Decoding the Gurus - Gad Saad: Oh my Gad, it's the Saadfather!
Episode Date: August 20, 2021Gad Saad is a Professor of Marketing at Concordia University, author of The Consuming Instinct and, more recently, The Parasitic Mind: How Infectious Ideas Are Killing Common Sense. Self described as ...the 'Gadfather' with a podcast called the Saad Truth, he's certainly well versed in puns on his name. But is Prof. Saad the true Godfather of evolutionary consumption as he claims? or is he more of a Fredo, perpetually getting passed over for other Gurufathers?Gad is worried about parasitic brain worms that are influencing people's politics, though this affliction seems to correlate pretty strongly with all the liberal political views that Gad dislikes. Indeed, you won't find any discussion of MAGA or QAnon in his extensive bestiary of the pernicious brain-worms that can parasitise your mind. Rather it is 'Trump Derangement Syndrome' that has Gad fretting. But it isn't all partisan politics, we also get to see Gad draws on his knowledge of evolutionary psychology and unparalleled 'surgical' satirical skills to 'castrate' his opponents. Get ready for a string of anecdotes in which Gad destroys postmodern ideologues with facts and logic, embarrasses pigeon brained academics, and teaches his soccer coach the true meaning of freedom... and then everyone stood up and called!LinksVaccine: The Human Story (Recommended Podcast!)Great thread on conspiracy theories and Gurus on TwitterTimbah on Toast's YouTube Documentary on Tim PoolGad Saad: The Death of Truth and How to Revive it: Modern Wisdom Podcast Ep. 217
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Decoding the gurus it's the podcast where an anthropologist and a psychologist
listen to the greatest minds the world has to offer try our very best to understand what they're
talking about i'm professor matt brown with me is associate professor chris cavanaugh and chris i
don't have a special introduction for you today, but I do have a
parable, if you will, which I think contains a special message for both of us.
Regreal me with your insight.
Imagine, if you will, a man, perhaps on Twitter or on the internet somewhere, and he's cloaked
with bad opinions. He's holding them closely to himself,
protecting himself against the winds and storms
of everything that's going on.
Okay, far-fetched.
Far-fetched and a person with bad opinions on Twitter,
but I'll try to imagine it.
Keep going.
The wind and the sun,
who are actually people in this parable,
have a bet as to who could get him to change his bad
opinions so they had this friendly bet and the wind blows and buffets this man goes ah
you stupid faking idiot change those stupid opinions take him off and the man he just he just holds them ever more
tightly to himself and he doesn't take off his coat if anything he's holding it even tighter
and then the sun says all right i'll have a go and he says go on mate come on it's it's not that bad
the sun's shining let's let's have a barbecue and have a swim.
It'll be good.
Don't worry about it.
The man, he starts,
does realize he is a bit hot
and he does, he takes off his coat
and then they all go
and have a barbecue and a swim.
Do you think there's a moral to that story, Chris?
I was just blindsided
by the deeply offensive ethnic stereotypes that that parable contained.
Jordan Peterson and a lot of the figures we cover are famed for their ability to weave
these poetic metaphors. I just don't think we're a threat to them.
It's true. I didn't know. I don't know why i feel that i've just thought i would mention that
but on the topic of the parable i'm a little bit surprised that the man walking around the internet
cloaked in his bad opinions that he reacted so positively to such a manipulative son the son of sun the sun figure in that parable seemed to be an obnoxious force trying to force its
jovial nature onto the man no i think the sun was just being himself i think the sun is just
naturally like that and just naturally has that effect on people i don't think he was being
manipulative but you know that's the thing with parables people take different things from them i mean it was beautiful matt that what can i say and it actually fits with
the theme of the current episode because we're gonna look at gad sad who we'll talk about in a
bit but i will provide a tempting morsel by saying that him and the interviewer in the content that we're looking at are prone to stretched metaphors and analogies.
They don't go so far as to issuing parables,
but they do provide long anecdotes about events
that may or may not have actually happened.
So this was a thematically appropriate introduction.
Good job.
Yeah, yeah.
These introductions, they come to me in the shower. Yeah, yeah. These introductions,
they come to me in the shower.
Inspiration strikes.
I've warned you about thinking about me in the shower,
but it seems it hasn't stuck.
So this also fits because we wanted to remember up front
to thank our new editor, Battery Angels on Twitter,
who has kindly offered to help with the editing of
episodes. And we will give him plenty to do. So if the release schedule is more regular and the
episodes are more coherent, that's nothing to do with us. It is all down to Better Angels. So
just wanted to give him a shout out for his hard work and kindness.
Yes.
Thank you, Better Angels.
Much appreciated.
Another thing we wanted to mention online
is to call for expressions of interest
for a social media helper.
We have a Twitter account
and I think we technically have a Facebook group
that we've never posted to. And we have the Patreon account and we, I think we technically have a Facebook group that we've never posted to.
And we have the Patreon, of course, which one of us actively supports.
And the other one occasionally shows up.
We are willing to divert some of our hard-earned Patreon funds to reimburse somebody who might be willing to look after Instagram, Facebook, whatever the
kids are using these days, helping to spread the gospel of the DTG thing. So if you should be
interested in such a thing, and it wouldn't like destroy your life work balance and whatnot, just
drop us an email and we can have a chat we're not talking
about somebody building up the brand on social networks with detailed threads and all that no
just like minimum effort is fine yeah so you can take us as a role model for that i'm not sure what
our selection criteria is enthusiasm a sunny personality you'll find out yeah somebody
motivated good if you have experience i guess i think we're doing this wrong but we should be
saying like qualified people with that are ready to make a change in the world and want to represent
the dtg brand and help us expand their frontiers no no if you literally want to help save civilization
through long form podcasting and this is the best way to do it that's it for you that's right
we're reaching into the parasocial relationships that we've cultivated now to exploit you on the
level of crappy employment offers so that oh no this isn't an employment offer i think that's probably something we shouldn't say they don't want to go through the hassle of that it'll be
casual gifts and sexual fevers
so send us an email if you're interested in any of that if that sounds good to you yes um
we're bad at this we're bad we at this. We're very bad at this.
Very bad at this.
Labor metaphors and badly told parables.
That's our brand.
That's what we've got.
That's why people come here.
The other reason that people come here is to hear us talk about the Weinsteins.
But we're going to disappoint you only to infuse you with a new vitality that you didn't know you possessed.
As we say that we're not doing Weinstein World today.
Instead, we're going to do an entire episode dedicated to updating what's happening in the wacky world of the Weinsteins.
have a special mystery guest joining us. Somebody who might be in some ways considered relatively normal and who doesn't know all of the ins and outs of Weinstein world. So they will be able to
react as a normal person and see whether we are being unfair or whatnot. Yeah. So it's going to
be us two terminally online people and a normal person. I realized, Chris, that I was
pathetically terminally online when I found myself on Twitter and I found myself watching
the first 10 minutes of a two-hour video that someone had posted. This person was a Marxist
Leninist who was doing a deep dive into ContraPoint's latest episode with the theme that she was a pseudo-fascist.
And I got like 10 minutes in and I thought,
what the fuck am I doing?
That's even quite online for me.
Commentary on ContraPoint's videos is a lie that I...
I can't say that I've never crossed it,
but I can say that I've pulled out at the beginning
in a similar fit of, what the fuck am I doing?
Matt, to make us feel better about our online lives,
there is sometimes good content that we come across in the online sphere.
And since we aren't going to do Weinstein world this time,
we thought we might mention some stuff
that we come across and that we actually liked.
We didn't hear that.
It was good.
No.
Yeah.
And we'll post the link to this thread
on Twitter in the show notes.
It was by this chap called Julian Sanchez,
who I don't know who that is.
It's a great thread.
And he nailed a lot of great points
that we talk about in the Garometer.
It was really talking about the COVID misinformation stuff
and how people engage with that sort of disinformation.
And he made some great points.
So one of them was the cranks and crackpots,
without naming any names, they they're out there shall we say
do this kind of deep dives into all of this impressive looking details of hex dumps and
spreadsheets ip addresses that kind of thing you see the same kind of thing with like theories
about election hacking and people debunking climate science. And he makes the point that a lot of this stuff
is purely signaling. The audience doesn't understand this dense material they're getting
presented with. It's really performing the role of flattering the audience with this invitation to
assess the raw evidence for themselves and come up, do their own research and to come up with their independent opinions. A lot of it is repeating things that we have said, in other words,
better. So that's always nice to get positive reinforcement, but somebody doing it better
than you. I like this point that superficially things look very compelling or scientific because there's
diagrams and there's references to articles. Like you say, it's superficial and performative.
The other part about it being flattering, not just to the person who's able to do that,
right? Like the guru figure who is demonstrating their mastery of statistics or science or some
field of research, but also saying that you as somebody
reading it, of course, will be able to parse this data and understand.
He drew an analogy that what the crank is actually doing is ultimately a lot more condescending.
This is me quoting him.
The equivalent of giving the child a fake cell phone so they can make calls just like
mom and dad.
He's saying that they make appeals that you are not the victim of the information ecosystem, the mainstream media.
You're a truth seeker seeing through the illusions that people are presenting you. This is valorized in modern culture, but that in
reality, you end up doing exactly what you're claiming not to be doing because you're relying
on this presentation by alternative experts and the gurus who are really selectively presenting
information to you and doing it in a way that flatters your biases,
that you're the real critical thinker and that's why you'll agree with them.
Yeah, it's a really nice spread.
He makes the point that it's a byproduct of a culture that valorizes the idea of being
an independent thinker, somebody who can critically evaluate evidence and come to
good conclusions.
And it seems to be this tourism of the modern world,
which is that every good thing gets weaponised and turned around
and the ASATS version of it gets used in exactly the opposite way it should be.
But yeah, I think in the current climate where people are increasingly
sceptical of authorities and institutions, the people involved are not necessarily conspiracy theorists or even prone to conspiracy thinking.
But I think they are vulnerable to that kind of flattery, which just ends up being deceptive.
being deceptive and the actual experts who tend to be very busy working on their expert things may well not be particularly interested in public communication or developing online
cachet or online followings are very bad at that and can be dismissive and can come across
as being patronizing when in actual fact they're just often being quite honest when they say,
look, you don't understand the details here. You haven't done it for 10 or 20 years. So just trust
me, sometimes that's the right thing to be saying. That's the honest thing to say.
Yeah, he meets the point that in actual fact, it is often the experts who are treating you like an adult by saying,
I'm sorry, you don't have the expertise to assess the genetic evidence for the origins
of the coronavirus or whatever.
People don't like to hear that.
And there is the flip side where there can be a stifling orthodoxy, right?
There's famous examples throughout scientific history where this is the case.
But they were not typically overturned by people on Twitter having threads where they've read the literature and have worked it out.
Yeah, the final thing I'll say about it is that it's connected to the article we wrote for Skeptic magazine.
I think the challenge for someone who does want to practice critical literacy and not get taken in by nice sounding lies or just deceptive information is not so much to get really good at analyzing genetic data for viruses or to get really good at understanding the methodology underlying complicated statistical analyses,
the challenge is really deciding who to trust and what sources of information to trust.
Yeah.
We're not polymaths with infinite reserves of time and energy. And so we shouldn't try to be an expert of everything. It's really much, much easier to just find good sources of information and trust
them. So I think the mistake that a lot of people in the rationalist and heterodox sphere make is to
try to engage with every technical argument, no matter how many of them get thrown around,
when the people that you're engaging with are often conspiracy theorists and
delusional, if not being deliberately deceptive. So trying to engage with that flurry of bullshit
is often not the best approach. It's a good thread and we were right.
Yes, it's a good thread. There were two other things I wanted to mention and they'll just be
quick things, Matt. One is that there is a podcast, which I came across relatively recently, called Vaccine,
The Human Story.
It's only three episodes out so far.
There are episodes coming out each week.
And it's about the eradication of the smallpox vaccine.
But it's done looking at the history of it and doing reenactments and so on. So it's really, really
good. I think in the current moment, when there's a lot of disinformation and fear mongering
around vaccines, it's just a really welcome breath of fresh air to see something which is kind of
celebrating the victory we had over a virus
and to hear all these anti-vaccine and pro-vaccine arguments
from a completely different era
and realize how much of it is being repeated now or forgotten now
because we eradicated smallpox and that.
But it's a really interesting podcast, so I just want to recommend it.
And we're going to actually interview the person responsible for it in a couple of weeks.
So there's that too.
Good stuff.
Timbo on Toast, if you don't know him, you should know him.
He's a guy that makes YouTube videos breaking down culture war figures and also some stuff to do with music that I don't know very well.
war figures and also some stuff to do with music that i don't know very well but he his videos are excellent deconstructions of various idw type culture war people he's done dave rubin he's done
james o'keefe and he's just started a series on tim pool and the first part is up it's about an
hour and a half long but it's. The production value is great as well.
I watched the first one.
It's really good.
His series on Dave Rubin is excellent as well.
So if you want recommendations for something to listen to, there's two.
And we might interview him as well in a bit of time.
So look at that, Matt.
Interviews on the horizon.
There's a flurry of interviews.
That's right.
But in between the interviews, we have to do our bread and butter some gurus all right but yes we'll we'll do a couple of
gurus if you demand what the people want and who are we doing today let's let's talk about the man
himself the man that they slash he calls the godfather i don't know if anybody legitimately calls him that that he
doesn't ask them to but in any case gad sad the professor of marketing but maybe more known as an
as he describes evolutionary behavioral scientist and author He's got some books focusing on the evolutionary psychology of consumption patterns.
But he's more recently came out with a book about the parasitic mind,
how infectious ideas are killing common sense.
And this is a completely culture war drenched book.
The appearance that we are looking at, which is Gad Saad, The Death of Truth and How to
Revive It on Modern Wisdom Podcast 217 is also about 50% of it is a promotion of the
book.
So those ideas will come up and look at them.
And I want to also mention Matt because he's a figure that will come up in the clips.
The person interviewing him is a guy called Chris Williamson, who is now a podcaster, YouTuber.
His original claim to fame was that he was a contestant on Love Island reality TV show.
on Love Island reality TV show. And as that might imply, he's a male model
and also into fitness and life hacking kind of stuff.
But what he's managed to carve out in that niche
that he's the IDW leaning person
within that life hackery fitness area.
So Andrew Doyle, James Lindsay, Gad Saad, leaning person within that life hackery fitness area so andrew doyle james lindsey gad sad evolutionary site sam harris these are all frequent references he sounds like someone
who owns bitcoin yes yes i think that's a fair bet and we'll see he has his own unique foibles
which come up we're not focusing on him particularly but i think he is a
emerging figure in that scene the online idw scene so yeah yeah the one thing i'll mention
before we get started is there's a bit of a connection for me with gert's study of consumption
from an evolutionary point of view there's a weird weird connection there with one of my PhD students.
We published a few articles on a very similar theme, which is to basically look at individual
traits towards generalized consumption. So you have stuff like consuming food, of course, but
also consuming consumer economic products, and also propensity for alcohol and drugs and things like that.
So in psychology, there's a very strong focus on approach behavior, which is just that tendency to be attracted to things in the environment with the intent of acquiring them, owning them, ingesting them, whatever.
In other words, good things.
So you have approach behavior and avoidance behavior.
whatever in other words good things so you have approach behavior and avoidance behavior and you can not just people they're pretty much all animals a lot of the behavior or interactions
with their environment can be broadly categorized in those two ways so gadzad doesn't like he he
often mentions this research but i think it's fair to say most of his appearances most of his tweets
most of his discourses about the culture war stuff,
more in line with his book, The Parasitic Mind, rather than his stuff on consumption. But I just
wanted to mention that I'm aware of that general area and broadly sympathetic to it.
Did you cite him?
We probably did cite him, or rather she did.
Yeah, but you haven't read his book right but i haven't
read his book no i i didn't i take your disclaimer that you're a fan and we'll we'll take that
context going into the episode that you you've been a long-term fan and cider of god's ad in
your work you kind of based your whole academic career around his approach so that is good to flag up well as we'll come to i think he says he founded the field of the evolutionary consumption
which i didn't realize until he until he told me you're playing in his garden matt we all are that's
he he is the alpha and omega as we'll see so yes let's kick back and get into the godfather so to start with matt before we get
into the chris williamson interview i want to just provide for you and the listeners an illustration
of gad sad's rapier wit and satirical stylings this is him well well let's just listen this is a from a video
on youtube hi everybody this is cat sad an acquaintance sent me an article in salon
wherein a psychologist by the name of john Gartner said that the reason why the number of deaths due to COVID is so high in the United States is because Donald Trump is a sexual sadist who enjoys torturing people.
And so this is a form of democide.
These are literal words in the article.
So because I don't want to be a victim of Donald Trump's sexual sadism,
I know he'll come up to Canada to kill the rest of us because of COVID.
I'm back to hiding under the table. We need to be protected from sexual sadist Donald Trump
who's trying to kill people because of his masturbatory urges.
Think of me. Ciao.
Reappear like it's the level of satire, you know,
step over Armando Iannucci.
This is the new master.
Did you get that, Matt?
That he's not actually afraid.
It's a parody.
And him hiding under the desk,
this is something that he has done repeatedly.
The best thing about Satara Tensori
when you repeat the same joke
and just
emphasize it more but that's that's often considered the kind of creme de la creme of
satirical delivery wait wait i'm just catching up here so he's he wasn't actually afraid of
getting sexually no yeah that's the this is a Yeah, the whole hiding under the desk bit, that was just a bit.
Clever.
Yes, it is.
It was very clever.
And as we'll see and hear, this is just an illustration of the mastery of parodic satire that Gad has.
Yes, it's not the first example.
And before we get into the interview, Yes, it's not the first example.
And before we get into the interview too,
there's something I want to read out.
It's actually part of a Goodreads review from his book.
And now this is not covering his book,
but it's covering a lot of the same themes.
And I think it's apropos.
The reviewer describes Gad Saad's writing voice as vile.
He says it's like reading a right-wing YouTube comments section,
only instead of it being a phalanx of angry 20- old virgins it's a single boomer academic large swathes of the book are sad quoting
his own tweets and then describing in blistering technicolor his cutting retorts whereupon everybody
on the internet clapped we've got your deep admiration for his evolutionary ideas balanced
against the negative book reviews so we've set the
context well we've provided a nice sample of his satirical death now let's get into the meat of
the sad pie the concepts he wants to introduce is the parasites right brain parasites so we've got
a couple of clips where he's outlining what this idea is that he wants to introduce into this course.
Here's how the idea came to him.
As a result of my, if you like, my openness to studying other animals, I noticed that there was a field called neuroparasitology,
which is the study of how parasites can infect the brains of a whole host of hosts.
So there he spotted something.
Now, how does this apply in the case of humans?
Humans suffer not only from actual brain worms in the same way that the mouse does,
but we suffer from another class of idea
pathogens. And those are actual ideas that are parasitic. So you got that map. There are actual
parasitic brain worms that humans might suffer from, but we also have this metaphorical brain
worm that can take over. And this would include certain ideas like postmodernism is the muller of all brain worms, as he'll explain.
There's just one more clip of him kind of making the metaphor concrete, just to make it clear what he's saying.
They can take an otherwise supposedly functioning human being, and then you can have these idiotic ideas infect your brain so that you could become a mush of bullshit.
So that instead of jumping into the water as the insect does, you now jump off the abyss of infinite lunacy, right?
So he talks a lot about this brain worms idea, which is the subject for his book the parasitic mind i have to say chris he doesn't really flesh it out much more than those clips
indicate does he there is one clip where he maybe draws the point like a bit more concretely right
like that he talks about the parallel
that he wants to describe, right?
It's this one where he starts talking about
a parasite that affects mice.
Toxoplasma gondii is a parasite
that affects the brains of mice.
And when they are infected with this brain worm,
they lose their innate fear of cats.
They become sexually attracted to the urine of the cat,
which is not a good thing for a mouse to be attracted to. And so I took this principle from animal context, and I argued that
humans suffer not only from actual brain worms in the same way that the mouse does, but we suffer
from another class of idea pathogens, and those are actual ideas that are parasitic yeah okay upon listening to it
it doesn't actually really help that much but you know the parallel is clear right the self-destructive
thing which takes over a brain and does the host harm so the first thing that should make anybody
think of is richard dawkins idea of memes right yes it is parasitic
on the meme metaphor the idea of memes it is it is so so the tricky thing is figuring out what
if anything gets sad's idea of parasitic ideas adds to the idea of memes.
So just to rehash the idea of memes,
which has now entered popular culture,
it's just the idea that ideas are a little bit like genes
in that they spread and become more prevalent
in the population of brains or minds,
based not so much on whether they're good or not or necessarily helpful or not
but rather just on being good at spreading so everything from catchy tunes to clickbait to
slogan type stuff or conspiracy theories can be thought of as memes and it's the fact that it is
so common that the word meme is so commonly used now is an indication that that at least is a helpful metaphor.
The thing that I can't figure out is how does the idea of parasitic ideas add anything to that?
Because if you add in the idea of parasitic, then that's the idea that the meme is somehow drawing energy from the host.
It's benefiting itself at your expense.
So that implies that parasites are a living organism
which exploit another living organism,
but ideas and ideologies are not living organisms.
So yeah, we are being parasitically infected by ideas
that are using up humans for their own
benefit but of course they're not actually alive so that yeah but but that but that's all contained
in the original idea of memes right which don't necessarily have the interests of the
the believer right yeah mind viruses yeah yeah so if you think of it in terms
of memes it's just more like an idea will spread and be accepted because it's appealing and good
at spreading but not because it necessarily does you any real material good that's true of his idea
of brain parasites but i just can't see any additional use of this metaphor.
Yeah, it is a little bit like he's just come up with a synonym for mind virus
and a fairly superficially distinct one at that.
We will get into him talking about what the content of these mind parasites are,
or brain parasites, but given his evil psych take on things,
it does seem a little bit strange that if we take his argument seriously,
which is basically the claim that in the modern environment,
especially at universities and in left-wing dominated areas,
there's now a dogmatic social justice ideology, which has taken over everything
and requires you to say that there's no objective truth, that there's no difference between the
sexes, and so on and so forth. Let's assume, just for argument's sake, that that exists,
and that we're now going to approach things as an evolutionary psychologist. From the point of view of somebody who wants to increase their fitness in that environment,
indicating that you sign on to that ideology actually would serve your interest, right?
Because you would then be better regarded by your conspecifics in the environment,
who will then be more likely downstream in the long term
to meet with you.
So it would be adaptive
in an evolutionary psychology kind of approach way, I think,
if there is a new ideological system
which has took control of everything
that is dominant in a culture to adhere to
it for your individual fitness, maybe not beneficial to the society in general, because
that would suggest that any ideology that exists in a society, you should just simply
go along with, adopt to, in order to increase your fitness.
But I'm just talking on a purely self-interested genetic spread your genes to the
most people in your left wing enclaves yeah look it's it's telling that all of his examples of
these terrible brain parasites are basically left-wing woke political things that he doesn't
like he doesn't he doesn't mention any aspect of MAGA or Trumpism
as examples of mind viruses.
And so I guess the second point is that it's hard to see it
as this idea that he's got.
You can't call it a theory.
It's just a metaphor.
It doesn't seem to be doing anything apart from functioning
as a pejorative.
It's just a synonym for stuff he thinks is bad
and ideas he doesn't like. Yeah. And I think that fits with his role is basically,
he is an evolutionary psychologist, or at least plays in those waters. And on the academic side,
that may be where his interests lie, but a lot of his content is heavily culture or orientated and he was one of the figures
leaning into trump apologetics pre-election this this interview is from pre-election and we'll
we'll see some of them later in the the clips we play but he is best understood within that ecosystem as a figure approaching dave rubin or scott adams he plays
in those waters with just slightly more academic rigor maybe more like jeffrey miller yeah i guess
that's the part that i object to like if one is a political partisan and there's a culture war
warrior that's one thing but i find a very superficial application of what's supposed to be
a scientific or intellectual idea when really it's just functioning as a as a bludgeon is
that's this kind of scientism that we've we've seen a fair bit it's like just just admit that
you're playing politics don't don't try to intellectualize your analysis. Well, you accuse them of scientism,
Matt. So let's just hear Gad explaining why you would be wrong in such accusations.
Now, I should always, I always like to preface that scientists do have epistemic humility. So
we recognize that what is true today might become untrue tomorrow in light of new evidence. But at
any given point, we do operate under the premise that there is a truth out there to be discovered. There
is, for example, a universal human nature. As an evolutionary psychologist, I want to study that.
There is certain recurring patterns of how women respond to their ovulatory cycles.
Postmodernism completely blows up this edifice of reason because it says that there's only subjective truth.
Everybody is bound by their biases, by their subjectivity.
There are no objective truths.
So there's a few things which are out there.
But one thing he mentioned was the objective settled truth of women. referring to a paper that he wrote, which women's behavior in terms of buying makeup or buying
various things was connected to their menstrual cycles. And this was a paper you had a quick look
at, Chris, hey? Yeah, Calories, Beauty, and Ovulation, the Effects of the Menstrual Cycle
on Food and Appearance-Related Consumption from 2012. I already know from the replication crisis that a lot of the research
related to menstrual cycles and behaviors within the evolutionary psych kind of world
is highly questionable about people wearing red dresses to signify their fertility. And
there's a lot of shenanigans going on with people defining different windows for fertile periods
and the kind of standard issues that you had in social psychology
with multiple measures and people engaging in pee hacking and so on.
And so when he made that claim, I was wondering what his paper is like.
I know there's a literature that focuses
on this topic, but my general impression is that it's not good. So I wondered what his paper is
like. I only did a scan of it. It actually took quite a lot of time to find where he mentions the
sample size. And this is people completing questionnaires about their buying habits and
their relative menstrual cycles.
The sample ends up with 35 participants for survey one and 17 participants for survey
two.
The claims made that the paper has huge implications for evolutionary understandings of consumption
patterns. On the sample size alone, it's hugely questionable. This isn't a sample of 30 countries
buying behavior tracked over two years or something like that. This is a sample of around 50 people
across two surveys in the US or Canada. The other thing is that when you look at the kind of key measures,
the outcomes, which are focused around whether they're buying beauty products
or food-related goods, they want to say there's a difference
depending on where people are in the cycle.
But the key comparisons are all very close to the famous P equals 0.05 boundary.
The effect size claim is, as they say, quite large.
So you can't say for certain, but it's a hugely dubious study.
And it's more that the level of certainty he attributes
is just not warranted from that kind of evidence at all.
Yeah. So in that kind of comment, he's contrasting this appreciating objective reality
and basing things on totally unassailable facts and logic and contrasting that with
postmodernism and subjectivity and so on. He's citing, as far far as i know an unreplicated paper with a small sample size
and p-values in the um worrisome zone that's that's nowhere near objective reality you know
there's a certain laxity i or i think where you can say well the standards of the fields that he's
operating in in 2012 were different than what they are now. That's sort of true. But at the same
time, he's citing this kind of thing as evidence in 2021 with extreme confidence. And I haven't
seen Gadd or pretty much almost anyone in the IDW sphere focusing on the very real issues that the
replication crisis brings up with regards
to a lot of the kind of studies that they would tend to cite.
I know people have covered it, like Jesse Singel, and that there is reference made to
it whenever they want to basically fire a shot about the legitimacy of whatever research,
right?
They'll mention, no, the replication crisis means we can't be confident.
But it doesn't seem that it's applied universally.
It's findings that they don't like that should be considered potentially unreliable, whereas
studies like this, still fine.
And I guess we should say for fairness, he doesn't specifically mention the name of the
study so this is me just inferring but i mean the topic is the same as what he's covering
yeah well i think self-citation we can we can assume that he's a punchline for it but anyway
let's stick a little bit with his presentation of post-modernism and how bad it's got, right? So this is him talking
about what is now the accepted dogma on liberal campuses about borders. All borders are racists.
Well, there is this thing called countries and nations, and countries have borders. And last I
checked, it wasn't only the Nazis who were condoning borders.
But I can walk with you on university campuses where that is the official position.
Borders are a form of white supremacy.
looking for an example to give of things that are objectively true in a material sense,
as opposed to merely socially constructed in a postmodern sense, that he settled on national borders, which if I had to just pick one thing that was obviously a social construct,
it would have to be political borders. But political borders are real, Chris,
in an objective sense, whereas somebody talking about, I don't know, gender roles or something,
that's terrible relativism and postmodernism.
Yeah. Plus this presentation that... So I'm not saying you won't be able to find anybody on a college campus who argues that we shouldn't have borders and that open immigration is the morally and ethically correct position.
But I will bet you that that is not an enforced orthodoxy, which if you diverge from, you are cancelled persona non gratis.
from you are cancelled persona non gratis like maybe if you're wanting to join some far left group that like because i think communists still believe in borders and stuff i think the u.s i
think the u.s has had borders yeah i wonder what that that leninist who was criticizing contra
points thinks we should ask him we should it's just that constant completion of the most extreme position is presented as an unquestionable
dogma.
It just isn't.
Like, I work at universities.
I believe in borders.
You can take various positions on that and you won't be exiled from conversation by simply
saying things like, you think immigration should be controlled in some respect.
Like that's the dominant position of political parties as well, right?
Look, Chris, to a large degree,
what we're describing in Gadsad is something that is just common
to pretty much any player in the culture wars,
which is seizing upon the extreme bleeding edge of your opponents
and catastrophizing it into a huge boogeyman yeah he's just doing more of that so it's
it's not particularly noteworthy or interesting but god's that does do it so yeah there is another segment where he's discussing the social justice activists and their relationship to truth in contrast to where he stands.
And I think it's an interesting encapsulation of his perspective on what they're about.
the objective of seeking social justice in the true sense of the term, not in the pejorative social justice warriors, that is something that we should all seek if we are rational, liberal,
good-hearted people. In the pursuit of that objective, we never murder truth. We never
rape truth. That's the problem, is that what they do is they conflate the pursuit of social justice
with a consequentialist ethic, right? Which basically says, it doesn't matter if I murder
and rape truth in the service of this more laudable goal called social justice. No,
as a purist, I'm a true classical liberal person. I'm opposed to that. This is how he finishes that segment.
But this is a common position that I see attributed to the social justice side.
And I don't think it's accurate because in my experience, even when I have disagreed with people on the stronger edge of the social justice side,
have disagreed with people on the stronger edge of the social justice side. I don't ever get the impression that their argument is, it doesn't matter if anything's true. I just believe this
because I think it serves social justice better. That's not the way they argue. They argue that
the evidence supports their claim better. They argue that there's evidence that discrimination
exists and that we shouldn't ignore it. Now, you can argue about the quality of the evidence or
the conclusions that they draw, but I haven't met that many social justice people that sort of say,
I don't give a crap about what any evidence shows. It's just what i believe to be true and that's all that
matters well i guess god said would say the people who would be against any biological
explanation for human behavior or biological differences between men and women are doing so in a knee-jerk fashion because they are motivated by the consequences of accepting
those sorts of differences and want to cultivate a world in which men and women aren't treated
differently. That's the steel-manned version of his position. I think if you take it, what he's
arguing to say that people ignore or downplay the relevance of like statistics that they don't like, right, or that don't suit their argument, or that they say that succeeding on things like that is kind of missing the broader picture. people do exist and can be vocal about it. But it's this certainty in which the postmodern side
is presented as directly saying that they just don't care about evidence and they think truth
is a silly thing to consider. I'm not saying nobody takes that position. There is validity
to the point that postmodernists are skeptical of truth with a capital T, but I don't know that that entails the rejection of all evidence or the assumption that everything is on an equal footing when it comes to truth value.
I think what you're speaking to is the trend amongst critics of social justice, people like Jordan Peterson, who tend to conflate postmodernism, they call it postmodern Marxism or something like that.
And they seem to overestimate the degree to which people who advocate for social justice actually embrace postmodernism wholeheartedly.
It's from the people that we know, they don't.
modernism wholeheartedly. It's from the people that we know, they don't. Postmodernism is a niche,
pretty abstract stream of philosophical thought, which is like a diagnosis rather than a recommendation. First of all, we don't want to get into it, but it may well be influential,
like say in encouraging skepticism of consensus or normative ideas of what's right and true and whatever, and skepticism about our
ability to directly access truth in an unbiased way that's uncontaminated by our culture or social
influences. A lot of the ideas that are influential are to a large degree true, right? I think what
you're saying is that he's essentially creating this caricature of the people he doesn't like in saying that they are
100% postmodernists to the extent that they're total solipsists that have no concept of there
being any kind of external material reality at all. And that's just obviously not true. It's
just a straw man. It's almost as if there's like thousands of derivatives roaming the corridors of modern universities. And the thing that annoys me about it is partly because I appreciate postmodernist, I'm falling into the trap of just labeling everything from continental philosophy as postmodern, but I'm not fond of that approach in general i think it had some useful elements but that a lot of it is taken
too far in terms of encouraging a degree of reflexiveness which can be self-indulgent
in academia like this kind of thing so i have issues with it i find myself annoyed when i'm
forced to defend it because people are forced to defend the general...
People who supposedly...
Yeah, are doing that because they're not doing what they're being presented as doing.
And it's weird because I end up feeling like if they were what Gadzad were claiming,
if what he was saying was completely dominant and that they all felt like
that, his critique would be legitimate to some extent, but it just doesn't accurately map onto
what seems to be there in the real world.
That's clear. You've made it clear.
Yeah. And I guess I think given the illustration, there's a section where, which comes up a lot,
Jordan Peterson talks about it and other people as well,
where despite being the defenders of the West,
they spend a lot of time bashing the decadence
that the West has fallen into, right?
Because of this postmodern malaise,
which has descended on society.
Anyway, here is a clip of him bemoaning the decadent West,
and he brings up a topic which I've heard referenced many, many times in intellectual
dark web spheres. Some of it is that, you know, if I am suffering every day, not knowing if I'm
going to get my caloric, minimal caloric, you know, food for the day, I don't have time to pontificate about feminist glaciology.
So in a sense, it is a measure of the decadence of the West. It's kind of the Caligula effect.
When Rome becomes too imbued with all of this hedonic pursuits, it kind of self-implodes.
So I think there's a similar thing here where instead of, you know, feasting at the buffet of gluttony, the actual food, we're feasting at the gluttony of bullshit ideas.
At this point, I really feel sorry for the hapless academic that wrote the feminist glaciology.
They should be sending him checks that paper has got so much mileage on the culture war circuit
that like you say they're they're jew royalties and they talk as if there's a field of feminist
glaciology that is but this is a paper right it might even be a paper which is like me arguing
that there might be a need for an approach, like a feminist approach to glaciology.
But it is not like there's this active, large scale community of scholars engaged in feminist glaciology.
It's a single paper.
I think it's just a single person.
That paper, like brought up by James Lindsay, brought up by Andrew Doyle, brought up by Douglas Murray, brought up by Eric Weinstein, brought up by Gad Saad here.
And I've seen more breakdowns of that paper than I ever want to see.
And the general thing is, yes, there's plenty of like stupid stuff within it seeming to suggest that we need to take other ways of knowing about what glaciers represent and stuff but like
but it all a lot of it hinges on the degree to which you interpret that as being a claim that
we should put that on a par with the scientific understanding like appreciating how people in
indigenous cultures have understood glaciers that those might interact with the the field of
glaciology when people are
studying in environments that host those people, for example, seems relevant, right? But you can
do generous readings of the paper or ungenerous. And like all papers, there's good stuff and bad
stuff. And maybe overall, I don't think I'm a fan of this paper in any respect. But there's so many
papers that come out that are just insane stupid there was a
paper that came out which suggested that cunnilingus by males performed on females was a
cheating detection adaptation right like like it's so so so there you go chris the existence
of that paper totally demolishes the validity of evolutionary psychology, doesn't it?
Yeah.
And it was an EvoPsych paper.
Yeah, I know.
Like it's just so silly.
And look, it's on a par with just fastening on a blue-haired student
at a college campus in the United States.
And to be even-handed about this, you know,
there's a fair bit of catastrophizing on the left about fringe figures or particular specific incidents that are actually a blip in a lot of things
happen in populous countries. So that happens too. But look, it's just what I want to say is
it's just the same old pattern in the culture wars, which is just fastening on a tiny little atom of outrageous content to whip
up what fresh hell is this type reactions in people and um and gatsat does a lot of that
you're going to be hearing about feminist glaciology in a decade's time still being cited
that paper it's it's citation metrics must be through the roof. It would have just been an obscure paper that died to death
in a random journal like most papers, except for this exalted status it's now given in the
culture war. I just wanted to mention that. And it relates to this point that Chris Williamson
makes, and this is not satire. I just have to flag up that this clip is not satire,
where he laments the situation where they need to talk about this kind of thing. mathematics. I don't want the brightest minds of our time to be taken up. I don't want this in the nicest way possible. I wish that you hadn't had to write this book.
Yes. I agree.
Are you bored of talking about social justice?
No, he's not. And also, you don't need to worry, Chris, about the greatest minds of our day being focused on these issues because James Lindsay and Gad Saad are not the greatest minds of this generation.
No, no, just think, Chris, for a moment what these people could have accomplished if they weren't getting bogged down in this culture war stuff.
I mean, James Lindsay would be inventing new mathematics here there and everywhere gad
said would be coming up to it just doing amazing evolutionary science that they wouldn't be these
political monsters they're forced to do it they made them do it they have to read feminist
glaciology papers they have to there's there's because if they don't who who will it wouldn't be that these
are attention-seeking opportunists who glom on to anything that's going on no no that wouldn't be it
and does the interviewer have to jerk him off so blatantly that that was a bit that was a bit too
much well there's there's quite a lot of that in the interview, which is characteristic of IDW
content in general. But he is just repeating a characterization that Gad Saad attributed
to himself earlier in the interview. I'm someone who's a true polymath. I'm all over the place.
I truly believe in interdisciplinarity. But my main claim to fame,
if you'd like, in academia is that I founded the field of evolutionary consumption.
Yeah, yeah. So we're going to play some more clips on this theme. But about three quarters
of this interview is like self editorializing and commenting on himself and his way of doing things and how great he is. And I guess congratulating
himself for being such a brave seeker of truth and freedom. And yeah, that's just a common,
it's becoming a common thing, isn't it, Chris? We see it in almost every bit of content we look at.
As we've mentioned many times, I think this is our kryptonite.
As people that have admitted
and acknowledged fetish for self-deprecation,
the tendency towards self-aggrandizing
in the intellectual dark web sphere
is just sometimes hard.
And what's most hard
about this particular instance of it is it's in the
conversation where there's a large segment about the importance of irony and satire and rapier
wits coupled with this pompous trump like self-pomposity and the two do not go together right like a a non-reflective constantly bigging yourself up
is not usually the chosen affect of you know the world's famous satirists
so i guess it's trying to be oscar wilde or something but it's it very much does not come
across like this but like it's it's kind of on the
same level of james lindsey's tweets yes or andrew doyle like they seem to truly believe that they're
really very very witty and funny and that's the bit that's mystifying to me yes there's there's
this part where chris williamson this the interviewer, talks about the powers in the IDW sphere
to cripple their opponents with their mockery. And again, Matt, this is not satire. This is him
accurately expressing this sentiment. I would much less like Andrew Doyle or Zuby to come after me than Nassim.
And the reason for that is there's going to be so much social embarrassment
because they're going to find a thing that I did or that I said,
and they're going to make me feel so dumb.
And this is the particular modus operandi of yourself uh
andrew doyle specifically and zoobie's very famous video where he did the deadlift record
it's utilizing the weaponry the semantic weaponry against people who are weaponizing it against you
is it though zoobies famous deadlift satire video that you know that's the height of irony this feels personal
to me because i enjoy satire i like irony i appreciate good humor and andrew doyle and
james lindsey being represented as masters of this art it's painful painful to me. I've argued with Andrew Doyle online.
I really can't say I was concerned by how small he shrunk me down with his cutting intellect.
No, it was all standard partisan nonsense. I just feel that there's an undue credit being given to the level of work required to run
Titania McGrath account.
But it's definitely a phenomenon.
Like if you look at the second tier or bottom theaters online, people like Dr. Roller Gator,
who tweets all in caps, that's his modus operandi and perennially funny, apparently.
They seem to genuinely believe that their heroes are extremely funny and that they're being funny yeah it's just
you know suffice to say we're not the targets but like i can appreciate when people are making
an argument that i don't agree with and they're doing it in a witty way.
There are plenty of people who are witty and can make arguments I don't agree with. I think
Douglas Murray, for example, can do that better than other people on that side. But it's, yeah,
I don't know. It's like the Babylon Bee or something being held up as this pinnacle of of satirical content
it's uh it's offensive to me matt that that is offensive to me but look the best way we can
explain this point is probably just to provide more examples of of it in in his own words all
right yeah let's get to that yeah so if you think we're being unfair
and we're being snobs about our you know our tastes and irony isn't that all subjective who
can say who is actually good at satire let's listen to this and make make your mind up for yourself
so here we go because i'm lebanese i'm entitled to speak on behalf of all Lebanese.
And so I gave a culinary clearance for 24 hours. And then I asked for everyone to take a photo of
their passports so that they can give me clearance in whatever they want to give me clearance in. So
for example, a Portuguese person would write and say, my name is Jose whatever Rodriguez,
and I give you clearance to eat Portuguese spicy chicken.
So you should go check it out because it shows you that most people are still sane and make fun of this stupidity.
Did you get the subtle joke there, Matt?
It's a cultural appropriation, right?
Because you shouldn't be eating that shit.
So he's he's issuing permission slips for people to do it.
Yeah, it's a good... And look,
I agree with him.
There's cultural clickbait of
Asian-Americans getting outraged that
somebody is daring to cook some
dish from Taiwan or something.
And I think it's silly.
I think people can cook and eat
whatever they want to cook.
So this is an example where
I broadly agree with him.
But it's still a stupid, unfunny joke.
I criticize you for having sledgehammer wit, Chris, but you're...
Yeah, compared to him, I'm like the 007, you know, assassin when it comes to wit.
I agree.
I don't like the cultural appropriation
topic i've said very much on the side that cultures mix and people being overly concerned
about the authenticity of cooking food that is culturally specific like i i tend to fall more in line with those arguing that it's an overhyped concern.
I can still hate this level of witty cutting down.
And the way that he describes it is just, it's so far removed from the actual level
of satire involved.
So here's him editorializing.
The actual level of satire involved.
So here's him editorializing.
It's very hard to be witty, sardonically witty, to be sarcastic at the right delivery if you're a babbling fool, right?
You have to have a very sharp mind to be able to very quickly identify these things. So now coming back to satire, I think satire, so the expression i like to use is properly activated satire is like the surgeon's
scalpel cutting through warm butter yes he's got a scalpel like wit he is actually correct
appropriately wielded satire is an incredibly effective way to undercut arguments except he
he's slashing with a blunt
machete that's the issue here yes it doesn't take great intellectual powers to exaggerate and
ape the position you don't like and go oh look how stupid i am so like being so pleased with
oneself for doing that that's that's the bit that's insulting that is it's the like mistaking
the hood who do i'm a social justice where i got purple hair like as that is surgically wielded
you know cutting satire like it is not oh and and here the last example you know that's borderline
maybe there's an element of wit in getting people to post passports with cultural appropriation.
But let's just go to another example.
There's plenty to choose from.
So how is this?
So now if anybody sends me any compliments, and thank you, I receive a million of those on social media,
a million of those on social media, I will always state that I need to know what your skin you is before either accepting the compliment or not. If you don't have 50% plus people of color, you,
then I'm sorry, but I reject your compliment because I'm trying to decolonize my Twitter feed.
Right. So what I've done is I've taken literal things that these morons say,
and I've just taken them to the extreme. Can you see what he's doing there, Chris? I mean,
can you follow? It was hard. It was hard to detect. When I first heard it, I was like,
what? Has he become a culture, social justice warrior?'s going on this is completely against time yeah but
then you explained it and you realized it was a tactic he was using a tactic to make a point yeah
yeah that that was what made it really click for me and and he also explains my how by using this
kind of confusing this this mist of war, this presentation,
it's impossible to pin down what his actual position is
because you can't detect what's satirical, what's real.
Like, what's his real opinion?
Yeah, you know, I picked that up too, Chris.
He was very pleased with that, that it provided sort of an invincible shield
that prevented him from being criticized.
And it occurred to me that, congratulations,
you've just rediscovered 4chan, the kind of shitposting.
Oh, no.
I think that's giving him too much credit.
Because, like, listen to this.
So, for example, it's very hard to pin me
because when I say something sarcastically,
you could technically not know whether what I'm saying is right.
So if you come at me, I say, what are you talking about, bullshitter?
I am totally decolonizing my Twitter feed.
I don't want to receive compliments from people that suffer from being white.
They disgust me.
You get it?
So what happens is I am pointing the mirror.
You get it?
So what happens is I am pointing the mirror.
I'm taking the exact semantic structure of your argument and I'm mocking it into oblivion, right?
This is the James Lindsay.
To me, that's not even on 4chan level because they don't explain the joke. And also, Gad, it's not hard to detect what your position is,
you bumbling fool.
Like, it's transparently obvious.
Nobody would mistake you for somebody who is actually trying to decolonize your Twitter feed, whatever that might mean.
It's like, it's the Tim Pool school of satire, rightire right like tim pool did this where he started posting
out tweets that he didn't believe saying you know bernie sanders was right and and so on and people
were like what the hell is tim pool doing and then he explained on an episode that he's like
chumming the water like he's just posting aoc is great and she has the right view on green deal
and it's like this was his way of firing chaff to make it impossible to detect what is his actual
position but i think i know which one is god's actual position i've read between the lines i've
you know decoded the message and yeah i think i can detect when he's deploying parodic content
yeah i think well the thing the thing that's irritating is not so much that he's doing
trolling and shit posting but that he thinks he's discovered and innovated some new
um form of of rhetoric of rhetorical persuasion.
That's the thing.
It's the fact that he thinks he's good at it.
That's what's upsetting.
And he actually, again,
in a thing which in itself is hard to parody,
they talk about how it's kind of unfortunate
that he's unable to teach these skills
to people at university.
So by providing you with the packets of information
in a way that is enrobed in sarcasm, in sardonic wit, in satire,
it almost makes it...
Now, the difficulty, though, is it's hard to kind of teach a seminar on this, right?
Because it's hard to say, please come to Professor Saad's sardonic wit seminar so that you can castrate the morons, right?
Because in a sense, there are certain rules that you can use in building your satirical arguments, but it's also instinctual.
So some people just have it, right? For example, I don't
believe that charisma is something that you could teach in leadership class, right? You're either
charismatic or not, right? Charisma, shitposting, trolling. You can't teach these things, Chris.
You either got it or you ain't. That's just how it is. It's a shame. He'd like to teach you. In a
sense, it's kind of like a science. He's explaining how all the pieces fit together but not everyone can do this i know it if only
there was a class where we could learn these satirical parodic skills that he possesses that
that would be a class that i would never send my worst it's almost it's almost cute he's just so pleased with himself like just so
happy about it and but the thing that kills me with that is just the the laughter and the
admiration from the interviewer that that sort of forced laughter before like so funny that's you hear that a lot and it's it yeah chris williamson has a very demonstrative
laugh there is one part in the interview where that performative laugh of chris williamson's
which i find particularly great as well i you know, this is just, this isn't an aesthetic preference, but like I hear that guffawing
kind of laugh and Chris Williamson utilizes it liberally.
But there's this point where he utilizes it at a point that Gad Saad didn't expect because
Gad Saad is actually outlining a serious point.
So let me just play because it was a funny interaction between the two of them.
The effort for me to protect myself potentially from one of these ideas,
is that on me to go out and search for this much stuff?
Or is there some platform?
Are there some particular voices?
Have you got a playbook?
Yes.
So one of the projects that I'm currently working on,
and I just published an academic paper on exactly that.
So one of the ideas that I have is to have something akin to a Wikipedia platform.
What is it?
This is not a joke.
This is real.
I know it's not a joke, but it's funny.
Is it? did he know
yeah that's it that that relates to this is as good a point as any to mention that the
nominological networks of cumulative evidence the cure for brain worms yeah what he was
outlining there is his plans to instancy it then in the
wikipedia platform which i just have to say matt oh my god what a bad like you know for talking
about people that are morons and imbeciles and have stupid ideas this is a serious suggestion
that he's going to build an alternative to wikipedia to store the accumulated
evil psych knowledge is what he's talking about do i need to explain why that wouldn't work there's a
thousand wikipedia's already exist you need to incentivize people to take part in them nobody's
going to take part in his bullshit like new wikipedia and you would just end up with a conservapedia if you made one that was
focused on evolutionary psych and the evolutionary psych articles on wikipedia are fine they already
exist and they're not all permeated with social justice ideology rhetoric right like if you want
to look up sex differences in humans on wikipedia go ahead there's plenty of information available
there so you're skeptical of this um alternative wikipedia idea in the same way that you were
skeptical of the unity 2020 initiative exactly you're a very skeptical person chris i mean yeah
i'm just with chris williamson and his reaction
and then oh it's not a joke yeah yeah i know i mean it's yeah but but it's crazy that you have
to yeah yeah uh the other thing he introduced there of course was this nominological
nominological networks of cumulative evidence yeah and so gadzad has a habit of inventing
new complicated phrases for things that already exist and i'm going to go out on the
limb here and say that he's basically as far as i could tell this very fancy title is basically
means destroying social justice warriors with facts and logic that's basically what it seemed
to mean if you wanted steelman version i would just call triangulation as well as like a legitimate academic thing where you approach a topic with evidence from different lines.
You have triangulating lines of evidence showing the same result.
So there's no need for this bullshit new term for an approach which already exists.
an approach which already exists and the way that Gad Saad is applying it is also not in line with the legitimate usage of it because okay well let's hear him explain it a little bit himself
in his own words before we take issue with it. He assiduously over many decades collected data
from an incredible number of sources, from paleontology,
from animal husbandry, from embryology, from comparative anatomy, from geology. And each of
these small pieces of the puzzle, once you put the whole thing together, made it impossible for you
to argue against it, despite the fact that 150 years later, people are still trying to falsify it without being able to, right?
And so I take this mindset and I formalize it in this thing called nomological networks of cumulative evidence.
So he's taken this idea of doing science and he's formalized it and he's given it a new name.
And he's given it a new name.
It's basically gathering a bunch of evidence and forming a logically cohesive theory
and doing a good job of it.
But he's formalized it.
The example he takes is to try to argue
for the reality of sex differences in toy preferences.
He lays up a couple of sets of evidence
from developmental psychology
and comparative psychology and stuff,
which seemed to support the conclusion. Now, I actually don't know enough about that literature.
I looked into it a couple of years ago, so I can't say how accurate his claims are, but I'm
not believing anything that Gadsad editorializes for me. But I will say that there are legitimate ways where you can employ that.
For example, with evolution or any number of topics where when you have different lines,
independent lines of evidence pointing to the same conclusion that it increases your confidence
that that is true. It's perfectly reasonable to do that. There isn't an issue with that. There's
a word for it, triangulation. I don't take issue with that. What I take issue with is the way that Gansad practices it. And another
example he uses in relation to Islam and whether we can regard it as a religion which is peaceful
or warlike or so on, right? And what he describes there is more like cherry picking where you
take isolated facts and use those to create an argument and in those respects if you do that
if you take lots of evidence about how steel can burn about how many people reported discrepancies in videos that they've seen about the radar network
failing in some coastal, right?
You can take all these different mini factoids and produce a 9-11 trufer style argument,
which points to an illegitimate conclusion, right?
Same thing with intelligent design.
The way that he is presenting
that is different from the way he then employs it. And you picked out the example of Islam. So
that just played the clip of him using that to answer the question of whether Islam is peaceful
or not. I don't need to listen to noble prophet Barack Obama tell me that it is peaceful or not. I simply need to build a nomological network.
And if that nomological network says that Islam is peaceful, then we've proven that it's peaceful.
If it says otherwise, then we've proven otherwise.
So I don't need hysteria.
I don't need emotionality.
I don't need to trigger my affective system.
I simply go where the data tells me to go.
Does that give you a good sense
of how to get vaccinated against BS?
So the thing you notice here
is that it's one thing that's very in common
with a lot of gurus,
which they really hammer home
points that are pretty basic.
One version of this is just that he's saying,
you should do evidence-based reasoning
and due diligence. And he makes out that he's saying, you should do evidence-based reasoning and due diligence.
And he makes out that there's this whole array of enemies out there who are against this
controversial idea. And they also appropriate this pretty anodyne idea of doing evidence-based
research. They give it a name. They say that they are the flag bearers for it.
They say that they are the flag bearers for it.
And then they go ahead and apply it, not to random topics,
but to a whole bunch of culture war topics.
That's why I described it as destroying social justice worries with facts and logic.
And with this particular example of Islam, I mean,
you could just flip that around and go,
is Christianity a violent religion or not, Chris?
Well, let's see, shall we?
It's a stupid question to begin with. On top of that, I'm well aware from previous appearances
that he had with Sam Harris, for example, that part of his numerological network is based on
his personal anecdotal observances of people wearing the burqa in Toronto.
This is not specifically for him answering the violence question,
but when he was talking with Sam Harris,
he derived a lot of his argument from his kids' reaction
to seeing people in the burqa in Toronto and feeling unsafe.
What he's talking about here and claiming that he
does, it's not what he actually does, right? He takes anecdotes, he takes specific facts that
support a conclusion that he wants to arrive at and use that. This claim that he's this passionate
figure who doesn't begin with any conclusion and simply looks objectively at the facts until he reaches it it's completely contradicted by all of his other arguments and content which he clearly comes
across as somebody highly ideological highly motivated to find specific answers yeah just not
a dispassionate scholar in any sense of the world yeah I think that's the bit I find irritating,
which is that I'm not against people having strong political convictions,
one side or another, to take a related but different issue.
You could take someone who's very pro-Palestinian
and really, really strongly against Israel
and is making all those political rhetorical points,
or you could take an Israeli person that thinks they're all terrible and they're trying to destroy us and so on. That doesn't bother me that people have
strong ideological convictions, even if it's not necessarily healthy. But I think like you,
Chris, I get annoyed when they drape themselves in this cloak of scientific objectivity.
And they're doing, as you say, doing that cherry picking, doing that motivated reasoning, but pretending that they're doing science.
And it's just not, you know, doesn't matter what your political views are.
Another illustration of this point is that the extent to which a lot of Gad Saad's content, or at least his
arguments in these kind of interviews he does, rely on these anecdotes he provides about
his personal encounters that you might categorize falling within the genre of overhaired in coffee shops, where Gad illustrates things
that have happened to him and how, needless to say, he had the last laugh. He gives one of them
at the start of this podcast where he's talking about going out for dinner with an adherent of
postmodernism who was dating one of his students. I think it's worth
playing a couple of clips from this just to see what we're dealing with. So halfway through the
dinner, whenever it was, I said to her, so I hear you're a postmodernist. Yes, yes, I am.
So there are no universal truths. Absolutely not. So do you mind if I maybe offer
you some universal truths and then you can tell me how you think I might be wrong? She said, yes,
go ahead. Go for it. So is it a universal truth that within the human species, only women bear
children? Is that not a truth? Can we hang our hat on this one? She says, absolutely not. Oh, no?
we hang our hat on this one? She says, absolutely not. Oh, no? How so? Well, there is a tribe of some island in Japan where within the folkloric realm, within the spiritual realm, it is the men
who bear children. So by you restricting the conversation of bearing children to the physical
realm, this is how you keep us pregnant and barefoot in the kitchen he met the most stereotypical actually he met somebody that i would like to meet who
put their hand up and said yes i don't believe in objective truth it doesn't exist and
that like i'm not interested in that and i'm focused on the japanese tribe
that's interesting off the coast of Japan, but folklore tradition, interesting.
I'm a little suspicious as to whether or not it really happened.
And look, can we be sure that this anonymous interlocutor
wasn't trolling?
Maybe she was using ironic satire to troll Gad Saad.
A master satirist like Gad would have picked up on that matt
but there is some more evidence that actually i didn't consider that but if we take this anecdote
as actually referring to any reality then this next segment of the anecdote i think might buttress
your interpretation is it true since time immemorial that within the vantage of Earth, sailors have
relied on the premise that the sun rises in the east and sets in the west? Is that not a universal
truth? And then here she uses a subform of postmodernism called deconstructionism. Language
creates reality. So she says, well, what do you mean by East and West? Those are just arbitrary
labels. And what do you mean by the sun? That which you call the sun, I call dancing hyena,
to which I retorted, well, the dancing hyena rises in the East and sets in the West. I put on dancing
hyena lotion when I go to the Caribbean, so I don't get dancing hyena burn. To which she said, I don't play those label games.
Now that was an incredibly prescient story.
And then everybody stood up and clapped.
You destroyed her.
Really?
Someone in Canada said, I call the sun Dancing Hyena?
And no one ironically? To be honest, if I was having dinner with Gad said I might be tempted to say I'm gonna do this if I ever meet him just to annoy him yeah
no it's like but the problem is you'll become an eternal anecdote for him but like
right maybe he had a conversation with someone who was postmodern inclined.
Maybe.
But it definitely didn't happen like this unless the person was trolling him.
This is the most stereotypical human that would fit all the stereotypes.
And it feels so painfully obvious that this is not a real story.
It's a like illustrative parable it's like you're
at the beginning but it's actually less less subtle
yeah that's yeah so there's a lot of anecdotes like that in this. And we mentioned it before, but that's just an awful lot of... And then I said this on Twitter
and this...
Yeah.
I've got another one, Matt.
I've got another one.
You sound like you're ready
to hear another one.
Here you go.
Hit me with it.
Hit me with it.
This also really happened
exactly as described.
I was asked to appear
at a business school luncheon or whatever to give a talk on
how I am a better ally to women. Guess how that conversation went? I said, no, I'm not an ally
to women. I'm an ally to all individuals. I have been an ally to women. I have been an ally to women i have been an ally to men i have been to ally to
people who are purple who are white who are fat who are short i judge people based on the merits
of who they are so then i said but i'm willing to come and talk about evolutionary based sex
differences oh let us get back to you professor that they never got back to you i know for a fact
well they got back and said sorry we're going another direction not having did that happen chris chris williamson activate that big idw
brain you've got and just consider what's being described and is that a normal human interaction
what idiot administrator selected gad sad to give a presentation on
how to be a good ally to women did they not google him before that i've i've never had a
conversation even approximating that in my entire life and i'm pretty sure you haven't either like
i just don't believe he's having conversations like that.
If he is, Canada is a bloody, it's just a zone of...
I don't want to disparage the Canadians because I know it's not.
I know this world that he inhabits.
What is the more interesting question for me is,
given that these anecdotes are not as described,
they may relate to big things like you might have
been invited to luncheon and they said they decided to go a different direction but that's the
like all the other stuff feels really really editorialized but i'm wondering how much gad
sad knows that he's doing that thing making the details more exaggerated and the story more in line with
the point he wants to make does he know that that didn't happen or is his head such that like he is
a master satirist he doesn't have it this world where there's social justice post-modern people
who believe in dancing hyena rather than the sun and that's right and then he's
smacking he's smacking them down and talking about his commitment to truth and freedom and liberalism
just just in random conversations yeah okay we'll get on to something slightly more substantial
about this but there was this part matt and it's one of the purest illustrations of guru self-perception that I've heard.
So it's an anecdote which isn't really related to culture war stuff, which is astonishing
in this interview.
So there's a part where he's talking about how much he's committed to truth and freedom.
There are really two life ideals that drive who I am. One is truth and the second one is freedom.
Okay, so there we go. There's him saying that. His commitment to freedom extends not just to his culture war and his academic career, but to his sporting career as well. His commitment to freedom knows no bounds, Matt. And the anecdote he provided here
was just amazing. So let's hear that. But when I used to be a competitive soccer player,
I played the playmaker role, the number 10 role, where I just kind of float around.
Whenever I had a coach who would put restrictions on me, you're playing today more on in left midfield, and you have to
track back and cover somebody, suddenly my brain would explode, because you were removing what I
consider to be my greatest asset, which was to kind of look for spaces to freely roam around,
looking for those opportunities, right? So freedom is something that constantly comes up in my life,
whether it was when I was a soccer player,
when I'm deciding which topics to pursue as a scientific project.
He's got freedom just baked into him.
It's in his DNA.
He just cannot stand the thought of being unfree in any context.
He's so free, he'll fuck up a soccer game by refusing to heed his coach.
He's like, get back in the center, you freaking idiot.
I love freedom, coach.
I love freedom.
You know, he reminds me of like the little boys playing soccer.
My son plays soccer.
Below a certain age, they don't understand about positions.
And they're like a little flock, sort of like a little huddle following the ball around
and then they eventually learn to play positions and i'm imagining a team of gad sides just kind of
doing whatever they want i'm just i'm seeking out spaces coach i'm seeking out spaces like
god we're 10 they'll die and we we need you to be It's a silly point, but it's just like he's always the hero
in his own stories.
That never seems to bother him, that he's always the legend,
that I'm the guy they couldn't control.
I was just so out of the box.
Yeah, like this is the editorializing that's a constant amongst
all our gurus, and I'm just constantly amazed that people
just lap it up
it's the same it's like it's like trump and trump just his braggadocio thing and
the fact that at least some people think that's cool that's great like i just i just cannot wrap
my head around it he's clearly very influenced byaleb, a guru that we've covered before. And Taleb is fiend for
having a quite punchy, combative style, calling people morons and so on. Gadzad does this too.
You know, he does this online. He's in the mold of James Lindsay on Twitter. Even with Taleb,
where we listened to his content, it did feel performative at times,
right? That he was having to remind himself, I'm supposed to be Taleb.
And super macho and all that.
Yeah. So I need to throw in a few morons and stuff to make that clear. At least Taleb is the
originator there, right? He's famed for being that thin-skinned, arrogant asshole. But this is like a budget, secondhand version of someone doing an imitation of Taleb.
And you still get that feeling that he's trying to insert it to make it more controversial.
So there's a couple of examples of this, but let's listen to one of them.
So there's a couple of examples of this, but let's listen to one of them.
So one of the things that I find most galling when imbeciles argue against evolutionary psychology.
Sorry, I don't mean to say imbeciles.
That's not diplomatic.
People with a deferring opinion, also known as lobotomized idiots.
Morons.
Right.
So they will say things like, well, you know, evolutionary psychology, it's pseudoscience.
Yeah, you're a moron.
The mind didn't come from magic. It didn't arise through a magical cultural process.
Culture exists in its form because of biology, not instead of biology.
Socialization matters, but socialization is not something in lieu of biology. It's because of biology. Socialization matters, but socialization is not something in lieu of biology.
It's because of biology. Well, I mean, look, I know you played that to illustrate him being
essentially a budget form of Nassim Taleb, which he absolutely is. But I just want to mention that
it also illustrates the point I made before, which is that he's fundamentally making a pretty uncontroversial point
that the mind isn't magic.
There is a biological substrate to the mind.
Yes, culture is like a layer that sits on top of that.
He may be exaggerating a little bit or downplaying the influence of culture,
but at heart, it's nothing particularly like not not many
people disagree with that but he just sets it up as it being this brave intellectual position that
i'm look i'm gonna take a stance for him at my first maybe of this episode the second part of
that clip i kept it in because i wanted to highlight that he actually can construct, like you said, it's a fairly mundane point, but it's a relatively valid one.
Culture and biology are not completely independent things.
Culture is impacted by biology and vice versa, right?
Culture doesn't exist without people which came through a process of evolution and so on.
Don't need to really get it because dual inheritance models, as we've discussed,
are the dominant view in modern evolutionary and cultural evolutionary fields.
And psychology, for that matter.
Yeah.
The first half of it with the morons and imbeciles and all that,
I don't want to agree with him on the second half because the first half is it with the morons and imbeciles and and all that like i don't want to agree with
him on the second half because the first half is just so annoying i feel dirty agreeing with a
general point that he might make because he wraps it up in this layer of self-aggrandizing culture
war bullshit that makes it if he does have something worthwhile to say about evolution and psychology and
consumption and so on he's got it buried under so much of his persona and the culture war it
actually degrades the points that he wants to make it doesn't buttress them yeah now that's my
instinct as well like he says an awful lot of things that are pretty uncontroversial even the stuff i'm not totally sure about is probably true like for instance that young boys and young girls
probably do have some mean differences in toy preferences there are sex differences in behaviors
in behaviors and preferences and so on we can argue about how large they are or how relevant
they are or whatever there's a bunch of pretty basic points that he makes.
But one, it irritates me because he makes out that he's this lone figure
presenting this view against an army of ideological terrorists
and academia when it's just the standard view in my part
of the social sciences anyway.
And the second thing is also that sort of forced
macho persona and the morons and the imbeciles we'll probably hear more examples of that
and yeah and because he links all of those points to culture war political ends it makes me want to
disagree with him it makes me yeah to speak to that the presentation of himself and
others like him as the kind of lone warriors standing up so here's a clip that speaks
explicitly to that point the silent majority hates the stuff okay i know this because I receive a million emails a day from all professors who are too afraid to speak.
And they say, thank you.
You're my only ticket to sanity.
So I know that 99% of people are against this stuff, except that each of the 99% is too afraid to speak up.
So it is left on three, four, five people to carry the burden for everyone else.
The day that people find their testicles, whether they're males or female, and actually activate their testicular fortitude and speak out and say, enough of this.
I wanted to mention that as well, because he falls for the same sampling issue that Lindsay does on so many people. people actually agree with you except where you're taking
a stance where it's fairly mundane and actually there isn't a huge amount the controversy so
i agree with the people who say that the extremes of the left and the right are the extremes and
they don't represent the majority position right this isn't strange because as we've said we're
center left people so this is self-serving view, you're not implying that they're right or wrong,
just that there's like a like a bell curve of opinion. And yeah, I'm just noting that this
isn't a controversial opinion for me to stick out because it simply says that people in the middle
are in the majority, which they are obviously, because the extremes are extreme. The notion that you can rely
on your inbox as a proportional sample of sentiment, it's so wrong. They all make this
mistake. I'm not saying you can't detect trends from what people tell you, but the way they
extrapolate from there, they're not good social scientists because they never seem to consider the sampling bias. Yeah, it reminds me of that wonderful character who believed that owls were
holograms that were actually projections created by aliens. When you saw an owl, it was probably
actually like a weird interdimensional hologram created by aliens to conceal their present in order to
investigate this he put out a request on his ufo whatever platforms and got all of these responses
all of these people going yes you know now you mentioned it when i did see that out something
something weird did happen he it's the same thing chris this i haven't
heard that though it does sound a lot like the hitchhiker's guide the mice isn't it mice are just
the thing which is visually represented in our universe from these trans-dimensional actually
yeah the mice are but i'm not going senile i'm not conflating with the hitchhiker's guide to the
galaxy with the thing that actually happened look Look, it's a real anecdote. Everybody came in and clapped.
I really just, yes, Andy knew,
but I have to mention it
because it struck me as well.
There was a researcher who I like
who was doing research on reptiles
and crocodiles and their sociality.
And he wanted to get,
he basically wants to argue
that they're more social than people claim.
And he did the same thing which you suggested, which was he canvassed researchers of like crocodiles for instances of cooperative hunting.
And he received many instances.
And then he published a paper about it.
And when I was reading the paper, it was interesting, but it was was also like but this is the exact way to collect anecdotes and and the examples were all they're things that if those abilities exist in crocodiles it would be much more scary because it's things like a crocodile
scaring a pig so it runs down and another crocodile jumps out and gets it right and then if they can plan like that we are and secondly that could also just be
individual one crocodile tried to eat a pig and it happened to run down the thing and then the
other crocodiles were there yeah of course and you know that crocodile researchers have considered
this but like obviously there's some examples where they they find that it was plausible i
don't think you can take from that that crocodiles can engage in cooperative hunting.
You should remain skeptical.
Given that I live in an area
where we have like four meter crocodiles,
I'm fucking glad to hear that, Chris.
Oh, what's that?
Look, there's some nice barbecued shrimp there
just beside the lake.
The crocodiles are trying to lure me out.
They've prepared some shrimp to lure me out. They've prepared
some shrimp to lure me
into the river. Pongs thrown around the
edge of the pool. Oh, that's
interesting. Just one crocodile
watching across the way. Wait for it, lads.
Wait for it.
I'd prefer to talk about crocodiles
and get fed, but we have a job
to do, Chris. We do have a job.
We can't stay with
the morons and idiots for so on and let me see my is i feel like we have to play at least one
more clip of him being a budget talent before we escape this point i can't remember if this is one
i played or not let's see but for example when in the pursuit of trans activism, you negate biological realities that the average three-day-old newborn pigeon knows, then that becomes a problem.
Yeah, I just wanted that for the three-day-old newborn pigeon gag, which comes up repeatedly.
He does actually explicitly mention Taleb, and he highlights how important it is and how significant that he's friends with Taleb.
Nassim and I are very good friends for several reasons, one of which, at least if I can speak for him, in terms of, you know, I always joke that Nassim thinks 99% of humanity are useless cretins that should be killed because they're imbeciles beyond redemption.
And that I am one of the few who makes it into his-
You're in the cut, you're in the 1%.
I'm really in like, I think getting the approval of Nassim
might be bigger than a Nobel Prize.
Kind of one of the cute things about Gadzad is he kind of wears a lot of these things on his sleeve.
He almost is quite upfront about the fact that he's imitating Nassim in this respect.
Yeah, and how needy he is for approval.
I don't think that he's entirely intending to be so transparent but
it is at the same time chris williamson doesn't pick up on it no maybe he's just like oh that's
great nasim loves you so you know geniuses recognize geniuses yeah chris williamson i
don't want to sound like a snob but you know he is a reality TV show participant and a male model.
So, you know, maybe he's not the best barometer.
Identity politics, Mark. Identity politics. Judge people by their arguments and what they do.
That was bad of me. I apologize. I'm sorry.
That was below the belt.
Below the belt.
Okay, this is the last reference to Nassim Taleb, and then we'll escape this belabored point.
And linking back to what you just said to Nassim and I, our friendship, we're both direct talkers, right?
We're both no BS.
Therefore, we can see what Trump is.
It's not as though we're simpletons who don't understand that he's got certain qualities.
Predilections, yeah, yeah.
Exactly.
Yeah, this is, look, I want to pick up on this.
We've got more clips about the Donald Trump links because...
Oh, yes.
This seems as good a time as any to move to the Trump apologetics.
Okay, I won't say too much now, but yeah, we're starting to get into it
where it's a familiar thread here, which is that these apologists,
it where it's a familiar thread here, which is that these apologists, nominally liberal,
nominally centrist apologists for just the shit show that was Donald Trump's presidency,
and who were hoping that he would be reelected, they would always frame it as, yes, we know what Trump is, we understand, but we can see beyond his boorish whatever
and his persona and all of these liberals
who are just terribly triggered by this brusque personality
just can't see beyond that and have got Trump derangement syndrome.
That was the galaxy brain take.
I just saw ad nauseum.
Yeah, there's a lot of this.
This comes at the end of the interview. And Gadsad
predicts that Trump is going to win the election. And that's wrong. But you can get election
predictions wrong for various reasons. But there's, there's more issues here. And they fall
in line with a lot of the things that we identified with Scott Adams. So here's, here's an early,
a lot of the things that we identified with Scott Adams. So here's an early, even before we get into the issue of like Trump's unique characteristics and how Gad Saad interprets them. But listen to
this and see if it rings any bells. So at the start of the, so before COVID, I would have said
it's 95% sure that he would win. With COVID and all of the imbeciles that now say,
well, look, the deaths, it's Trump, right? This is like your aunt got diabetes during Trump. Well,
there's really only one conclusion. It must be that Trump caused her diabetes because, brah,
it's during his presidency, right? An Amazonian frog just died in the Amazon. It is during Trump's presidency. So how could you not see the link, moron? Right. So because most people have the cognitive abilities of a newborn pigeon, they are regrettably all placing the blame on Trump.
appearance again here, but the other point I wanted to emphasize is this is from the Scott Adams School of Thought, where holding Trump responsible for anything that happens
during his administration is unfair and non-sequitur. But the flip never applies
when in regards to Obama or Biden or the Democrats. You can criticize Trump's handling
of the pandemic because he universally did things badly, argued it's not serious,
promoted misinformation about treatments and so on. So whether or not he's entirely responsible,
nobody's, I think, reasonable is arguing that.
Yes, any president could have to deal with a pandemic.
But the notion that it doesn't matter if it's Trump or Biden or whoever.
No, it does.
Look what Biden has done since he came in.
That's a completely different response.
Well, that's the really annoying thing about this.
Nobody's saying that Trump's responsible for the death of some particular tree frog or something.
People were saying that he totally mismanaged the pandemic, which he did.
This running defense, so Gad Saad and people like him frame it as liberals with their Trump derangement syndrome, just want to blame him for everything.
Why don't they just admit that they're MAGA bleeding bleeding edge right wing people, because that's what they do. Totally partisan for him. But
the irritating thing is that it's just, no, no, they're being super rational. And what they're
doing is they're noticing these mind viruses that are existing in the brains of liberals that
cause them to blame Trump for everything. So you mentioned about people refusing to admit
when they're actually quite obviously in support of Trump
or at the very least issuing apologetics for him.
I think Chris Williamson engages in this quite obviously.
So here is him first making the point about
he doesn't have a horse in the race.
It's so interesting, man, especially as a Brit.
I don't have a dog in this fight.
I mean, I don't want the world to break,
but I have no preference.
And yet, I can totally see how people get confused by that.
But the bottom line for me is that,
yeah, Trump is uncouth and he's simple in a way, but that simpleness belies honesty.
Okay, so hold on, Matt. Hold your tongue for a second.
I know you want to respond to how he framed that, but listen to...
So he said who wins, he doesn't have strong feelings one way or the other.
Now listen to this bit.
Yeah.
So you're saying what would happen if he were to win?
No, I just think that if it happens and he does win
after every weapon under the sun that has been picked out
by mainstream media and individuals and movement groups
and stuff like that, I think it's a stark message
about just how wrong the Democrat messaging,
the left messaging generally is at the moment,
and how much it doesn't resonate with the normal people,
not the people that live on Twitter.
Hmm.
So this was the lessons to be taken from Trump's victory.
So I bet they did some real soul-searching after the big loss.
Yeah.
By that logic, that would suggest that actually Biden's victory suggests that maybe Chris
and Gad are wrong and that the public were fed up with Trump and that even despite the
hardcore social justice equity for all and wokeness as the curriculum, people were still
willing to vote for a geriatric man to get rid of Trump. So maybe that speaks to the sentiment
that they don't appreciate surrounding Trump. Yeah, the thing that really rubbed me the wrong
way was the implication that underlying the veneer of Trump's apparent lying lies a deep
sea of honesty. Like, no. The only kind way to put that is that they're saying that he is what
he appears to be, like a narcissistic idiot. Liar.
Yeah, liar. But that's not what they mean. They mean that he's honest
about his policy interests and he speaks what's on his mind and heart. No, he's a manipulative.
He even tells you that he is just saying things that he's been told to say, but they act as if
there's a deep wellspring of like a commitment to truth within him.
And it isn't.
There just isn't.
He's a famous liar.
Yeah.
And he's no friend of liberalism, which Gad Saad promotes himself as being the flag bearer for.
It's inconsistent, Chris, is what I'm saying.
Inconsistent.
Let's hear Gad Saad explain why he doesn't support Trump, just why he may carry water for him.
But, you know, Professor, I look up to you.
How could you support a maniac like Trump?
First of all, there's a difference between the positions that I take and supporting Trump.
I always say that I don't have posters of Trump, which my wife and I use in the bedroom as foreplay.
posters of Trump, which my wife and I use in the bedroom as foreplay, right? So the fact that I explain why Trump is a very viable option doesn't mean that I'm a pro-Trump guy. I understand that
he's brash and he's vulgar and he's non-presidential. But as I explained recently in a clip,
a sad truth clip, there is an expression that I bring from Arabic that basically says to
get drunk by smelling the cork of the wine bottle. That's the first part of his argument.
You know how you can tell you're a Trump apologist when the most disparaging word you
can use to describe him is brash, uncouth. It's so annoying to hear you know scott adams did a
similar thing where they editorialize as if the it's just an aesthetic this taste that people have
for the way that he presented those ideas but his ideas fundamentally weren't they weren't that bad
and like no it's both right it's that he's a boorish, lying, idiot narcissist,
and that the ideas that he championed were xenophobic, nationalist.
And he was incompetent on top of those two things.
Yeah.
So it's like the perfect trifecta.
And listen to the venom with which he addresses Obama in comparison.
Now, do you understand the analogy here?
That means that it takes very little to get me drunk
because I'm a moron, because I'm a lightweight, right?
So here's what most people do,
including some of my very highfalutin, highbrow, cerebral friends.
Trump is vulgar.
He speaks in a brash way. He's cantankerous. He's brazenly boastful.
Therefore, he attacks my sense of aesthetics. This is what I call an aesthetic injury, right?
But now look, you see, I'm getting drunk. You see, on the other hand, Obama, he's lanky. He's tall. He's majestic.
He's got a radiant smile. I'm getting more drunk by the second. You see, I'm getting a bit wobbly,
right? He's got a mellifluous voice. Oh, my God, I'm getting drunk. He's presidential. Now,
what Obama says is utter garbage. It's rehearsed, platitudinous, vacuous bullshit.
Okay?
If anything, the semantics of what Trump might say
might actually be much more substantive.
But Trump is vulgar and disgusting.
He repulses me.
Therefore, he is a monster, right?
It's just such a straw man.
The thing that upsets me about it is how it's presented as,
look at me seeing through the matrix, right?
Like diagnosing what the real objections are.
Diagnose yourself, you moron.
You pigeon-brained fool.
You're just making excuses for somebody that you're invested in. And nobody was under illusions
at the end of Obama's administration that he had feelings and that a lot of the hopes that they had didn't materialize.
There was plenty of criticism of Obama.
He was not given a free pass.
No.
He's not given a free pass now.
Absolutely not.
And the Democrats in the United States have shown a total willingness to vote for people
that are not as mellifluous or as lanky or as handsome as Obama.
You know, it's Biden.
It's stupid.
And, yeah, so that's what I hate.
It's very Scott Adams, this galaxy-brained rationalization
of just straight-up right-wing partisan politics.
And they just don't have the guts to admit that they're just
straight-up political...
Partisans.
Partisans and perhaps even reactionaries.
Like, I am a liberal and you are too.
I like liberalism.
It's great.
And so I like freedom.
Freedom's good.
Yeah.
And the way that Gad said, just that's what he calls himself.
Yet he's not.
You know, if you're supporting supporting trump then you're not someone
who is in favor of those things yeah so like the last last tip on this topic and then we'll get out
of the cesspool that is trump apologetics but here is gadsad talking about why he feels an affinity
to trump and i think this is actually, but not in the way that he
intends it to be. Obama was as much of a narcissist, but I didn't succumb to the cork because I see
through his bullshit. You know what I'm saying? And I think regrettably, most of my highfalutin
colleagues are unable to see this because they come from a rarefied world where you speak. I can speak as fancily
and probably 10 times more fancily than all of them combined, but I can also say bullshit,
right? And that's why I say I'm the professor of the people. So I can connect with Trump on his
level. I get what he's doing. He's a buffoon in a style sense, but the content of what he says, he is against
open immigration. He cares more about radical Islam. The professor of the people. Yeah. Yeah.
So I think you're right there, Chris. I think he has revealed a little bit of truth there. And he
does feel an affinity for Trump because he has a fair bit in common with him. Yeah. And I think a lot of our gurus do.
Trump is probably the archetypal guru.
So one of the things about self-aggrandizing,
attention-seeking narcissists is they, in fact,
this is true of anybody who is on the spectrum
of having some kind of personality disorder,
is one of their blind spots is that they have to, because they're humans, all of us do this,
they apply their model of themselves. They use themselves as a model to understand other people.
Yeah, this is what we all do, right? It's a fundamental truth about people in terms of
understanding someone else's motivations. It's agent-based reasoning. We think, well,
what would I be thinking or doing in that situation
all right i'd be wanting to do that right and that's how we attribute motives so one of the
flaws about narcissists is that they apply their own motives and their own explanations for their
own behavior to other people and often they're totally wrong because they're not normal they're
not they're not they're not typical people they have a personality disorder or at least they're totally wrong because they're not normal. They're not typical people.
They have a personality disorder, or at least they're on the spectrum of having one.
And so they often mistake other people's motivations in assuming that they're the same as their own.
Yeah, I think you're spot on.
And it's something I often find when I hear the gurus analyze how other people think.
gurus analyze how other people think that it just doesn't ring true to me what they describe especially when they're projecting negative things onto everyone does this and you're like
don't do that you know so yeah but this comes up so often with these kind of figures and like
i just feel if you want to be a trump apologist if
you want to be a trump supporter and you're in the model that god is then have the balls to admit
where you lie politically and who you support don't hide behind this like claim that it's the
people that don't get you or they're focused. No, you like a right-wing populist because you share his views.
So have the balls, Pigeon Brian.
That's right.
I can respect that.
I'm not one of these people that hates everyone on the other side of the aisle of politics.
I can imagine that if you're a religious Christian, if you love guns, very conservative, all that stuff, right, then you will hold your nose and be a total partisan in favor of Trump.
And you could be those things without being like a deeply horrible person.
In fact, I know people that are way on the right side of politics, and it's an obvious point, but they're not terrible, right?
Their politics might be terrible, but they...
Yeah, that's right.
I might disagree with all their things, but they're not...
They don't necessarily irritate me, is what I'm saying.
Yeah.
People, like Gad said, who won't even admit that that's...
Where they are.
Where they are.
I mean, come on.
Just, I mean...
I know.
It's not hard.
It's not hard to see.
And Chris Williamson as well I feel he
I'm not playing a lot of clips of him but this fiend lack of interest in the way that the
mainstream media is all against Trump I'm just interested in ideas and sense making and yeah
and actually I think it's a good time to turn to this is actually a slightly positive segment when it
comes to god because he he actually pulls back from some of the attempts to invite galaxy brain
reasoning that chris suggests at least to a certain extent so uh let's let's hear the first of these
how much do you think that the shifts in sexual norms and sexual marketplace, like
less monogamy and Tinder and gender imbalance
on campuses and incels and so on,
has contributed to the current social unrest
among young people?
Any specific area
of society?
The fact that we're so
ready to riot and
loot and also be very vociferous online when we don't have anything to back it up.
It just seems like there's a lot of unrest among young people.
Is it the fact that they're not getting laid?
Well, I don't know if I can tie the incel phenomenon to the chaos that we see.
I think it's a bit of a, I like to be very tight.
I'd like to have my nomological network exactly tight
before I pronounce it.
Well, I have to give respect to Gad right there
because he was offered the opportunity for a hot take,
which would have been stupid, and he politely demurred.
Well done.
Well, he did, but he does, he's kind of forced
by the situation to say, but, you know, if you ask me the spitball, right, and the, but I did appreciate that.
And I think this is a good illustration that when Chris Williamson or other interviewers of his age, when they try to present themselves as like relatively neutral people that don't have a horse in the race. It's not true, right? They have these ideas. His idea there is that modern feminists and
trans activists and now that sex has decreased, that people are just getting frustrated in their
homes. And that's what's leading to the riots about racial justice or whatever it's kind of a fairly
transparent attempt to disparage that as like a a silly movement just caused by sexual frustration
yeah it's a pretty familiar theme isn't it that the left-wing protesters or activists have some
kind of mental disorder, and then perhaps
diagnosing that with some recourse to science, like evolutionary psychology.
Yeah, they just need to get laid.
I think that Gad Saad's claim that he likes to wait until he has all of the data in and
tightly organized before he makes any claims.
I'm not sure how well that holds up in general, but like you say, I do appreciate it
at this particular point. And there's actually another point when a similar thing happens.
So here's another example. I was going to say, so evolutionary science, would it say sexual
inequality is as powerful of an explanation for rage as economic inequality, say?
Well, it depends what you mean by sexual inequality i mean you see what i mean so imbalance yeah exactly there are different currencies you could use
right so yeah i mean so this line of questioning there is is not good because this is speaking to
that men's rights sort of incel talking point that a few men, they're getting access to too many women
and we need to go to some more traditionalist thing
where each man is guaranteed sex and that's important.
Jordan Peterson enforced monogamy kind of comments.
Yes, it is along those lines.
Semi-impressive is that gad sad attempts to
be more rigorous right he's he's like well what do you mean by sexual imbalance or sexual inequality
and he then does go on to talk about societies where you have excess of unmarried young males and the harm that that can do.
Excess of low status males without access to wives or means of gaining status, which is, I think, a relatively well-established area of research historically as well.
But without focusing on that particular area, I think it's just a nice illustration.
The cat's head maybe does have within him
the ability to be academic
and focus on measurement
or that kind of thing.
And he has produced work.
So I think there's a slight difference
between, say, him and Chris William williamson right that comes across from this
this kind of clip yeah chris's is worse gad's that is able to recognize that during a direct
link between tinder type dating behavior and street protests is is silly yet yet Chris is pretty keen on that point.
And, you know, Matt, we've done our own disservice to the world of metaphors
and analogies and parables in this episode.
But just to make you feel better, I thought I'd give some examples.
You know, we illustrated how Jordan Peterson and other people are masters in this domain.
But here's some examples of why Chris Williamson
might not be exactly on par with them.
I don't know whether you've played,
you almost certainly won't have done,
but Call of Duty Warzone is super popular at the moment
and my housemate plays it.
And you get to choose like a preference
of a loadout of your different weapons and you can have like this automatic
rifle and this knife and this gun or whatever and it definitely feels like satire is like the go-to
primary weapon for you absolutely it's like that's the one that you get that's the first gun that you
pick up and then maybe there'll be a little bit of this and a little bit of that.
It's a good metaphor.
It's a good metaphor.
You know, it's like, it's like, it's like pointer strike.
You pick your weapon.
Yeah. No, look, if Gadzad was a first person shooter player,
he'd have satire on like a hotkey.
Like it'd be F1.
Yeah.
He'd just spell switch to it.
Like, like real quick. Like someone comes around the corner, boom, satire on like a hotkey like it'd be f1 yeah to dispel switch to it like like real quick like
someone comes around the corner boom satire have you seen the new version of jumanji
no no i have not instead of a board game computer game setting and each of the characters like
brings up their profiles and it says strengths and weaknesses like, in the same way, if God said his strength would be satire, irony,
cutting sarcasm, and weakness might be ego and fragility. Yeah, I just love that, you know,
there was a long way to go for that metaphor just to say, you're good at satire yeah yeah that's right yeah
well thanks chris that's making me feel better about my i've got another one that and like most
of the references chris uses it's tied into modern culture gaming culture tech all this it's up to
date matt so might be a bit hard for us to follow but let's see if we can keep up with this.
It does seem like postmodernism is the source code that's underwritten everything.
And then what you've got on top of that are some apps.
So very nice, nice way of putting it.
Yes.
Yeah.
So you have the particular operating system that's postmodernism.
And then you have, give us some of the apps.
What are some of the apps that people have downloaded onto their social justice phone the app metaphor has been used it's some
might say it's been overused but like i just i just i kind of appreciate the the beauty of that
like the social justice phone running the operating system of post-modernism what kind of apps like what a question what a wonderful question
for i wish someone would ask me those kind of questions i think i liked it a little bit better
than the call of duty analogy but yes well you know horses for courses poor chris we'll have to
leave him there suffice to say that he's gaining in popularity in this space or like on YouTube.
So, you know, he has interviews with the people that you would expect.
Sargon of Akkad and Gadzad and so on.
It will be depressing if he becomes a more prominent figure in this space.
Everyone we mentioned, it turns out a couple of months later, they're doing crossovers or appearances at Donald Trump's family convention or whatever. So
I'm just awaiting Chris Williamson and J.P. Sears appearing at Jordan Peterson's next
main event or something like that. So dad's sad. Now, one other thing that he does in this, which I think is pretty common,
he denounces the practice of engaging in identity politics that the left is prone to,
focusing on the characteristics that someone has over what they're actually saying. But then,
as with many people who make that point, he then goes on to say this.
When you're constantly whining, when you simply don't know what else there is in the world, right?
That is frustrating to those who have lived that, right?
So Ayaan Hirsi Ali, do you know who that is?
Yeah.
So Ayaan Hirsi Ali should be someone that people seriously listen to because she's lived Islam.
And yet she is a Hitler bigot who is an Islamophobe.
I mean, if a black woman from Somalia who is an ex-Muslim is somebody that doesn't carry the right identity markers to speak about Islam, then we're lost.
about Islam, then we're lost. I hate that you can denounce the relevance of identity earlier in an interview, and then you can completely lean into it to support another position.
I actually think there's an argument to be made. We should weigh things by the relevant experience
or the broader awareness that people have of global trends
or that kind of thing.
It's fine.
Where did Ariane Hersey-Alley grow up?
Somalia.
Yeah, and underwent like female genital mutilation
and escaped an arranged marriage.
So definitely has undergone genuine trials and tribulations
so and she sort of so she sort of speaks out about islam a bit like since sam harris kind
of mold is that exactly and she's leaned maybe more towards the right wing and i think lean
towards it might be putting it mildly since she arrived in the West. Yeah, but identity politics, not okay, except when it is, right?
Yeah, I take that point.
Yeah.
Fair enough.
A common occurrence, I think, in the intellectual dark web sphere.
So usually, you know, we try to say some nice things about the people that we are generally negative about.
And with God's side, I will say that I think if you follow simply what he claims he's making a defense of, for example, that non-logical networks of cumulative evidence or whatever, right? Like simply saying that you
should triangulate sources of evidence and avoid making conclusions until you've looked into the
topic in depth. Yeah, I agree. And that the left might have a knee-jerk negative reaction to anything involving evolutionary psychology or biological explanations for things related to human behavior.
Sure. I think if you take aspects of his argument outside of what he does with them, that the basic points can be fine to endorse.
And it is true that in the same way as Brett Weinstein does, or other people in these spheres,
when he's summarizing research, he's not always doing it badly, right?
He can summarize points.
He can talk about the scientific method and stuff in a coherent fashion.
And I will say that there is one point during the episode where Chris Williamson asks him about sharing more topless photos on his Twitter account.
And he seems to show a genuine moment of self-deprecating humor, saying that that would be a horror show, a crime against humanity, unless he was sharing photos from his 20s or 30s. And I was just like, oh, that's nice.
He didn't slip into the reflexive self-aggrandizement.
think if he dropped the culture warship and he dropped this need to be a budget talib a kind of shit poster and the needy personality he might actually have something at least a take that
could be worth hearing but if everything that he does is so laced with that that that's essentially
90 percent of what his output is my backhanded compliment is that he does is so laced with that, that that's essentially 90% of what his output is.
My backhanded compliment is that he could have something worthwhile to say.
I think he has had something worthwhile to say, and he said it.
He's been a professor at Concordia University and a researcher for many years, and I respect
his research on the evolutionary basis of consumption.
I think that's good stuff.
I haven't read it, but I know the area, right?
Let's clarify the matter.
I think rather than get yourself into a replication crisis pragma,
you respect that field of research rather than because you don't know his particular studies.
That's right so i'm
not commenting on the robustness or whatever of the specific studies it's a very niche area of
research and like i know enough about what he's done on it the basic theses and so on like looking
into why you know why certain kinds of young men are all into buying ferraris and and all about
ostentatious displays of wealth.
Like it's genuinely interesting evolutionary reasons there.
But I have a question on that, Matt, because just to clarify that, like I agree, you know,
Leonardo DiCaprio wearing a watch and like, why do people want to buy that?
Right.
There's evolutionary psychology, I think, that plays into that with high status individuals and the desire to imitate them but how do you feel about say his research
that when women are particularly in a fertile period that they will focus on buying beauty products over buying food.
Does that stuff strike you as good?
You know, basically so?
No, that doesn't strike me as good, that particular one, no.
So the premise of Gadzad's specific article there
was that women would be trying to make themselves more attractive
during the times of the month in which they were fertile.
Of course, human beings are a species which don't sort of display fertility overtly.
But that doesn't make any sense to me because for a woman, the challenge is not to get a man to have sex with you.
And they only need to have someone to have sex with
them just a few times in their entire life and that'll be enough sex right in order to
get what you need in order to have children whereas the the priorities for that's in terms
of just game theory whatever men have got a couple playing a completely different game
so it doesn't seem to make any sense to me that the thesis behind that little study that they did but look that's a very that's
really getting to the weeds a very specific paper which i don't think is good but just the more
general premise right which is the way that economic consumption is tied to social status
signaling like an awful lot of modern consumption is about that, keeping up
with the Joneses and so on. And men and women do it. And even though the patterns are slightly
different, it is interesting. And yeah, so I actually respect his academic background. And
like you, looking like the vibe I get from him, and I had to have a look at his Twitter feed and
stuff. And it's a lot of it is pretty genial and good-natured,
like interspersed with the culture war shenanigans.
As you say, there's some kind of self-effacing humour
and just good vibes.
Obviously, if you criticised him in some way,
he'd straightaway try to channel Taleb and be the tough guy.
But it does feel like a bit of an act with him and a bit of an
act a bit of an act a real act that evolutionary consumption stuff that I referred to is from back
in 2007 and his most recent book the parasitic mind which is just looks like just a pure culture war scrawl is from just 2020.
On a sort of gut level, I don't dislike him that much
because he's got that traditionalist uncle,
politically incorrect, conservative sensibilities, fine, sure.
He doesn't feel like a dyed-in-the-wool culture warrior he's trying to be one with
not a great deal of success i agree on the not great deal of success but i i think i
regard him as being a bit more malignant because he doesn't strike me as someone massively far from the Scott Adams school of engagement. I think his politics
is now the dominating force in his rhetoric and that the evil psych stuff is, although he shows
some signals of being hesitant to go too far in that direction,
he's right at home chatting with Dave Rubin and Michael Malice or whatever
about the crazy social justice warriors and defending Trump from whatever criticisms may come.
So I regard him, I think, as a bit more malignant than you do but it i think it's
one of these cases where you it basically if you don't pay attention to him he just you know is
trotting along in the background being a self-aggrandizing buffoon but i think it's a bit
like you know eric weinstein or someone the more attention that you pay the more malignant that you might find the output that's just my hunch i haven't paid that
much attention to his material so i can't say that for sure but it's a hunch that i have yeah i guess
i guess i was just saying something similar to yourself which is the feeling i guess it does
it's almost like it doesn't have to be.
He's kind of chosen to be.
It doesn't feel like he needs to be like this.
It feels like this is a persona that he's adopted and now. I think the personality flaws are just a core part of the personality.
So the character that comes out,
like how much of it is a character versus
how much of it reflects his insecurities and whatever that's like for a psychiatrist
to uncover it does feel very artificial it does i mean look i just i saw on his twitter feed that
he's quite proud that his book the parasitic mind is number one in the civil rights category
on amazon which is a little bit funny in itself,
beating How to Be an Anti-Racist by Ibrahim X. Kendi,
that number three.
I suspect he's selling more copies of The Parasitic Mind
than The Consuming Instinct.
The impression I get from that prior book is it may have had
some political overtones, but I don't think they were that strong.
have had some political overtones but i don't think it was they were that strong he's he's definitely aware that he will achieve a much higher profile much more easily by going down
that route yeah he knows where his bread is buttered he's not a victim right like he's a
willing participant in the the partisanship that he slipped into. And look, of course, he's comfortable with it because he's, I don't doubt for a minute
that he in his core, he's a politically incorrect, old fashioned, grumpy, conservative in the
vein of your unacceptable uncle sort of thing.
But he doesn't seem mad.
He seems like someone who's like that that who's chosen to lean into it yeah i think fair to say
that neither of us are fans of of god and giving him attention feels like doing what he wants
it makes you feel unclean in a way because any attention just seems like it will feed him like he's that kind of plant
from little shop of horrors to use my own stretch metaphor like feed me see more attention attention
i don't think he's a top tier culture war figure infamously was very upset when barry weiss
left them out of the idw article but i think that's his lot in life to be kind of forgotten
that he's a member of the idw or the politically incorrect sphere or whatever he's a legend in his
own mind much more than he is in the general cultural ecosystem well to make my own labored
analogy i feel like characters like that side and there's
to be a few others amongst our gurus the ones who chose this path that had a choice at some point and
didn't need to it it reminds me of you know in lord of the rings where uh galadriel is offered
the ring of power and she she puts it aside and goes to go into the West and lose her powers and disappear or whatever and fade away.
I'm not saying Gadsad is Galadriel, but I think there's a similar narrative in terms of being a respectable professor, doing some respectable work, being completely, well, not completely, but having a low profile and not getting the attention.
And you could keep doing that and then fade away like we all do.
Or you could choose to grasp the rig of power, Chris.
So he's kind of more of a, he ended up more of a Saruman type character, I think.
Well, he would like that comparison, I'm sure,
because that's a major figure in the book, I think.
But no, no, Chris, it works because Saruman is kind of a failed,
like second tier villain. Doesn't really compare to Sorin. Yeah, yeah, Chris, it works because Saruman is kind of a failed, like, second-tier villain.
It doesn't really compare to Sauron.
Yeah, yeah, I get it.
He's still, you know, like an evil wizard.
So, okay, I much prefer comparisons to second-level enemies
from the Turtles, the brother that figures from epic fantasy but yeah sure he's
sauromon they there's superficial comparisons but superficial similarities yes thank you
don't make me tell you another parable chris yeah okay so that's it for you dad we're done we've washed our hands with you for this week and you're off
into the dustbin of gurus yep hope he listens hope you enjoyed it because i don't think we'll
be returning to him i think no we'll be moving on i don't think so either To turn now to other matters that we usually address at the end of the podcast,
before we go to our Patreon shoutouts, which I've actually organized and have the correct list
in the correct order, Matt. So we won't be repeating any names or giving people random roulette style shout outs.
This will be precise.
It's a technical exercise in shouting out people who deserve it.
Before that, I have some reviews to reference.
And we got one review.
It's, you know, normally I take a bad one and a good one.
And I've got a good bad one but the good one
it's actually got pretty neat critical feedback so it's like a good review but with a barb in the
tail so i'll maybe i'll start with a serious one and then get to the the negative one. So this one says big blind spot legal, colon legal. So give you an idea
about the point. And it's four out of five though, Matt, even with that big blind spot. So we only
got one star reduced for that. DTG comes on to the IDW scene, providing much needed reality check
on bad science flourishing outside the peer review process. Being ethnically Irish and Japanese,
my subjective favorable bias is towards Chris,
an Irish Oxford postdoc in Japan.
Matt is more established in his academic career
as a professor in Australia.
I don't know why they need to have those details.
And it goes on.
It could be because I keep implying it.
By way of a cursory search, both Matt and Chris have a good number of publications
in respected peer-reviewed journals.
Matt seems more quants with Chris leaning more qualitative.
I feel like I'm getting assessed here for a tenure application.
There's no shame in being compared to me
and coming out wanting, Chris.
Don't let it bother you.
But go on, go on.
Your quant skills leave me in the dust.
The good.
DTG helps pull the curtain back for laypersons.
Listeners will generally gain the ability
to become skeptical about claims with skill, not emotion.
Chris and Matt have a good odd couple chemistry
and they occupy different research domains neil host is american which arguably allows them some
additional distance to criticize us guru culture so it's all very nice that is nice yeah i like
that they um checked my google scholar page i hope they make made note of my H index. Yeah, don't worry.
Such metrics, they're irrelevant.
We should compare our H metrics sometime, Chris,
like measure them to a bit of a measuring contest.
As Stuart Ritchie has said,
this is the problem with modern academia where the focus becomes on a meaningless metric
rather than the quality of the underlying work.
No, moving on. Sounds like someone with the quality of the underlying work. Now, moving on.
Sounds like someone with a small H index would say.
Well, that may be the case.
It's not how big it is.
It's how you use it, Chris.
I understand.
Don't worry.
That's right.
The bad.
The show seems unaware of its own blind spot.
I get it.
My spouse is an academic whose depth of knowledge as a subject matter expert works against him when the matter is one of law, as it does for more than a few of his doctor
colleagues. At times when Chris winds up in a rant, I wince a bit when he unknowingly takes a
hard turn down a bad legal take. It's not often, but when it happens, the magic of the show deflates
and DTG borders on becoming gurus. Overly emotional due to lack of context or ability to analyze law where needed.
Will Chris and Matt at some point succumb to the siren call of becoming gurus themselves?
I do think it is inevitable.
They'll have to balance their academic careers with show growth.
In my opinion, Matt and Chris have a hit on their hands.
Are they ready?
Ooh, that kind of took a heavy turn, Chris.
Yeah, that's a, you you know but only one started that
but i'm really curious what the bad legal tics are because i don't remember offering many legal
tics um we have a listener chris spanos who's a lawyer and a patron who we often interact with
and he seems like the kind of person who might
he would pull us up i think yeah so i'm yeah i'm just wondering what i said
i'm not saying we don't have the blind spots i'm actually curious so like yeah i mean we just we
just have bad like we both have bad memories so if someone could remind us that would be
interesting and good yeah so i'd be i'd
be interested to hear the details i wouldn't be at all surprised if you had a bad take legal or
otherwise i i thought would no yeah i'm not either i'm gen just genuinely like what what did i say
did i say alex jones should go to jail or like what so i'm curious the person who wrote that
review is alf gear so alf gear let me know what my bad
legal kicks are yeah and good feedback that was good feedback that was good so what do you think
will the the siren call of guruism will we succumb to it i already have my already yeah i'm a guru
in my own mind i'm on lecture tours at tedx yeah that's not even TED TEDx yeah no I I mean we get that
question a lot but I think that to be a guru you have to have degree of self-confidence and a
belief that you're having these massive world altering impacts and I don't feel that i have that level of self-belief so i don't think we're in that
danger have you have we come across a guru who who doesn't strongly believe in themselves as
like a polymath and genius maybe contra points but yeah there was questions about how much of a guru she
is but even contra points is has a lot of hot takes she has pretty elaborate opinions and i'm
not saying they're bad but they're certainly very creative and we're just too boring i think
like we don't we don't have exciting views if If we develop some revolutionary theories,
then that will do it.
So no, we're all right.
We're all right.
Don't worry.
We'll see.
So the negative review, Matt,
after that deep soul searching review,
is from Argburn.
And it's a shorter one so what if tony blair but a podcast
three three out of five stars and the comment is these hosts 100 percent bombination of brown
people so i tony blair you know tony blair you're familiar with his work i'm familiar with his
work so hang on he's we've been compared to tony blair we're like tony blair podcasters
if tony blair was a podcast then we are the outcome of that right right okay so it's like
i guess it's like centrist neoliberal thing new labor yeah yeah new labor yeah we're new labor the part that i like most about that review
is despite insinuating that we would endorse genocide targeting at least people who are not
white right that's the characteristic that only knocked us down two stars so it's like genocidal maniacs but you know three out of five the panther
i like him he's got his priorities straight that's good yeah we would start the iraq war
but but you know three out of five for that but in a whimsical way
yeah so that's what we have the those two reviews for this week well that's natural
i'm probably a bit of a neoliberal shill sometimes i can imagine rubbing people
pat more strongly on the left with your bombs not rubbing them out rubbing them the wrong way
collateral damage matt that's what you're always saying it's just collateral damage what's everyone complaining about so
I just cut all that out usually
but behind the scenes it's there
so well I appreciate
the review
Arg Burns and
we would appreciate any
such further reviews in the future
I will say as well
that for people
the patrons that were about to give a shout out,
that we have been putting up content there from the monthly live hangouts and from interviews
done on other podcasts or things released. So there's content there, Matt, if anybody feels
like joining the Patreon. And of course, they can get the Garometer episode afterwards as well.
Some people who already took that wise decision are Michael R., who is a conspiracy hypothesizer.
Michael R. Thank you, Michael R.
Yes. Thank you, Michael R.
Every great idea starts with a minority of one.
We are not going to advance conspiracy theories.
We will advance conspiracy hypotheses.
Then we have actually another two conspiracy hypothesizers.
They're just beside each other nicely on this spreadsheet.
So Nick Weeb and Appleyard.
Nick and Appleyard.
Thanks to both of you.
Nick and Appleyard.
Nick and Appleyard.
Yeah.
Thank you both, you lovely conspiracy hypothesizers.
Every great idea starts with a minority of one.
We are not going to advance conspiracy theories.
We will advance conspiracy theories. We will advance
conspiracy hypotheses. The last one for this week, Matt, is a revolutionary genius by the name of
Patrick Dunlop, like the famous tennis racket manufacturer. Yeah. And presumably a person is,
well, probably a tennis player or something. Yeah. Possibly the heir to that fortune. So
just remember us.
That's why he's on the Patreon, that revolutionary thinker.
We should make a higher tier just for Patrick, you know,
because he can afford it.
That's right.
A lot of riffing for just somebody with a surname Dunlop.
But I apologize, Patrick.
Thank you anyway for being a revolutionary thinker.
Here is your reward. Thank you anyway for being a revolutionary thinker. Here is your reward.
Thank you.
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.
All true.
All true.
All true. All true. All facts.
All in this crazy world that we are.
Delivering the hard truths the gurus do.
So Matt, the final thing that we do
is announce who the next guru to cover is.
We already mentioned that we're going to have
the special episode about the Weinsteins.
I don't know if we mentioned it or not, but we are going to wrap up the series with Aaron Ravenowitz looking at Michael O'Fallon and James Lindsay with their crossover episodes.
So actually, I guess that is the next Guru episode, isn't it?
Yeah, exactly.
We've got ideas.
We've got lots of ideas, but maybe we don't want to
commit ourselves quite yet let's let's let's have a look oh fallon has done some really
interesting things to end on so yeah he's such a character these people like like he is a lunatic
he is he is not i mean he probably always was, but he now has a daily InfoWars show, basically.
And we'll get into the details.
I guess that's the kind of distinction I was trying to draw with Gad Saad.
Like, I'm not trying to whitewash him or minimize him,
but compared to some of the gurus we cover, he doesn't smell crazy.
He doesn't seem quite as damaged when i look at the kinds of stuff that
he does in his conversations yes yes he's an he's an annoying cultural troll and insulting does the
lightweight uh nasim taleb but he posts a lot of wholesome stuff as well and a lot of stuff making
fun of himself and the kind of stuff you would never see in a million years from someone like James Lindsay or Michael O'Fallon or Eric Weinstein.
Our top tier gurus smell really bad.
I think your baseline is the issue here.
Now, I think your baseline is the issue here. If you're not self-aggrandizing like Eric Weinstein and James Lindsay, sure, he's not in that stratospheric level, but I feel that that is a bar which is hard to overcome. There is a comparison issue here.
Okay, let me be even more clear.
So in the same way that I was not instinctively repelled by Jordan Peterson, I'm not instinctively repelled by Gad Saad,
despite disagreeing with his style and content in many, many, many cases.
That's what I'm trying to say.
I think I get it you don't view him as like scott adams like right as as much as maybe i do i because i see him as
essentially being opportunistic in a way akin to scott adams and with the condemnation that follows from that or as you seem to regard him as
like being more that he like swims in those waters but it's not a natural fit for him yeah yeah i see
him very much like jordan peterson um i think um someone who who actually has a potential to not be crazy
and to actually be substantial,
but because of their intrinsic political leanings,
has found that being a bit of a culture troll
is a convenient role to play.
Actually, Jordan Peterson today is crazier,
a lot crazier than I think he was maybe 10 years ago.
Possibly, yes. I mean, I think he was maybe 10 years ago. Possibly, yes.
I mean, I think that's almost a given, given what happened to him.
But, yeah.
Well, so there we go.
Different opinions are available on the Decoding the Gurus podcast.
That's right.
We are not a blob.
We're not a blob.
We're not a monoculture.
Dissent is allowed. How wonderful for us. We're talking across these huge ideological divides
that we have, but that's just the kind of thing that you get here. All right. Matt, it's been fun.
I will leave you to the rest of your morning devices and just with my final piece of advice that you should grovel at the feet of your morning devices. And just with my final piece of advice
that you should grabble at the feet of your muscle master.
Thank you, Chris.
I will.
Bye-bye. Thank you.