlighting that it's a particular kind of person that has been uh badly affected by this so uh who do you think it is that has that problem who could it be yeah who friends who are on the anti-trump side at some point in dinner they have lost it at somebody else at the table perhaps something that has crept up on me and has crept up on all of you, but I'm really struck particularly by how much more deranged everybody is than they were when I was last here. And I would say of all the people that are visibly hurting, visibly hurting, are my liberal left-wing centrist friends
Starting point is 01:22:43 who just have been erupting all the time it's conversations are quite hard yeah so look i mean so far it's a pretty um a pretty uh anodyne point that we should um you know be nice to each other and um not let politics dominate our lives sure sounds fine Sounds fine so far. But I think there's another clip there, Chris. Yes. And I will also say that it's treating dinner tables as a fairly freaking secret area of life that is defiled by the discussion of politics. And I don't know, maybe they have these dinner tables where people are having these deep philosophical conversations about the meaning of life that are you know
Starting point is 01:23:32 now being interrupted by politics but speaking for myself my dinner table discussions are just about you know what happened that day and what the kids got up to so exactly i think i think a large part of maybe what we provided chris is just to go look you know not every like they they cultivate this uh and they do this quite a lot in this episode they cultivate this this aura and this mystique they spend a long time talking about the various dinner parties they've been invited to and the famous people they know he was at a Conservative Member of Parliament, a very distinguished thinker, extraordinary mind, and a very haunting figure in British politics
Starting point is 01:24:11 because I remember him from boyhood and I actually met him a number of times as a child. He was a captivating figure in lots of ways. He was like an Old Testament prophet. By the way, the late George Steiner, who I was sadly, I didn't know, but who I once also had giving a lecture when I was a boy, also deeply impressed this on me.
Starting point is 01:24:35 I mean, one of my, I only met him once, but somebody I admired enormously in my 20s, Irving Kristol. And I remember Irving said somewhere assuming that many of the people who came to your dinner arrived in luxury automobiles oh yeah what percentage of those luxury automobiles were purchased by funds that involved China in one way or another and they make these hints at this at this wonderfully civilized discourse that happens in these rarefied circles that um i don't think their listeners belong to but i think they're trying to inculcate that feeling of wanting them to wish that they
Starting point is 01:25:17 belonged to to these circles and that they can by listening to to them talk and reading their books and so on, they can somehow participate. And, yeah, look, maybe you and I are strange, Chris, but, yeah, my life is not like that. Yeah. Are you saying, so let me just play a clip. Are you saying you haven't had this kind of experience? Exactly. I'm thinking about a situation I was just in with my son where we were scuba diving in Belize.
Starting point is 01:25:47 And we happened to encounter a Caribbean reef shark quite unexpectedly. That could be a bad example. I had been scuba diving with my daughter. I have encountered reef sharks, but not in Belize. Oh, my God. Not in Belize. Well, ain't not a belief not a belief well at least you know two out of three years in path but i forgot you're an australian you know you just scuba dive on your way to work that's right then hop on a kangaroo go for a ride it's yeah it's a different world yeah well as somebody from the darker side of the universe i will say that scuba diving with caribbean roof oh no not i don't know where built belize is so uncultured chris this is terrible i am i am so well wherever the freaking reef shark is when an anecdote starts with that and it's presented as a fairly anodyne thing to
Starting point is 01:26:40 talk about you know you're dealing with elites, which would be fine, except that they spent all their time reeling against elites. That's a problem. We haven't played all the clips of them doing this, but they really do spend an awful lot of time alluding to the very special people they know and the special events that they've been to and just the exclusive circles in which they move
Starting point is 01:27:05 they they do do that a lot they do i i was invited to dinner in london which really did comprise i don't believe in the term the establishment i find it lazy and i think there are multiple establishments at any one time and conjunction alert yeah but but um i was it was really a dinner of people who i really would regard as establishment in multiple areas of public life very distinguished figures and and for some reason me is a grit in the oyster and okay so to get back to the dinner table, the sacred dinner table space. Here's why that stance that they stake out might be a tad hypocritical. So here's another story that Douglas tells shortly, about 20 minutes after that. The point is that they go around the table,
Starting point is 01:28:00 everyone to explain what they thought the long and short-term threats to the country were. And everybody did the same thing. Everybody in the room talked about how Brexit and Trump were the biggest problems we faced because they had unleashed populism and that therefore everything must be done to stop brexit and trump and they got to me and i said i'd rather not speak yeah i'd wait and the very end of the evening the host said um douglas you know you've been uncharacteristically silent and that's usually
Starting point is 01:28:39 a worrying sign and what do you what do you think and i said i said you're all mad you're all completely mad yeah um and among among much other madness you've decided that the general public the majority of the public must be warred against in my country when the majority of the public when 52 of the public vote for something i don't go against the majority of the public. Yeah, so I kept that long because they get into Brexit and the framing of Brexit is just, again, himself as the representative of the common man in the exalted circles most of whom look down on them and don't listen to them and don't respect them but you know the main point with that as you said it came in about 20 minutes after this long talk about you know pretty stupid point but fine point that it's important to have nice
Starting point is 01:29:44 conversations at dinner and we shouldn't get all head up about politics and political disagreements but and then he goes on with this other anecdote but which is involves him sitting and stewing and refusing to answer because he just disagrees so strongly and then he saves it for the end and then rants at them about what idiots they all are it's just so many of the points that they make and the framing just is comes across as so inauthentic oh and hypocritical because like i mean in that case it sounds like another weird dinner party where people go around and you outline what you see the problems of society are like but okay that's that's something that people do to be pretty clear i i doubt that these events actually really happened in the way
Starting point is 01:30:33 that they're being described anyway it's all it's all just the way things are presented that's even worse if it's true because like the glee that he takes off you know saying how dead and and also it's that he's channeling you know outrage and chastising people for the expressing whatever views that he didn't like that the biggest problems are populism and trump or something like that but he just went on about how you shouldn't do that, how people can express their opinions and that's fine and it's okay to hear things. But instead he sat silently, you know, when asked his opinion, he said, I think I'll give it later. And then, uh, and then at the end launches into a tirade. So if that's not true, like it's even worse, right? Because then he's just inventing a scenario where he ran into the people in his mind.
Starting point is 01:31:31 It doesn't work very well either way, but yeah. So look, we should pause just for a second here. And because it feels like we've been jumping around a fair bit, but in this episode, this four and a half hour chat they have, they really don't deal with any of these topics properly. So it's different from, say, the Rutger Bregman episode or the ContraPoints episode where they do have some sort of structure to the conversation and they do lay out some sort of arguments. And there's actually some meat to sort of deal with. In this rambling conversation, they hint at and touch on and then drift away every single topic.
Starting point is 01:32:14 So if you feel, I'm talking to people listening now, if you're feeling like you haven't gotten a sense of what they're talking about from our coverage, really, I'm sorry, but you're not missing out on anything because there just was nothing there was nothing there so yeah just explaining about the scattergun approach we're taking well that's i i think you're a little bit harsh though matt because i will say that they do have kind of segments where they spend 20 minutes on the importance of maintaining a stiff upper lip and learning classical poetry or you know so they do have their little themes like they have 30 or 40 minutes they spend on gender topics towards the end yeah so yeah oh look they
Starting point is 01:33:04 they certainly have their themes, I guess I'm saying, but they don't, yeah, they don't back them up or debate them or discuss them in any real way. They just agree with each other that, of course, that's true. Yeah, I think the counter argument would be that their examples and their anecdotes that they provide are what they are offering to back it up. That is what their evidence is. But I agree with you that a lot of the content can be summed up by a couple of clips, which I think illustrate the way that they interact and they complain about the use of the term performative. But I think performative is a good word to describe a lot of the way that their conversation works. So here's just a couple of clips
Starting point is 01:33:55 to give a taste of how their interactions go. Marcus Aurelius alone cannot get us out of this problem, but he helps. Okay. Boethius can't alone help us out, but he can help. You know, my view is you wouldn't need kamikazes if everyone took one step forward. You know, I'm for everybody taking one step forward you know i i'm for everybody being taking one step forward except you well you're way forward
Starting point is 01:34:31 that's what my mother fears yeah um i'm with her i am look i don't feel it i mean i am I mean, I feel great, apart from for the state of the world. I'd forgotten how embarrassing to say that and to have forgotten that it was your table. It was so clever that you would bring it up in this way. Your table was one of the tables in which it happened. Exactly. Damn you, Douglas. As you know, I'm high on disagreeability in public and highly agreeable in private. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:35:08 Yeah. So that's a representative sample that gives people a taste of what the tone in really 90% of this four-and-a-half-hour thing. It's so performative. It feels to me like kind of after-dinner conversation with a couple of people that know each other. But it really isn't something that should be recorded and distributed because its sole function that I could see it playing
Starting point is 01:35:36 is really for people to enjoy Eric and Douglas play acting and aping not what intellectuals do, what people's image of intellectuals do. It's hard to identify anything useful that a listener could get out of listening to that. I mean. Yeah. And I will say as well that we talked about the competitive recitals and the reference to elite events and important people that they know. But one thing which Douglas Murray is good at doing is presenting conservative talking points or arguments in a kind of persuasive manner, which often involves strawmanning or at least significantly weakly presenting the alternative. So there's nothing inherently wrong with him arguing for conservative views, but that's what he's doing. And he's often presenting this as if it's an enlightened form of centrism that he's
Starting point is 01:36:40 practicing. But in many times, it's just clearly partisan. So let me give an example to illustrate. So this is a little bit where he's talking about Europe and America and attitudes towards colonialism and race relations and all that. So there's a lot of things that he says, but here's an example. I mean, as a Dutch historian wrote recently at The Spectator, what exactly were the Europeans meant to do after they found America? Were they meant to go back home and go, shh? Were they meant to say, we've discovered this amazing place? I don't think it has any potential I wouldn't bother with it
Starting point is 01:37:27 there's a large land mass over there doesn't appear to be at all heavily populated but I don't think we should be much interested in there, somebody else will find it what exactly was were they meant to do? maybe not commit genocide
Starting point is 01:37:43 is what people are suggesting is the problem it feels to me that what is being done there is framing a very easily dismissed straw man right that okay so when europeans found america you expected them to just turn around and ignore that they existed? No, nobody expected that in history. But they lament the consequences for the people, the Native Americans who were there, right? And for the undeniable savagery and exploitation that fell from that. But that happens throughout history. But it's just acknowledgement of what happened.
Starting point is 01:38:25 In terms of the tone and the presentation, they like to present themselves as being dispassionate and even-handed and rational and just bringing some common sense into the debate. That's how it's represented. But what he's actually doing is, as you you said presenting the liberal point of view as a reasonably extreme straw man and then arguing the consequence of that is that you just have to accept really quite a strong right-wing position that you you know, it was all inevitable. Nobody did anything wrong. And so, yeah, that's quite irritating being a total partisan, but not presenting yourself as one. Yeah. And they're quite good at doing that. Yeah. And it does take on sometimes a slightly more nefarious tone. Here's an example talking about the dynamics that liberal overreaction to past atrocities or past injustices can engender. Often unadulteratedly, for instance, the empire,
Starting point is 01:39:37 have you heard the empire strikes back term? The empire strikes back has been for 20 years or so a description of immigration in Europe. I see. Interesting. Yeah. Yeah, they like it. Oh, you don't like the immigration. Well, The Empire Strikes Back. I see.
Starting point is 01:39:56 Ah. Now, of course, your obvious play to that is to say, okay, and when does the empire reassert itself and strike back? This is ugly. They want to make us ugly. But it's vengeance. Yes, yes. So this goes to the heart of Douglas's theme about immigration in Europe
Starting point is 01:40:20 and how it's a terrible thing. And it's quite a straw man of the pro-immigration attitude, isn't it? And it's designed to inspire a reaction. Yeah. So, yeah, it is partisan rhetoric, but presented in a nice, calm, Etonian or Oxford voice. Well, both. He's from both.
Starting point is 01:40:47 But yeah, so just to follow on to that before we move on, this is another part where he's talking about the reaction engendered when people say they don't care about British people or white people's ancestors. You keep graffiting the Cenotaph, which is the memorial to the dead of the two world wars. You keep doing that,
Starting point is 01:41:14 and then you say, we don't give a damn about your ancestors. What's the instinct that kicks in that's not very noble, but anyway is an instinct worth putting out there? The instinct is this you know what if you don't give a damn about my ancestors i don't see why i should pretend to give a damn about yours so let's go at it fine you want to go at that we can do that here's the ignoble version
Starting point is 01:41:37 of that in the american context you want to tell the majority of the population who are still white that 13 of the population who are black are allowed to demean and talk in a derogatory fashion about the majority. How long do you think that's going to last? On the one hand, you can read that as, well, he's just remarking on the negative consequences of having this polarized dialogue around the topic. But it sounds a lot more to me like he's reveling in that sense of,
Starting point is 01:42:10 you know, righteous indignation and while presenting it as a regretful state of affairs. But when does the empire reassert itself? When do the white people stand up to this oppression? the white people stand up to this oppression. Like it, it really isn't that far from, you know, some really pretty toxic rhetoric. You know, you could put together an argument around double standards, which might have something to it. But I agree with you that in his case, he's seeing this as a good opportunity for a jumping off point to instigating an emotive reactionary response. He sees it as a rhetorical opportunity. So he comes across to me a right-wing conservative rhetorician. How do you say that, Chris? Yeah, I like that. That's good. Someone who does rhetoric.
Starting point is 01:43:11 I'm actually okay with him being recognized as that. But the issue for me is that by many people, he isn't treated that way. Like he's noted as being right wing, but then he's kind of presented as if he's a fair handed person looking at issues without bias. And that's what rankles to me, that it clearly isn't that. Like I don't have an instinctive hate for someone who is a conservative rhetorician, a conservative person who does rhetoric, right? I mean, because the left has people like, I don't know, AOC who does rhetoric and that's fine. So, but yeah, it is the thing that rankles is the presentation
Starting point is 01:43:47 that this is just common sense, that this is just any reasonable person who, you know, is properly civilised and is willing to just think about things in a forthright way. See, I'm imitating his accent now too, but that's on purpose, Chris. You know, that's the bit that rankles. You just have to admit you're an activist, admit you're a right-wing activist and be frank about that. I suppose he does present himself, does he, like personally?
Starting point is 01:44:17 It's just that other people sort of view him as something more than that. Look, I think it depends on who he's talking to. But I think he is clear about having, you know, a general conservative lean, which is so novel that it is worth remarking on. But in other occasions, I've heard him describe himself as, yeah, I'm mostly liberal, but I suppose I have some traditional conservative tendencies and so on and so forth. So another example of this on a completely different topic concerns the part where they start to get into modern gender dynamics between the sexes. And this, I think there's a couple of clips which are very indicative of Murray's
Starting point is 01:45:06 opinion here. So here's one that I called men's rights advocate. So much that the pleasure which women and some men are taking in sexually torturing heterosexual men is extraordinary to me i mean the the recognition that the benefits of recent sexual advances can be made can be accrued by a tiny number of heterosexual men and that the rest should be tortured is one of the things i think is least attractive in the age again the the the language of revenge. I think that, I mean, several things. One is that the big underlying one is that women are trying to make men into something that women don't want. So he's diving right into not just MRA territory there,
Starting point is 01:46:02 but into incel territory there, Chris, don't you think? Yeah, yeah. Before you go on further, here's just one more clip that might illustrate that point. The attempt to feminize the heterosexual male. Right. To make him beseeching and rather pathetic. I mean, this is also,
Starting point is 01:46:24 this is throughout the advertising culture much more. The pathetic male is the very common theme now. The male is the one who cannot do anything and the kids and the mother need to do it or the girlfriend. And this builds out onto everything. And it's, of course, because it's come about because the male part of the dance is not permitted.
Starting point is 01:46:50 So I remember this, and it is quite surprising how enthusiastically he dives into that territory, Chris. For people who aren't familiar with some of that stuff he alluded to at the beginning, the stuff that he's talking about where apparently, you know, a small percentage of men get all of the sexual opportunities and the large majority of men are disenfranchised is a really strong incel ideological point, which leads them to sort of this throwback reactionary conservatism where, where, you know, marriages should be enforced and controlled and, um, and that has to be done so that all the men get their fair share of sexual opportunities. It's, uh, it's creepy stuff.
Starting point is 01:47:37 There's a version of it where I would have some sympathy towards the over-transactionary nature of modern dating or whatever. But the thing is, I don't actually know if that's true because all I see that is in terms of outrage articles and, you know, things that people are needing to get consent documents signed before they kiss someone. I don't know if that's actually the case, right? Because I'm not in the dating world now, but there's a realm in between where Murray goes and pointing out some of the excesses of the modern era or things where dynamics might've got a little bit messy or confused, right? Or American dynamics being exported to the rest of the world.
Starting point is 01:48:27 And I think there's a point there, but he's going way, way beyond that point into the Elliot Rogers manifesto territory. Yeah, like you, I have a strong suspicion that the kind of stuff that makes it into the magazines and the discourse is somewhat exaggerated. Yeah, obviously the landscape has changed due to technology and culture. You know, people are meeting online. You got your tender, you got your grinder. Yeah, exactly. That's right.
Starting point is 01:48:59 That's what the kids are doing, I think. I'm not sure. They're up chatting, they're dick picking. That that's right they're dick picking I've never I've never sent a dick pick Chris and that's not that's an experience I've probably no I've never felt that's ironed actually I asked my wife once whether I should feel about if but her answer was a firm no I can imagine her reaction you should try it so
Starting point is 01:49:33 this kind of discourse seems to imagine a past which was free of the vulgarities of the modern age but i'm not sure it was i follow an account called whores of yore on twitter which is a great account everyone should follow it which is a bit of a historian of sexuality and uh yeah i i'm suspicious that Murray's account there is not simply just,
Starting point is 01:50:07 you know, playing into these golden age, yeah, conservative motifs. Nostalgia. Well, to illustrate that nostalgic take, here's him talking about people overreacting to what happens in the sex-like world of being at a bar well in what i'm talking about is things like oh i don't know you're in a bar you you need to squeeze through a space and somebody touches you on the ass as you do it's not the end of the world, you know? You didn't ask for it, but you're in a highly sexualized place.
Starting point is 01:50:48 And so what? It's quite flattering. You don't always want it. If you really didn't want it, you know? But you're in that game. You're in the sort of sex-like world. The sex-like world of a bar. I don't know. I think our bar experiences have been slightly different, but that just struck me as, okay, okay. So you can say, yeah, look, it's not the end of the world if somebody grabs your ass in a bar, but it isn't
Starting point is 01:51:27 okay. It is not a loss of something that we might regard that as socially unacceptable, that women don't have to put up with just random men feeling that they can, you know, grab their ass without consequences. Like, yeah, it just, that really graded on me that that was presented as common sense, that that would be fine. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Cause like you said, it wasn't, that actually wasn't fine back when 20 years ago or whatever, as I recall, cause like when we were out at bars and clubs with friends friends when they got grabbed by some guy they didn't know it wasn't okay no i agree and i don't think it was okay in the 1950s or the 1960s i mean look there are certain bars sure there is like i i i went to there is sex like world bars but those are not you know, it's just a description of the bar as like a massively sexualized environment. Like, I've been to many bars that are not highly sexualized environment.
Starting point is 01:52:35 Yeah, yeah, exactly. They're almost anti-sexual. main point is that the point that he's making is just not a very smart line of argument so it is odd that he's perceived as as a scholar and a philosopher and a deep thinker when or like the examples we've we've covered so far in our in our episode have been pretty representative of the kind of stuff that he talks about with eric and it's just all pretty trivial stuff. It's like click, it's the conversational equivalent of a bad tweet. Well, look, Matt, there was one, to illustrate that nicely,
Starting point is 01:53:18 there was one point that reminded me of our favorite guru, Scott Adams, and his infamous, the past cannot like what what can you do to change the past nothing so what's the yeah what's the problem so there was there was a point where murray is talking about focusing on problems and our inability to solve them uh so let me let me just play that because i i enjoyed. It's a disastrous thing to realize. We didn't solve climate. Yes. We didn't solve COVID. We sure as hell haven't solved race. In fact, we make everything worse. Yeah. So and this is him talking, you know, if we focus on problems, we don't solve them. We make them worse.
Starting point is 01:54:05 So the inference is kind of, you know, don't waste your time. But like, don't waste your time on climate change or COVID. I like. I have to point out that the reason why these problems aren't solved is because people like him have been doing everything they can to stop them from being solved. And we are solving them. Like, you know, obviously climate change is a much bigger and longer term issue. But it's people like Murray giving apologetics for Trump that are part of the reason that efforts don't progress as fast, like you say.
Starting point is 01:54:41 But the other thing is the coronavirus. We've made tons of frigging progress to solve that. We understand much better how to treat people. We know much more details about the virus. We've developed vaccines in a record amount of time with a record amount of cooperation and international collaboration to get it done, including with regulatory institutions, right? The evil institutions, they managed to get through drug trials in quicker time than has ever been managed before. And yet this is presented as if that's a complete failure
Starting point is 01:55:18 of our attention space. We're focusing on the wrong things. We'd be better to just ignore these issues and then things would get probably get better if we ignored them more it's yeah i just find it so irritating and i hope the point's coming through here that douglas murray's a conservative and that's fine like we're not conservative so it's natural that we're going to disagree with him but i hope it's clear that the the points he making are really bad. The logic behind them is really not good. I can think of far better points to make in favor of all of those conservative positions than he has.
Starting point is 01:55:53 Well, look, you know, every time we do an episode, we always have a segment where we try to find something nice that the, uh, or where we think the person has made good arguments or we agree with. He recites a mean sonnet. I'll give him that. Okay. Well, I've, I had an, uh, an entire segment that I find very refreshing and it's about one of my favorite topics, the intellectual dark web and people like that. So, um, I'm gonna first, first Murray is talking about himself mostly, but then he extends the point out. So here is him making a point which I strongly agree with.
Starting point is 01:56:32 I've found this quite often, not just in other people, but for myself, and being portrayed as in some way a sort of outlier. And I sort of have to stress to people, not only that it doesn't feel like that, but it's not the case. You know, I'm not like, hanging on by my fingertips to respectability, such as it is, and such as I would desire it. I write for all of the major newspapers in my country. It's a wonderful thing. But they all want me in their pages and it's a great honor. Yeah. So he's not wrong. No, he's not. And this is him making the point that he isn't repressed or that the IDW sphere often has people presenting these victim narratives while at the same time
Starting point is 01:57:22 that they're foraging people for adopting victim narratives. But as he states there, he has, you know, columns in national papers. He regularly appears on TVs. He has bestselling books. And here's him making the point even clearer in regards to the contrast of his critics. And i will not have people who are genuinely obscure people who deserve their obscurity and genuinely incurious and uncredentialed and unthinking try to portray me or any of the rest of us as in some way the the weirdos it's not the case well this is this british expression oh do fuck off i invite them to do so yes yeah so yeah he's always quite right and actually so you mentioned the tendency of people in the idw sphere and pretty much everybody across the board these days to present themselves as as uh as a victim, whereas he obviously avoids that.
Starting point is 01:58:26 And that's refreshing. So on the other hand, there's often a tendency for people on the left side of politics to present people like Douglas Murray as if they are extremists and way out there in the political spectrum. And I don't think that's right either. So Douglas Mary does do quite well in a pretty broad spectrum of English publications precisely because he does represent what are pretty mainstream conservative points of view.
Starting point is 01:59:00 Well, yeah, although I would maybe counter that a bit by saying it could also be the case that a large segment of the population agreeing with Douglas Murray's narratives doesn't mean that he doesn't lean to the farler edges of the right. fringe. I'm not suggesting that, but I mean more towards the Nigel Farage sphere in British politics, which is, which used to be regarded as like a extreme fringe. Murray is a figure which does, you know, he says he's not controversial and stuff here, but he is. And part of that is because of his tendency to run defense for people who are more extreme than him. Or openly more extreme than him. You know, he quite happily appeared with Stefan Molyneux, just wrote a glowing hagiographical account of Andy Ngo. And in essence, he's rarely met a conservative figure that he
Starting point is 02:00:07 doesn't wax lyrical about. But in any case, wherever you place him, it is definitely the case that he isn't a marginal figure with no access to an audience or influence. But this is in particular, when he starts talking about the IDW. I think he says something that I would firmly endorse, which is this. I'm getting fed up of the number of people who sidle up to me and ask me about my, you know, benighted status. It's not like that. It's not just that it doesn't feel like that. It isn't like that.
Starting point is 02:00:41 And it isn't, I think, for most of us. And I think that the era of hiding behind victimhood as a way to excuse oneself and permit oneself to say things that are true really ought to stop. There's a new phase that's needed on this is with so many other things yeah so the idw needs to stop wallowing in its claims to persecution and victimhood and yes i strongly endorse that douglas you are correct but you're speaking to a primary culprit there okay good is there anything else that you that he said that you well there was one thing where I think it was directly aimed at me. It felt like I was being singled out for condemnation.
Starting point is 02:01:34 Shall I play that for you, Matt? Okay. Is this something you agree with or just something else now? Well, I think you're the only person that can judge whether this is accurate or not. I cannot speak to that. Okay. All right. So here we go.
Starting point is 02:01:50 And we are seeking out. It's self-harm. It's self-harm. We're seeking out people who don't like us and listening to them. And it's making us again. I think some of them are bots. Oh, I'm sure. I'm sure. But, you know, some of them are bots oh i'm sure i'm sure but you know some of them are real lunatics and they they they are having an effect yeah i i know so many people okay who
Starting point is 02:02:15 have been fundamentally affected by this and they have to be saved also by the way we have to not celebrate people for suffering yeah so you feel seen by that i feel seen yeah you know that i he's generally talking about like slightly different about the people seeking out to feel offended but i think he had points of i he seems genuinely concerned about people who would seek out stuff that they don't agree with yeah of the lesson i am sympathetic with his point of view sometimes it does feel like a form of self-harm particularly after a four and a half hour episode of him and eric and they did have one very last point that he made, but he's essentially making a point about Americans being slightly myopic in the way that they apply their culture war to the rest of the world. I'm sorry, but you have an incredibly ignorant left. You have an incredibly ignorant internationalist class.
Starting point is 02:03:22 You have an incredibly parochial internationalist class, let alone the nationalists. You have people who believe they've got the whole thing sussed. And they think that this situation you've had in this country is the default situation. And they're willing to burn this whole damn thing down to learn that it's not. And then they're going to take everyone else with them at this rate. You know, I'm fed up of the spillage of American ignorance on these matters coming into my own country, coming all across Europe as well. We have our own problems. Well, so I do realize that's not a great clip to play.
Starting point is 02:03:58 I agree with what you do. No, I understand the point that you agree with, that exporting of the American frame of looking at the world and American neuroses and projecting all of that onto the rest of the world and the rest of us, it should be said, eagerly lapping that up and taking it on. Yeah, I'm with you, Chris. I agree with him in that respect as well. Sometimes America really does need to look overseas
Starting point is 02:04:31 and see that places like Australia certainly aren't perfect, but we're certainly healthier in some respects than the United States. So we certainly learn a lot of things from these big, you know, cultural heavy hitters like the United States or the UK for that matter. And it would be nice just, you know, just occasionally just for people to take a glance down under, you know, maybe look at the New Zealanders as well.
Starting point is 02:04:54 They're all right. You know, things are pretty good. Are you sure? You guys are all right? So there's a point where in contrasting himself as the kind of world trap world traveler and you know person who's seen things that if all if americans and liberals understood it that they would appreciate what they have you know even in the non-war zones you know even as you know, I mean, travel around India and try to tell yourself that life in America is benighted. Travel around much of China and try to tell yourself
Starting point is 02:05:36 that human rights are not respected in the United States of America or the United Kingdom, let alone all the countries I could list, which I've seen firsthand the extent to which human life has even less, in fact, much less value in the eyes of people in power than in the places I've just mentioned. When he was casting himself as that, I kept remembering this clip where it's talking about the coronavirus and how the pandemic started. And I'm just going to play it for you because then I have a point to make. When the bat theory came up, I said that I vindicated one of my long-held theories,
Starting point is 02:06:21 which was the problem with human beings is that someone always shags a monkey. It's always been a disappointment of mine in our species. There's always just one guy away from doing that, you know. And this is one of the things that makes the survival of our species extraordinary. I mean, obviously, it's extraordinarily precarious. And I thought, oh, there's always going to be one person who soups up a bat and then eats it. And and then of course at the time we don't run realize actually the bat one was the less embarrassing story that the chinese might want to get out it wasn't
Starting point is 02:06:55 as some of us thought at first the most embarrassing thing it was it was actually the less embarrassing thing yeah so the point i wanted to raise there is just the notion that people eating bats is embarrassing. Right. And this might be my anthropologist sense coming out, but I don't see what's inherently embarrassing about that. But it's presented, you know, I mean, he presents that as ha ha ha, like essentially savages, you know know shagging monkeys and eating bats but what's what's better about eating a fucking guy is that's right is eating snails just the absolute worst snails are snails with garlic and butter are great yeah so i you know i he probably hates but he's such a chauvinist he probably hates the french as well so it's that's not to say that he isn't well traveled or you know hasn't seen more of the world than a bunch of people but it's just that maybe
Starting point is 02:07:52 he isn't the person that's you know so worldly and open-minded as he pertains to be because when when i heard that i had no reaction to finding out that people eat bats yeah of course it's it's a strange thing to say i i had a different take from from that would you like to hear it yes please so the thing that struck out to me is the way in which followed the theme that i've been going at in this episode at how he presents just the most inane arguments with such an air of erudition and confidence that it somehow seems to be good and I'm going to say it so he says something like you know a constantly extraordinary to me that the survival of our species is in such an extraordinarily precarious situation because someone's always going to
Starting point is 02:08:45 shag a bat like like that's his that's his point it sort of slips past you but it's just a dumb thing to say that's a dumb thing to say this because and it's not that it's his conservatism doesn't bother me at all really it's just it's just so irritating to hear such inane things said with such self-confidence. Yeah. And well, the other thing which comes up for me is, you know, the Trump apologetics that we tend to find in the gurus' face. I think it's partly because some of them lean right wing and partly because it's an open invitation for contrarianism, right? To give a hot take. And there's this
Starting point is 02:09:28 constant presentation that the real threat in the modern world is centrist liberals or the left. And it just strikes me as so counter to recent events, right so let here's here's just an illustration of that sentiment being voiced perhaps something that has crept up on me and crept up on all of you but i'm really struck particularly by how much more deranged everybody is than they were when i was last here and i would say of all the people that are visibly hurting, visibly hurting, are my liberal left-wing centrist friends who just have been erupting all the time. Conversations are quite hard.
Starting point is 02:10:19 Yeah, I wonder why. You know, I wonder if there's some situation that has caused them to perhaps have justified concerns. But before I get your reaction to that, Matt, I just want to play one more, which again, echoes the Scott Adams school of insight in the politics. So I'll play this then let you respond. respond you know i know does it make things better if biden wins or if trump wins you know i mean and i can't help thinking well the underlying questions remain similar that's it short one yeah yeah yeah so yeah it reminds me of eric and brett's galaxy brainerdness of how nothing really matters and in politics and scott adams for that matter because because everything's corrupt and they're all the same so there's really no difference between Trump and Democrat politicians. So yeah, it's extraordinarily, especially in hindsight of recent events, it feels like an increasingly untenable position for these people to present left-wing irrationality and authoritarianism
Starting point is 02:11:29 as the greatest threat to liberal democracies. And I'm saying this as someone who is one of those people he's talking about. I'm a centre-left liberal. So, you know, I'm not completely oblivious to the stuff on the left-wing fringes, which I don't particularly like, but it's just ridiculous at this point to say that the left is the only concern for someone who cares about institutions and liberal democracies and the rule of law and so on. That's just absolutely absurd. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:12:10 Yeah. Well, Matt, don't you know who is there to save us though? Maybe there's an answer that these two guys have for who we need to look to to get us out of these situations and deal with things. Well, this is the thing. Who can still dance on the a-frame roof or avoid the snowplow yes we don't so yes not not very well this is the thing is it really down to 20 people and you know them all because 18 of them live uh in the modern version of your rolodex well because it's the people who can speak in public and i really do think this has to do with institutions the yeah they were about to get onto the fucking
Starting point is 02:12:52 institutions again but of course the main point is is that it's it's it's those two guys with their friends who yeah we don't need institutions what we need is douglas murray eric weinstein and for our podcast uh where they they discuss these kind of things and you know come up with the answers and but we can't let this slide by i know this isn't about eric but what was that analogy to the snow plow and the a dancing on an apron i think we've held off on eric for long enough right we're we're over two hours so i think it's time to indulge us for a little bit in some because there were some great eric moments in this Um, and, and in some respects, he's really the star.
Starting point is 02:13:47 But so that, that analogy is him talking about, I think Murray introduced it earlier, but in modern politics, the center lane has been plowed into the extreme furrows. Uh, so there, there is no center lane.
Starting point is 02:14:03 The snow plow is coming up and pushing everybody to the extremes that was a theory so that was that and he combined it with another one so that's right you know eric likes to layer his metaphors and analogies on top of each other but but i've got a lot of examples about that the folder here is called eric's greatest hits so this this promises good things and this definitely has to be the intro to us diving into eric uh this clip let's just fucking do it i'm gonna get a lot of use out of that matt let's go let's just fucking do it yeah let's just fucking do it so what well okay this isn't an analogy but this is just a remarkable piece of reasoning which i was i was so impressed by it's we're very arguing why we shouldn't throw the baby out of the bath
Starting point is 02:15:03 water and giving an example when it comes to dragons that's very frustrating i mean just to riff off that analogy the fact that large venomous monitor lizards exist uh they clearly do and if i get too emphatic about saying that there are no dragons i may say there are no komodo dragons and if i do that then I'm getting it wrong. And I'm tempted to do that every four seconds because. Yeah. So what do you think about that? You cannot say that dragons do not exist because there are Komodo dragons. It's these word games are fun, aren't they?
Starting point is 02:15:39 There was a tweet recently of Eric's where he was defending his stance that he's about having grave concerns about COVID vaccinations, one of his favourite topics. And his Martin Bailey thing there is to compare it to water. Oh, you know, I'm just saying that vaccines are not 100% safe and even water isn't 100% safe. So it's not accurate to say that vaccines are safe. So these public health authorities, they really need to respect people's intelligence and give them more accurate information.
Starting point is 02:16:12 It just does my head in. Anyway. It's kind of hard to parody. Vaccine denialism or, you know, anti-vax sentiment at least feels a bit more serious than whether or not dragons exist. But in Eric's mind, they're kind of related. It's presented as being precise and nuanced and accurate, but it's just being, this is bullshit,
Starting point is 02:16:41 totally beside the point. Yeah, and there was a point where Eric was talking about, you know, being able to give Trump credit for things, saying positive things. And he gives the example of the Nazis. And I took this as remarkably galaxy brained example. So here we go. Then you have to say, well, do you think that the Nazis were wrong to buckle to the Rosenstrasse protest and return partially Jewish men to their non-Jewish wives out of the concentration camps? Or would you have preferred that they send those people to the death as well?
Starting point is 02:17:17 It's like, well, that's an absurd blah, blah, blah. And then you start to realize that this has to do not at all with the intellectual point, but with party discipline. You've got to hand it to the Nazis. You know, they returned some of the Jews in the Holocaust. So, like, is it really fair not to give them credit for that, Matt? Yeah, yeah, that would be unfair. So, I mean, I guess, okay, so try to steal Matt at us, I suppose. He's talking to the point that, in his view,
Starting point is 02:17:46 liberals don't want to give Trump credit for anything, that there's nothing that Trump could ever do, even signing the most obscure and innocuous law. It has to be bad because Trump did it. I mean, that's the thing that he's saying isn't true, is pretty minor point but what do you think yeah it just struck me as you know that's presented as finding nuance being able to say well the nazis returned some people from concentration camps due to pressure and like we should be able to acknowledge that is a better outcome than them just killing them all. But like who was arguing that? And it doesn't give them credit that they buckled to, you know, one pressure or some political circumstance,
Starting point is 02:18:34 some agreement or whatever it is. They still were instigating the Holocaust, right? Chris, you've helped me clarify exactly what I've found so annoying about that line of argument, which is that they take some insignificant thing that somebody does which wasn't bad or good and then to make the galaxy green point that, oh, you can't say that Trump is bad because, you know, he's done some good things. So, you know, it's all very complicated. Let's consider some of it. And it's deflection and obfuscation, like to spend an awful lot of time talking about those little incidents that he mentions with the Nazis. It's such an insignificant
Starting point is 02:19:15 thing. It's obviously beside the point if you're talking about whether or not the Nazis were a good or bad thing. That's obvious when it comes to Nazis, right? But he gives these examples to back up his style of reasoning when he's talking about things like vaccines or whether we should worry about Trump and MAGA and so on. And that's what's so annoying, to elevate insignificant things into making them out to mean as if they're an important point in the greater scheme of things, allowing them to ignore the elephants in the room. I feel like there was a conference that none of us were invited to that came to some very strong conclusions. And they've
Starting point is 02:19:57 all circulated this list of correct answers. We've decided that Donald Trump is odious, and every good thing that he does must be made into a bad thing so that there is no break in party discipline. I wasn't at this conference. Yeah. The extent to which Weinstein and Murray are feeding on each other on the anti-establishmentarianism is really hard to exaggerate. So here's an illustration of that. Every institution's got dislikable things. Sure.
Starting point is 02:20:30 The problem is when you see through it. And with a set of authority figures, with a set of elites, we see through them now. Do we? Well, a growing number of us can. Unless one gives up any attempt to believe any of this, right? And this issue about, well, I don't know what vantage point I want to pull back to to analyze this with you. The total collapse of institutional integrity across all sectors, across the entire Anglophone world, almost.
Starting point is 02:21:12 Maybe there's a pocket of integrity somewhere. It's very hard. WTF. Yeah, WTF. At no point where Douglas says, well, that's a bit hyperbolic, right? No, no, no, that's right. They're on the same page here. It's a real one-two punch, isn't it?
Starting point is 02:21:36 So on one hand, what they do is that they take insignificant things and magnify them to make it all very complicated. So you can't say that Trump is bad or whatever. And then, but when it comes to things that they don't that they want to hit for instance the the epidemiology community the health authorities and so on they also take these um what i think uh in the great scheme of things not super significant things and inflate them into they've totally collapsed there's total collapse and institutional authority yeah that there's no credibility or there's just nothing there at all so it's just this weird minimization and magnification yeah and i've got a beautiful illustration of that where it comes to
Starting point is 02:22:17 discussing the legal system and the how bad things have got so listen to this. And we're going to lose the court system. I don't think it's going to be possible for Majid Nawaz to win judgments in future. Like we have a jury system. And if this critical race theory continues apace, we are not going to be able to impanel juries. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:22:41 Yeah. That critical race theory is going to prevent you from being able to win court cases. Are you implying that's hyperbolic, Chris? At my thought, man, like how many people in the general public have even frigging heard of critical race theory? Or, you know, except for Trump reeling about it in some speech or it's such a it's a very james lindseyist thing but like even if it was becoming this really strong
Starting point is 02:23:16 societal force the notion that you won't be able to get fair trials because of the penetration across society? Really? Yeah. And, yeah, so, yeah, it is annoying that given the state of the United States at the moment that they're presenting things like critical race theory as the primary threat to American institutions. Does that does that i mean you would have to have really bought into the distorted looking glass view of the world where everything
Starting point is 02:23:52 small looks big and everything big looks small in order to actually accept that kind of thing yeah and it might it isn't just the courts though that's not just the only problem. I'm sorry. No, no, no. What else? But when somebody says, trust the scientists, they're really saying something like, we, the UN, have gathered the IPCC and gotten a consensus statement. Please accept that as if it was somehow settled at the level of the laws of arithmetic, which it absolutely is not. Yeah, I have to admit, as a guy who would like to be able to think about this scientifically, I don't know where I can turn.
Starting point is 02:24:40 And in part, I know it's a little bit late to get in on UK bashing, given that the empire has been given up and all that. But to lose, like, I don't know, nature right i don't know that i trust the royal society to be an arbiter of things scientific royal society in nature they're gone not surprising i mean they refuse to acknowledge brett's insight and they also have done that one day shutdown STEM event, which, you know, completely discredited them. So, my God, it's ridiculously hyperbolic. Like, in an era in which science, you know, in which the coronavirus research has developed at unprecedented pace and with just a really impressive scientific undertaking but they present it as if all the credibility of the scientific institutions has just dissolved yeah like yeah i know it's it's
Starting point is 02:25:36 out of touch with reality like this is not this is not politics anymore this isn't these guys being um you know a bit centrist right wing or whatever you want to call it and us not. It's just being completely out of touch with reality. Nobody should take this kind of thing seriously. Yeah. Yeah. And okay. So for the last Eric clip, here's something which might sound familiar from recent rhetoric uh talking about
Starting point is 02:26:06 globalists and what their agenda is you know yeah yeah in the city of london is doing well then the idea is that it is unpatriotic to fight this global agenda and i think that in part one of the next idealisms that was supposed to follow the davos idealism was the actual dissolution of national identity in a much more aggressive fashion that multiculturalism is when you still can say what distinct cultures are but when you've thrown all the cultures together and you can't say what anything actually is everyone is a mutt there is no distinguishing aspect yeah so this this is you know the greek globalist conspiracy to create a one world culture and government yeah so chris are you seeing this like in the last 20 years or so have you seen the world just just plummeting
Starting point is 02:27:02 headlong into the loss of national identity and the loss of national units being a meaningful political structure and it being completely overtaken by trans-global, trans-internationalist global institutions. Are you seeing that? Because I haven't seen that. Well, Matt, to be honest, sometimes I get very confused here in Japan, whether I'm back in Ireland or, because it's just, it's all so similar, you know, Belfast and Tokyo, the, the cultures are just, they just mold in together. It's, uh, yeah, it's remarkable. And, uh, you know, even when I lived relatively close between, you know, Northern Ireland and like England in London and then in Oxford. Those places are different and they're right next to each other. And we haven't lost the
Starting point is 02:27:56 national diversity or cultural diversity. And yes, there's globalization and there's American TV shows, you know, popular across the world and all that. But man, it just it's it's hard to deal with the level of hyperbole that they they put all these things on because it makes it any reasonable point dissolve. It really does. Yeah. The hyperbole takes it to just unreality like last i checked with this the australian government policy it was same as it's always been which is pragmatic self-interest i don't see them um falling under the sway of the ipcc or the you know who china controlled bureaucracies in zurich or something um or brussels yeah so it's
Starting point is 02:28:49 just it's just silly it's what a waste of time to spend your time um inventing these fantastical um hyperbolic scenarios and then clutching your pearls about these things he should just go back to talking about dragons yeah because they're they're more real than the stuff that they're talking about yeah um but you know to try to take his point semi seriously which is hard to do he towards the end he was talking about okay you know you if you have multiculturalism you need to have distinct cultures and and so that if we're all blended together and we're all mixed up, then you can't have multiculturalism anymore. And actually Australia is a pretty good example of that. I mean, probably not too different from the United States, I suppose,
Starting point is 02:29:30 in that, you know, we're an explicitly multicultural country. It's government policy and everyone is totally on board with it. I learned that it's a controversial word elsewhere in the world, but it's not here. It's just a statement of fact with more than 50% of people having very recent immigrant background in the country. It's a statement describing the demographics.
Starting point is 02:29:55 And quite obviously, it's a mix of the two things. Yes, you can pick out lots of different distinct cultural identities. There are still Italian cane farmers up there in North Queensland who are distinct. There is the Lebanese community in Melbourne that you can point out as being distinct. There's a suburb in Brisbane that has a very wealthy suburb with a lot of Chinese people there. You can do that. At the the same time it's all totally mixed up you know it's all it's probably more of more of that than the other so my question to them i'm trying to take it seriously is so what
Starting point is 02:30:32 what's what's the problem is there a problem because it doesn't seem to be a problem like what you know isn't that natural there's going to be a bit of distinctness a bit of a lot of mixing up um maybe it'll all get mixed up and and in australia i'm just focusing on australia here but it applies everywhere maybe we'll all get mixed up and there'll be this new melange culture um maybe it'll stay somewhat distinct and you'll you'll have different things it'll probably be a bit of both but who the fuck cares is like what what what is eric concerned about because i can't figure it out well you're obviously not a xenophilic restrictionist, Matt. That's your problem.
Starting point is 02:31:09 That's a term which Eric has invented. Oh, yes. I remember that. Xenophilic restrictionist. So this is, it's really fun to make these things explicit. What is, do you have a clip that explains that? Yes, I do. Xenophilic restrictionism.
Starting point is 02:31:27 Let's do it. Can you find a single article that will talk about what I call xenophilic restrictionism? And there isn't any. Sorry, that was it. Okay, we can answer his question of why there are no articles talking about this term that he invented, xenophilic restrictionism, is because it's stupid and he just made it up. want strong restrictions, immigration policies, and be in favor of immigrants or appreciate cultural diversity and that kind of thing. And it is possible. But I think it's fair to say that there's a distinct correlation between anti-immigration sentiment and the desire for harsh restrictions on immigration,
Starting point is 02:32:26 and a less than positive view of immigrants and their impact on society. So the reason there aren't tons of articles outlining that position is because it's relatively rare that somebody would take that position genuinely. that somebody would take that position genuinely. And Eric is very, very clear that that is the position which he is taking. And let's take him at his word that it is purely an economic thing that he is interested in. But it shouldn't surprise him that that thing is not popular because it's the reason that he ends up getting on so well with conservatives and other right-wing people. I mean, I have this problem that I get along with conservatives and libertarians, even though I'm not in either group.
Starting point is 02:33:16 That's because we're still, if you don't mind my saying so, it's because we're still willing to talk. Because he essentially endorses most of the policies that they want to employ. So like his personal attitude towards pasta or sushi or, you know, his friendships with various people from around the world, it doesn't really make that big of a difference. No, it doesn't matter. No, it doesn't matter. That's what I was going to say. I mean, if you're talking about immigration policy, then the fact that you've got um indian friends or chinese friends doesn't matter in the end you know eric wants to restrict them high-skilled immigration like he wants to reduce the amount of students coming to america and all that kind of thing and like there's there's tons of stuff that you can go
Starting point is 02:34:05 into it you know we we talked with dan about the boskin commission and and various he has all our conspiracy theories related to the national science foundation and the undercutting of uh american pages right but yes yeah but like he has reasons for all of these things but a lot of the time it does get tied up with he'll say that but then he'll also start talking about you know we can't really trust the amount of chinese grad students and where their allegiances lie and yeah it's like it's kind of both sides of your mouth in some ways the other thing I can't help but mention is that his conspiracy theory around the National Science Foundation, you know, pushing for a lot of, you know, technical immigration is connected to his,
Starting point is 02:34:57 you know, he's got this art of connecting the conspiracy theories to his personal grievance story. So I think his own feelings of the lack of opportunity of about for him and people like him like homegrown talent in the united states is very much connected to his conspiracy theory about the importing of foreign talent agreed agreed well had to be said yes it did and i i feel like we're we're still two hours short of catching up to them for their content. But I feel for our audience's sake, the people that have made it this far,
Starting point is 02:35:34 we should call it a day and give any final thoughts that we might have. Yeah, I definitely agree. We should call it a day. I don't have a long speech to give about Douglas Murray because I think he could be summed up pretty simply. He's a partisan rhetorician. I don't know how to say it. But he's a partisan.
Starting point is 02:35:57 He does rhetoric. He has a nice voice and he gives a very civilised spin on what are, you know, either centre-right leading towards far-right political points of view. So it's understandable that he's popular, but if you actually look, as we did, at the points he's making, they're just bad. Like they're just silly.
Starting point is 02:36:23 You don't have a hot take to end on. I don't have a hot take and I don't have a positive impression of him. Like I'd be interested. Like I'll be, you know, I haven't read his books like you have. And, you know, maybe in The Strange Death of Europe or some such, he puts together something more interesting and substantial, which I think I could appreciate even without necessarily agreeing with it if he in fact does that. But appreciate even without necessarily agreeing with it,
Starting point is 02:36:52 if he in fact does that. But just based on this conversation with Eric, it's just very bad after dinner banter. Him and Eric basically, during the conversation, demonize the use of the word performative because they don't like that, you know, things are seen as performative. But I can't help but say that in a lot of the case with Murray, it feels that he can make arguments somewhat eloquently, but a lot of that is down to the performance and the upper crust British tone that he adds to the thing. And I'll just play one final clip, which I think sums up that character and the image that he presents. This is him talking about at the beginning
Starting point is 02:37:32 of the coronavirus outbreak, what he decided to do if he was going to go out. I don't know why he thought that, but like, yeah, if this was to be his final stand, what would he do? That's why I spent the early weeks of lockdown when I thought, OK, maybe we're all going to die just reading Tolstoy, because I thought this is something I want to do. This is a nourishing thing to do.
Starting point is 02:37:58 And I'm not going to get caught out on this train. Now, in retrospect, some people might legitimately say, well well you missed realizing what the COVID thing was as well but as I say I did that fatalistic thing of okay this is one that's not in my bailiwick yeah so just a stereotypical image of the intellectual he finds out that we might all be doomed so if I'm going down by Jove I'll read Tolstoy and I don't doubt entirely that that might be what he did, but like, I think it's hard to separate in some sense how much of his personality is a posh caricature and how much just is him being a posh guy,
Starting point is 02:38:39 like actually, right? Because he did go to Eton, he did go to Oxford. And as we know, everybody who graduated from Oxford is an elite intellectual. So just the joke for anybody who doesn't know is I graduated from Oxford, but you might not know this from my accent. But I guess it's a kind of a common playbook in the UK.
Starting point is 02:39:03 Like if this very up-across person, but speaking to the concerns of the common man. Oh, yeah. Isn't that kind of Boris Johnson's shtick as well to some degree? Yes, it is. And, oh, God, his name is going out of my head. The British politician that looks like a cartoon british person uh he you should just you should just memorize this stuff chris and that way you'll
Starting point is 02:39:30 have the resources to keep you occupied and to do like hold on he's i can't believe it's on the tip of my tongue he's jacob reese morg jacob reese oh yes him Yes, I know him too. Yeah, so it's exactly like that, right? Like he's not a man of the people, but he's almost like a caricature of what a British elite leader is supposed to look like. So, yeah. Yeah, but actually I don't make any of these crazy connections, Chris, because, you know, there's a weird correspondence there
Starting point is 02:40:04 with Donald Trump as well like he's not he's not a man of the people in any way shape or form but but he's but he says the things that connects with them he talks to populist talking points just like um douglas murray and just like boris and jacob rees-mogg but people like it when the things that feels like earthy popular concerns are voiced by someone who superficially is so out of touch it's interesting yeah so i think that there's that right with the kind of appealing to a broader audience a popular audience even if you are an elite but i would also add to that, that he seems to fit this ideal stereotype for our friends in the intellectual dark web and those kinds of spheres as their ideal image of a public intellectual, right? So this iconoclastic stiff upper lip British guy,
Starting point is 02:41:07 classic stiff upper lip british guy they they love it yeah so yeah they love it and hearkening hearkening back to the old virtues as well is a strong thing yeah so i i don't i don't really have that much to say uh apart from that so yeah i mean i i found this one a struggle. I think we both did. And I will be grateful to get back to people who are a bit more dramatically guru-ish. Yeah, yeah. You know, just to get out of the culture wars again. I think we need a holiday from the culture wars the other thing too is and you just can't overstate the just the degree of irrelevant sidetracks um and analogies that were unnecessary and vignettes about about you know episodes in one's life that really didn't just serve no purpose apart from to be performative as as you said.
Starting point is 02:42:05 So there's all of that stuff. It's just this exercise in pantomime. Yeah, and this is coming from us. Yes, yes, that's right. But the other thing too, which we didn't mention, which is it's quite amazing how they didn't listen to each other throughout this episode. Now, this is not the kind of thing that's easy to show
Starting point is 02:42:24 with these clips, but dozens of times throughout the four and a half hours, I was dutifully listening along, following the point that was being made, and then the other person, either Eric or Douglas, would reply. And it was astonishing how many times they just, their reply was just a complete non-secretary. It was not a reply to the thing that was said. It's almost like they were just waiting there.
Starting point is 02:42:52 This is particularly true of Eric, but to some degree of Douglas. They're almost like just waiting for the other person to stop talking and looking for an opportunity to jump in with their own performance. So generally they'll seize on some superficial thing that was mentioned and then start talking about something that was completely different. So it made it just insanely frustrating to listen to because no thought was ever finished.
Starting point is 02:43:18 No point was ever replied to. So they do both have very good memories and it's like they're drawing upon this this treasure trove of of of smart sounding things to just inject at at any random point it was just infuriating yeah i was tempted to just start talking about something completely different but that's right but you don't do you because you respect you have some basic level of respect for the conversation that meta joke could have like just went over um like it's so okay so you know we didn't take the garometer i for i spend this time but uh okay so let's let's not do it and let's incorporate.
Starting point is 02:44:06 We're going to run through the garometer and go through all the people we've covered so far. So we'll just load Douglas Murray in with the rest. Yeah, and from then on, we'll see about a segment for incorporating that. So yeah, that's Douglas Murray in a three-hour nutshell. Hi, Matt. Who is it that we're due to look at next?
Starting point is 02:44:31 Did we decide? No, I don't think we've decided, Chris. So a lot of people in a lot of coffee shops have been asking for Nicholas Taleb. Oh, of course. Oh, yeah. Taleb? Taleb? Yes. nicholas talib oh of course oh yeah talib talib yes well look i mean he is he is he he was part of the original cast that inspired this little project of ours so yeah and he's a little bit outside culture war stuff like he's not deep in the weeds at least i freaking hope not yeah no i mean my impression of him is that he's well he's blocked
Starting point is 02:45:05 me on twitter i find him extremely annoying but i have to i think he's going to be more substantial than than these two jokers so yeah i'd be yeah i'd be in favor of him okay so let's let's say nicholas talib then and we'll we'll find some content or if anybody has any suggestions please send them to us what's the things that we normally need to tell people that we have twitter accounts which individually are c underscore kavanaugh and r for c dent and the podcast has its own account gurus pod and we have a patreon which you can find with typing and decoding the gurus yes and the gmail address where we check the emails periodically which is decoding the gurus at gmail.com awesome yeah nice one good that's that and leave us reviews on itunes and stuff um we
Starting point is 02:46:02 appreciate them as you well know because we talk to you about them. So yeah, thank you. And please do that. And, and yeah, sorry, this is so late.
Starting point is 02:46:13 It's a, it's a bit of a tricky one, but we're done with it now. We've got there in the end. So yeah, thanks for sticking with us guys. So over and out from me. See you later.
Starting point is 02:46:24 Bye. Bye. Bye. sticking with this guys so over and out from me see you later bye

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