Decoding the Gurus - James Lindsay: The monkey is out of the box and it HATES liberalism
Episode Date: September 23, 2020Chris and Matt discuss James Lindsay's talk at the Speaking Truth to Social Justice conference held at the ostentatious National Liberal Club, in an episode that will disappoint Lindsay fanboys and ha...ters alike. Blindingly hot takes include, "He's a bit hyperbolic" and "Critical Theory is complicated".They discuss some pretty strong metaphors (or are they analogies?) of Critical Social Justice involving monkeys, viruses, and boxes.Most importantly, the duo establish definitively that, despite James' assertions, Jeff Goldblum did NOT die on a toilet in Jurassic Park (which, let's face it, would have ruined the entire movie).LinksJames' talk on YouTubeEmbrace The Void episode on Sovereign NationsTwo Psychologists Four Beers episode on Diversity StatementsNot Jeff Goldblum being eaten on a Toilet in Jurassic Park
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Decoding the Gurus.
It is the podcast where two academics listen to content from the greatest minds the online world has to offer,
and we will try to understand what they're talking about. I'm Matt Brown from Australia,
and with me is Chris Kavanaugh. He's from Northern Ireland and presently in Japan.
And today we are looking at a talk that was given quite recently. And before getting into that,
I just want to give a bit of a reminder about our podcast. So we're looking at the way that people structure their arguments, the way that people
present themselves and frame their speech to be convincing, and the way that they build a community
around themselves. So we're as interested, I think, in the form that their arguments take
as much as the content. So hopefully we'll become a bit more aware of the rhetorical techniques and so on that
get applied.
So Chris, welcome.
Hello, Matt.
Yes, you were doing a good job there, so I don't want to interrupt.
Please continue with eloquent speech before I destroy it with my garbled ramble.
I'm afraid it was turning into a speech so i thought i better stop
i i was enjoying that so yeah i i feel bad to to pop in and interrupt but yeah just to echo
one point that you were heading towards in looking at the way that people use rhetoric or persuasive
techniques we aren't only arguing that the people using these techniques are
necessarily nefarious characters who just want to, you know, steal your money and convince you to cut
off contact with your family or that kind of thing. It isn't so black and white. Actually,
you could use the same techniques to argue for something which is morally good or which is,
I don't know, a worthy
cause. So it is something to note that a lot of the things that we're talking about, even though
it potentially carries with it a seeming judgment, that's not what we necessarily mean.
Yeah.
Matt, can you put that in a better way?
I think that's basically right. I mean, you know, we think it's interesting the way that people present themselves and the way that they make their arguments.
And, you know, it's just good to be aware of, you know, because there's substance there, the substantive analysis and argumentation going on.
And then there's also rhetorical techniques being used as well.
And usually when you're an academic writer, a good academic writer, or you're trying to help someone
be a better academic writer, you're usually in there with the red pen, deleting a lot of that
sort of rhetorical stuff, because ideally we wouldn't be doing it, but we live in the real
world and let's face it, we'll do it. But it's just something that it's smart to pay attention
to when we're forming our opinions about things. So in this know, in this podcast, look, we have opinions,
just like everyone else.
We're going to comment on the material and talk about what we think,
but we're not necessarily authorities or experts
on any of the things that we talk about.
So we may well be wrong,
but we're not going to pretend that we have no opinions.
Yeah, and I think if I'm not able to be sarcastic and cynical, then that will eliminate about 80% of what I say.
Okay, I know, we hear you, Chris. You being obnoxious is a line in the sand.
being obnoxious is a line in the sand and that's that's that's it is my nature and i will also say that this is a point i consistently bump into online when when i offer
an opinion on something or like a response to an argument it it doesn't require that everybody has to accept my interpretation i'm just telling
you what my response or opinion is and and this seems to be a point that is often hard for people
to accept because i'll make some opinion on something and then someone will respond by saying
oh yeah well i think this and it's like, yeah, that's okay.
I genuinely don't mind if you don't agree with me.
These are the reasons that I think that.
But it's fine that someone else has another opinion.
But it's kind of like some people anticipate that you should want to convince them to join you
and completely abandon their opinion.
And this includes complete strangers who you've had no interaction with.
They're like, well, well, I don't think that.
And I'm always just like, yeah, that's okay.
Like, I don't actually have a strong willingness to spend like five hours convincing you to
agree with me.
Like, it's okay for you to disagree.
And that's very much the way i feel on
this podcast that it would be impossible for me to talk about some of these content and characters
without issuing opinions or like my response to things but it doesn't require that to enjoy the
podcast you have to agree with me it's probably more enjoyable at least it is for me with a lot
of content that you don't agree with everything
yeah yeah for sure yeah and look i think the other thing that feeds into this is that
the way the the twitter discourse is that really people are in these camps you know so if you
criticize x then you're in the anti-x camp and you hate everything about x and x is entirely
illegitimate and should be scourged from the face of the earth right um so
and so but you know i think this comes up in this episode because um i for one have very
ambiguous feelings about the topic you know i've got a mixture of opinions about it i'm gonna
i could um i could spend hours criticizing points of view on both sides of this topic.
So maybe with that, it's worth mentioning who it is that we are going to be discussing.
Yes, let's not keep people in suspense.
Yeah.
I think we've built it up enough. The person that we're discussing is James Lindsay, who is a well-known, somewhat controversial online figure who rose to prominence through a series of high- about toxic masculinity and submitted it to a journal
to illustrate low standards that are accepted for arguments in these kind of fields. The
significant flaw in that enterprise was that the journal was a pay-to-play journal where you just pay a fee and they will publish you. So on those grounds, it didn't
do that well, but James had various defenses for that. But in the wake of that, James, Peter
Boghossian, another academic, and Helen Pluckrose, who I think was an academic but has left academia,
in any case, that trio then engaged in a larger scale hoax effort,
which I think took the better part of a year,
involving submitting a whole bunch of articles
to various gender studies or post-colonial studies
or the critical theory heavy disciplines
to, again, highlight the lax standards in the field and this time they did
submit to actual journals in the field and they got a bunch of papers rejected a bunch of papers
accepted and a bunch of papers under review whenever the hoax was revealed and this created
a significant uproar either from people cheering that they were able to call out the vapidness of the social
justice disciplines or from people who saw them as bad thief hucksters issuing a critique that had
all these problems with the methodology and didn't target science journals or this kind of thing so
yeah that's how james rose to. Do you think that's an accurate account
or am I missing anything?
Yeah, no, that's a good account.
Yeah, there's a few other things, I guess.
So I guess it's important to mention
they've followed up the hoax
because it became known as the so-called squared hoax
with a book called Cynical Theories,
which I think you're reading at the moment, Chris,
which they sort of delineate their point of view
with a bit more detail.
Yeah, so I am halfway through that book.
And it's fair to say that they were not,
at least James was not super positive
when he heard that I would be reviewing the book.
So yeah, I think actually before we get on
to some other things,
it probably is worth mentioning as well
that I wouldn't be
james's most popular person i think he's i think he has tweeted about how he he genuinely hates me
i i think you've said a few things too chris are you on record for calling him an obnoxious
ass or is that just my i don't think i'm that. It doesn't sound like something I would say.
I would happily go on public record saying that.
I think James's Twitter persona,
maybe by his own admittance,
is like an obnoxious troll.
And he's justified that in various ways.
So I don't pretend that we have no history of positive or negative interactions.
But I will say he seemed much more convinced that I have this multi-year campaign against
him.
And actually, I had paid relatively little attention to his content until very recently.
So I can honestly say I have not been running a multi-year vendetta
against him and and also i think i can separate to some extent the argument he is making from
him his personality and person but but i do think the two are you know somewhat interconnected but yeah this this isn't an attempt
at like a hit piece takedown on james but it it is the case if we if we ignore all the people that
i've had various twitter feuds with or negative interactions there'll be very few people we can
address on the podcast yes well some of the feedback we're getting on the first episode
from people was that uh oh um chris is is much less annoying when i listen to him on the um than
when i see him on twitter he's maybe not such an i did i did notice that was a consistent response
was oh he's actually not yeah bad that's yeah and and did you notice chris that nobody was saying that about me yeah but
that's because they know you're an outright sympathizer matt that's the that's the issue
no no it's because it's because it's because they liked me before that's why this is why you could
learn from me young man and anyway um yeah look i yeah so i think your I think your and James's history there is balanced somewhat by the fact that I'm pretty friendly with the Cycle Squared crowd.
I'm a mutual appellant Black Roses.
We have friendly interactions now and again.
I'm very friendly with Iona Italia, who is Cycle Squared adjacent.
She's also friendly with me.
I'm friendly with her just to
it's not a one-way street i don't in fact i think our friendliness has reached such a pitch
of flirtation that i'm assuming at this point we're going to run away together
that's that's kind of what i'm assuming yeah okay so yeah so a couple of other things to
mention about the backstory the current circle squared episode didn't happen in a couple of other things to mention about the backstory. The current Circle Squared episode didn't happen in a vacuum, of course.
It's called Circle Squared because it's almost like a reboot of the Alain Sokal affair, it was known as, in which this physicist, I think he is or was, did a hoax article many years ago.
And I'm so old that I actually remember this.
article many years ago and i'm so old that i actually remember i remember this um this has been done before essentially where he submitted a very amusing article really i recommend everyone
read the original um a so-called hoax article because it is quite funny it's called a quantum
hermeneutics of oh something anyway um it's it's it's just nonsense from beginning to end
and it was accepted by a journal called Social Texts
and it generated with exactly the same intent.
It was actually followed up by what I've not read this, unfortunately,
but what I'm told is a pretty good book called Higher Superstition,
The Academic Left and Its Quarrels with Science.
And so this is back from 1994.
So, you know, it's fair to say the kinds of issues that are that
James's speech that we'll be covering today deals with have been doing the rounds for some time and
yeah show no sign of getting resolved anytime soon. Yeah actually Alan Sokal's book which
he made this while along book which annotates the article it has the article and then on each page
a breakdown of why he included the things that he did um and then like philosophical discussions
about what it means and authority and peer review and all these kind of things um and that that was
a book i really liked back in the day so i don't have any philosophical objection to hoaxes to illustrate points. And I
also share the feeling that the SoCal squared hoax did illustrate valid points to do with
willingness to accept articles that are congruent with certain ideological positions and issues
that are common in peer review. I think my objection is not to the effort,
but rather the inferences and how broadly they're drawn from that.
Yeah, if I could put words in your mouth, I think you're probably fine with such an endeavor as,
I don't want to call it a stunt because that's a majority but um as an as a demonstration or attention getting exercise as a jumping off point to have a conversation as opposed to being incontrovertible
proof a hundred percent so my issue in large part stems from the framing of it as a study and the
way it was represented on ariel and laid out in quasi-study format. And I think they referred to it in various times as a study.
And it much more seems to me like a journalistic expose.
And I actually think, ironically, if they had framed it like that, they would have avoided
some of the issues that eventually came up with research ethics and the need to get your
work approved by institutional review boards
so so yeah but anyway this this podcast is not about the so-called square hoax but it's definitely
relevant to the background i think yeah yeah that's right yeah because this this relates to
what we talked about the beginning which is when we take one of these figures and take some of their material and look at it in depth where we're
kind of focusing at it in isolation and just just treating it as something in itself but with
something like this i think it's easy for people to assume that we've got some agenda to either
yeah well because we're a critical kind of podcast to assume that we're um we're in a camp that is
ideologically opposed to whatever the
person is saying so um yeah so so for myself you know i where i'm coming from with this whole issue
is you know i'm a i'm a quantitative social scientist and it's probably the one thing i
actually do get passionate about like good you know good and bad social science you know and
the good stuff is really good and the bad stuff can be really really bad so my opinion
on this is that just from a methodological or epistemic point of view i have serious concerns
about the various critical x studies stream of research i'm concerned that it forms a bit of a
bubble it's not doesn't it doesn't really talk to us or interact, as far as I can tell, with the broader social science.
And it's kind of its own thing.
And it does tend to rely on a lot of theory and not a lot of evidence.
So, you know, my heuristic when I think about research in the social sciences is almost like a pyramid where you go for a large amount of raw data of one kind or another.
It could be quantitative or qualitative.
And then you make careful inferences and analysis of that.
And you very cautiously adopt some sort of theoretical perspective that's driven by the data.
So my gut feeling is that this discipline has that pyramid around the wrong way essentially with
very elaborate theory with some pretty strong priors applied to it that is not always supported
by a great deal of evidence at the bottom but that's not what we're talking about we're not
we're not debating about this we could be wrong completely wrong about that hopefully we got
listeners who who love who love critical studies and we hopefully we have listeners who hate it and hopefully everyone can enjoy this episode.
Yeah, that's a nice equinami...
Oh God, I don't even know the word to say.
A good message, Matt, too.
Thank you.
Our overly long introduction on...
So there is a couple of very final housekeeping points to note before we forget one is that we
do now have a twitter account which is at gurus pod already blocked by eric weinstein so there's
that uh endorsement it was all those abusive dms you were sending him chris you got to stop doing that yeah well
to be fair the the amount of dick pics he got it just it's too much for anyone
but um maybe i'll cut that i'll see i'll see but yeah so on that account we'll be giving
advance warning or notification of the material that we'll cover in the following
week so we're aiming to release on the kind of bi-weekly schedule and for us that means like
one week of researching and recording and then uh one week to prepare and release and for the
listeners hopefully it means like one week or one and a half weeks to get around to looking at the material.
And then you can see how far you agree or disagree with our analysis.
And like we mentioned, disagreeing is fine.
We are actually interested to hear feedback.
So we do have an email account, which I think is decodingthegurus at gmail.com or or one word just decoding
the gurus sure okay just checking today's um yeah so that is probably our email account so if you
send feedback there assuming that account exists so yeah and if you send back things we you know
we'll read it and we might end up discussing it on the next podcast.
So there you go.
That's all the housekeeping expertly and professionally done, right, Matt?
Well done.
Yeah, that was good.
Yep, you did it.
You did it.
We are professionals.
Perfect.
Professional podcasters.
Joe Rogan, watch out.
Okay.
All right.
So enough faffing about about let's get into this topic
okay so I think we'll probably start with some clips say Chris so you can have a little look
in your folder Matt before you jump the gun into your obsession with hearing clips I think it might
be worth mentioning the actual name of the talk oh Oh, yeah. So this is The Truth About Critical Methods,
which was one of the most popular videos
that popped up when I typed James Lindsay into YouTube.
Might have been the process involved in discovering it.
But it's a talk from a conference
given earlier in this year.
Yes, it was.
It's called Speaking Truth to Social Justice
Conference. So the titles of the conference and the talk already, I think, flag up the perspective
that you're being given here. And to try and summarize in one or two sentences, this is
James revealing to the audience what critical theory is actually about, not what it sells itself as being,
and issuing a warning about the danger that it poses to liberal societies. Is that fair?
Yeah, that's very fair. And look, I hate to give more preamble, but I feel like the one final thing
we should mention is, in kind of talking about what this podcast isn't about
there's um you know this conference was was hosted by um an organization that his name i've forgotten
could you remind me their sovereign nation sovereign nations yes so i it's fair to say
some questions have been raised about that relationship and And another podcast, Embracing the Void,
has covered sovereign nations in some detail,
raising some issues about generally where they're coming from.
And that's not what we're going to be talking about.
But do we need to say anything about that, Chris?
Well, so one of the people that was raising questions
about this conference was me.
And to summarize my point,
and like you say,
this issue is covered in depth
on the Embrace the Void podcast
in a standalone episode.
So Sovereign Nations
is an evangelical Christian group
that has partnered with Lindsay
to create the website New Discourses,
where James posts most of his material now.
And or at least the founder of Sovereign Nations, Michael O'Fallon,
has some business relationship with the New Discourses website and company.
And that group, Sovereign Nations, if you go to the website, you will basically see a smorgasbord of fairly
standard reactionary right or conspiracy prone right wing content about George Soros and
the coronavirus not actually being a serious concern, that kind of thing. So it does seem
an odd organization for a self-professed atheist and
secular humorist to partner with but i know that james and the other so-called squared figures
response is that they're not endorsing that world view they're just speaking across the aisle
on issues that they agree with but i i do take some issue with that argument because while it is good to engage with
people with different opinions and you don't have to agree inherently with everyone that you share
a platform with, I think it's fair to say that Christian dominionism, which seems to be the
ideology that sovereign nations is ascribed to, is almost in polar opposition to secular humanism.
So it just feels a little disingenuous
to paper over that,
if your whole ideology is about, you know,
the need for liberalism and secular humanist values.
So, yeah, that's all.
Yeah, yeah, that's right. We don't want to cover that here, um yeah yeah that's right we don't we don't want to cover
that here but i think that's an important point to make um because this organization is is obviously
a political partisan organization their main concern is is political and it's a right-wing
traditional christian kind of perspective and i think it sort of points to a problem in which
which is that the discourse goes from being one that's about essentially academic methodology and epistemology, really, really kind of an ivory tower type issue, to being a very much a popular political and polarizing issue. And I think my final comment on this
is that I think it's a shame
that essentially everyone on the left
thinks that the circle squared people are terrible
and it's just nothing that we should be talking about
and it's all just a maneuver by the right-wing people.
Everyone who is, you know,
centrist or classical liberal or right-leaning
are on the side of
this on the side of cycle squared saying look out look how terrible the universities have become and
academia is broken and um we just need to we need to burn it all down and that's a that's a really
my final point on this is that i i lament i lament the direction the discourse has taken
well it will come up in the discussion of the episode anyway.
So maybe we'll crack on with that clip that you were so eager to get to.
Yes, I need a break from talking.
I'll tee it up by saying this is James starting out by referencing that he is a 90s kid.
And he has something he wants to warn people about.
So here we go.
In every one of those movies, you had this one particular character, not the hero,
Jeff Goldblum or something. He was always some kind of scientist, kind of a weirdo.
And that person solved the problem kind of before everybody else and more or less freaked out.
kind of before everybody else and more or less freaked out. They tried to tell public officials, the public, anyone who would listen, something catastrophic is on the way. So 20 something years
later out of the 90s, that's me. I'm not Jeff Goldblum. He got eaten by a dinosaur on a toilet.
Okay, so this is GMs presenting themselves like the common character in 90s disaster movies,
the scientists trying to warn society
about the impending disaster and being ignored.
So if it was a different time,
it might be comparing yourself to a prophet
right who isn't he did a cassandra chris cassandra yes the mythical archetype but um so before we get
into some of the other content and just to illustrate my complete neutrality i want to note a very important
substantive criticism here which is that james said that jeff goldblum was eaten on a toilet
by a dinosaur in jurassic park now now man as a as a scholar of jurassic park and the 90s kid myself I think that
many of our listeners who share those
characteristics will also note that
Jeff Goldblum was not eaten
on the toilet at Jurassic Park
he in fact survived
not in the novelization I think
but he did survive
in the movie
which was fairly obvious because
he was in the sequels so
i i think this is important because i i think it speaks to the level of scholarship that we can
expect um this is a this is an entirely fair point this is not a this is not a gotcha at all i i i
think you've really nailed um nailed him on this. Yes, I think it was important to get that up front out there
because it is the main issue with this talk.
Absolutely.
Well, I'm just glad to know that he wasn't eaten on a toilet
because the idea of Jeff Goldblum getting eaten on a toilet,
it's just not right.
You know, Jeff Goldblum is great.
Everybody loves Jeff Goldblum.
It was a bad lawyer.
It was a bad lawyer. It was a bad lawyer.
It was a bad lawyer.
Someone who deserved it.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, not Jeff Goldblum.
And one other point to note, still on the Jurassic Park theme,
the Jeff Goldblum character, who's the kind of cynic, you know,
warning people about the impending disaster,
he was actually kind of a precursor to a critical
theorist right he was like a mathematician skeptical of science's arrogance and
so it's kind of ironic to be compared to that kind of character so again not a petty point
just flagging that up not petty at all yes absolutely but look i mean okay so being more
serious about this now because somebody has to be chris um yeah look i think this is a good i mean
this sort of sets the tone because a lot of the um a lot of the talk does rely heavily on metaphors
and um and evocative imagery and and that um self-presentation as the person who is giving
the warnings to a complacent public and who aren't getting listened to is, I think, the self-presentation here, which is fair enough.
The other imagery that or a metaphor that James returns to a lot in this talk is this looking inside the box.
So before we say any more about that, maybe we should go straight to a clip to illustrate that.
Yes, there's quite a lot of choices in this regard.
So let me just pick one.
OK, how about this one?
Let's have a look.
The problem is that the contents of social justice don't match the pretty diversity picture
on the box.
Social justice activists say it's just about respecting people.
It's about making the world more fair
and just. That's the picture on the box. That's not what's inside the box. I want you to look
inside the box with me today. So I'm not going to tell you what social justice and critical theory
are about today. We're going to look inside the box together. I'm going to read what they say,
what they teach straight out of one of their books. So there's two themes here that are
recurrent. And I will say James is someone that certainly seems very fond of his metaphors.
I was tempted to make like a super cut of all the times we get this mention of like what's in the box. I may do so and stick it
at the end of the podcast, but it's fair to say he returns to this imagery fairly often. And
alongside that is the notion that it's not him in misinterpreting. He is going to present what
the critical theorists say themselves. And in particular, in this case, by reading extracts from a book called Is Everyone Really Equal?
Question mark, an introduction to key concepts in social justice education by Oslam Sensoy and Robin DiAngelo being prominent critical theorist who has become a kind of previously celebrated
figure for a book introducing the concept of white fragility, but more recently, a punching bag,
I would say for people who are critical of the social justice critical theorist worldview.
But I will say that James was ahead of the curve on that. He's an OG criticizer of her.
So it isn't really fair to blame him for just following that trend
because he's one of the people that started it.
Yeah, yeah.
So there's some credit to his self-presentation here
because I think criticism of Robin DiAngelo is pretty widespread
and including a lot of people who are very sympathetic of social justice because
i think she does represent a point along the popularized spectrum of critical theory thought
or social justice thought it's that sort of edgy spectrum as well um which yeah and i think it's
often brought up the amount of money that she earns for giving talks where essentially she tells predominantly an
audience of white liberals that they are racist and she herself is a white liberal so so this is
part of the reason that i think she tends to be reviled yeah yeah there are there are some grifter
type characteristics there are musicians yeah yeah okay Yeah, yeah. Okay, so look, I'm getting back to
the metaphor. Yeah, I look, as you said, this looking inside the box metaphor is used throughout
the talk. And in rhetorical terms, the idea is to present critical theory and social justice as a
kind of Trojan horse with destructive and corrosive stuff being smuggled in to the city
of liberalism under the guise of friendship. So, you know, I think it's pretty effective metaphor,
but we should remember it's just a metaphor. Yeah, and one of the points that he's making
is that there's a distinction between social justice, which he would say is kind of
lowercase social justice and uppercase critical social justice, that this is a distinction.
And there's an important distinction between these two worldviews. And it's one that the
practitioners themselves make. So let me, I'm going to play another clip, which is Kim reading from the D'Angelo book directly, where they make this point.
Let's start with the concept social justice.
While some scholars and activists prefer to use the term social justice in order to reclaim its true commitments,
in this book we use the term critical social justice.
So here's a first truth to speak to social justice.
The authors of this book tell us exactly what they mean by social justice
and that it isn't what you might expect.
It isn't just treating people with more respect,
caring about issues of race, sex, sexuality, and so on,
or trying to make society more fair. That's the picture on the box, or as they put it,
it's true commitments. And they tell us, they, not me, they tell us that it's not what's inside.
Okay, so yeah, that was a nice encapsulation of the two points. And a kind of contradiction I want to flag up here is, so this point about the description not matching the content, and that there's this important distinction between critical social justice and what people would normally understand as being for equality and against racism. And so on the one hand, James is presenting this as he has uncovered this important information,
which he needs to share with people.
But the people he's quoting are very, very directly making this distinction themselves
openly, like there's no subterfuge, right?
There's no subterfuge, right?
They are saying, let us make clear that this is our stance and this is not the same as the mainstream opinion.
So to some extent, both James and the D'Angelo group agree
that they are presenting a novel approach.
Yeah, I have to agree.
I don't think anything's being smuggled in.
People like D'Angelo, or indeed any academic critical theorist, is not shy about talking
about these things.
So I don't think it's really secret.
The thing he seems to be alluding to is really that spectrum of popular perspective and people who are more either in the academic world
or terminally online, like you and me, where sort of obviously, if you're highly involved with it,
you know, or further out on the spectrum, you're going to be really attuned to all of these fine
theoretical points, which are indeed more extreme, if you want to use that word,
than the popular conception of
social justice. Like if you put away Twitter and just talk to somebody in the real world and ask
them about social justice, they would list off a bunch of things that are just general liberal
humanist type opinions. And then if you were to go to Robert D'Angelo or to the academic literature, you'll get a very
different picture. So that much is true. But I don't think there's anything nefarious about that.
It's just a natural consequence of how the world works.
Yeah. So academic theories can be more Byzantine than is standard. It just feels like if D'Angelo
is talking in public that she will be making the
same kind of points yeah yeah i mean look a couple of other issues here is that um
robert d'angelo doesn't speak for every critical theorist or social justice person out there
yeah obviously um there's that um i'm sure a lot of them disagree with it i mean this is a point that probably we
want to get to a bit later but i think now is as good a time as any to bring it up which is that
there is throughout this talk and this is a kind of common tactic amongst people who want to argue
for a particular worldview they present the opponents or enemies as this unified group,
and they can take examples from individuals
and use that to speak for the entire category.
So like you pointed out, critical theory is like this massive field or approach.
I think it spans across multiple academic disciplines and has
various sub disciplines or sub versions of the approach. And as my summary probably illustrates,
I'm not an expert in this area, but I would be hugely surprised if there isn't significant differences between different theorists,
that they might share, you know, core beliefs about, say, that society is organized unequal
and that there are power structures at play that go unacknowledged. But where you go from there
can be hugely different and unlike what social implications it has but james in this talk tends to treat
d'angelo and and a bunch of other scholars who he references as if one of them says something
then all of them basically agree with it and a really good illustration of this is when he compares our critical theory, social justice
to a virus, which is another metaphor that he uses fairly often.
And he justifies this at several points by saying, OK, you might think I'm being unfair
by constantly invoking this viral imagery and talking about critical theory as an
infection and so on because right because that sounds like dehumanizing uh language so he he
kind of flags his audience well you might think that's a rhetorical technique but actually and
then he points to this article which he notes was published in an obscure journal by two feminist scholars which talks about
social justice ideology or something as a virus and it it compares it to like an infectious
disease you know that can go in and needs to break down the defenses and that students of
this approach can infect different departments which which to me doesn't sound like a good thing to be arguing for, right?
Like when you're comparing yourself to a virus.
I share James's sense about that.
But the thing that I don't share is two academics making a controversial comparison
in a random article does not mean that everyone in the field endorses that view or their arguments,
right?
And the last thing that before I forget, when James mentions that, like, they say this about
themselves, he uses it to legitimize or to move the source of the criticism from from him but in this talk and and probably if you do a
search online the person that's most associated with comparing critical theory to a social virus
and a contagion is not these obscure uh feminist fear academics it's james so he is the person making that comparison yeah yeah yeah it's funny actually
when i when i looked at that article about um the critical theory article that compared it to a virus
it didn't actually ring too many alarm bells for me because partly one i know how the field
just like this is true of many academic fields to one degree or another but
particularly that one psychology too is rife with this is that like using the most sexy language
to dress up a relatively anodyne point right so i think what the fundamental point they're trying
to make there is that yes we're hoping to enact social change by by through education getting
those ideas out there,
and these ideas will spread and, you know, word of mouth
and there'll be a grassroots kind of change, you know.
And they rely heavily on this evocative analogy
to make their article sound more exciting than it is, right,
which is something that academics tend to do.
And, you know, the first thing I thought of was Richard Dawkins'
idea of memes, which basically prop that it all ideas are like this all ideas are like viruses um so those
are the two connections that i made and and i didn't you know i find a lot of that literature
objectionable but i didn't find that one objectionable so um yeah but as you say look i
think the key point is just because you found one academic writing one article in which they make that analogy, it's a weak point.
It's nothing more than a metaphor, I think is probably the correct view to take.
Yeah, so this is James using that metaphor in the talk to talk about the spread of social justice infection.
This isn't just in our universities.
Law societies, many corporations, even some cities now have diversity officers.
And the diversity training industry in the United States alone is above a $10 billion a year industry.
This is an industry that produces no tangible product whatsoever. And almost none of what it does is supported by evidence in its
favor. Some of what it does is has evidence against it. So yeah, I just played that clip
to highlight that. Like I say, this metaphor is extremely useful to James in his argument, and it does have rhetorical
force.
So, yeah, I just think he should own that it is him using it.
Right.
And like you said, you know, an idea being catchy or effective, it could be used to discuss
ideas which are actually good.
Right.
That you want you want to spread
ideas of democracy or that kind of thing but even still i think using the viral comparison is rarely
presented as a good thing sure sure yeah so look i think this metaphors that we're talking about
which is firstly like talking about the guy from jurassic park or cassandra warning about this secret or somewhat secret thing that is destructive about the metaphor of
looking inside the box to see what's concealed in there and i think he also uses the phrase
the monkey with the virus is loose in the city so what's what's that science fiction movie with the monkeys? Contagion. Oh, Planet of the Apes.
No, no, no.
12 Monkeys.
No, both wrong.
12 Monkeys.
Is it 12 Monkeys?
I feel this was a trap map because there are many science fiction movies with monkeys
releasing viruses.
Yeah.
Okay.
So very, very evocative imagery and very much designed to press those emotive buttons.
Yeah, although just to run with this point
that you want to,
I'm pretty sure he's referenced about monkeys
in the city of Europe first, the contagion,
because he's talking about Dustin Hoffman
earlier in the talk.
No, no, you're wrong, chris it's got to be that movie
12 monkeys the the gilliam movie we're not going to agree on this i think i think we might just
need to hang this up now because this for me is a red line the james was referring to contagion
is an article i will not budge on all right in the interest of maintaining our friendship
we will let that drop but it's good that we're talking across the aisle like this i i think
really if more people did this kind of thing then the world would be a better place
did you want to continue i did but i won't okay all. So related to that, all of that, all the monkey stuff, all the other things that we talked
about is that as well as like this talk and James presenting himself as a prophetic figure
who is trying to warn society, the issue about what he's warning society about is like an
obvious question, right?
And we've already seen that he wanted
to highlight that social justice isn't what it pretends to be. So our question might be,
what is it about? And thankfully, we have James to tell us that. And this might be him quoting
from the book. Let's see. The very fabric of society is what needs to be changed.
There's a term for that.
We call it social revolution.
This is a real glimpse inside the box of social justice.
Not fairness, not respect, not equal pay.
Social revolution.
To unmake our current system and replace it with one they
are socially engineering for us. That's what you are signing up for when you sign up for
your lifelong commitment to social justice.
So there you have it. It's about social revolution. And the comment about lifelong commitment
was because in a quote he had previously
read from d'angelo she mentioned that committing to critical theoretical approach requires a
lifelong commitment and he took a view with this yeah so yeah what do you think yeah okay well i
think i think the last thing first which is that um yeah there's a few quotes from robin d'angelo
there and i i feel like he chose these quotes badly because i feel certain that she must have said more contentious stuff than is quoted
like he quotes some there's some pretty anodyne statements there from from robin like you know
that people are individuals but also members of groups that the groups aren't equally valued and
people that are more highly valued receive more benefits i mean it's not actually when you actually
think about what she's saying in those quotes it it's not very controversial. And if you take that one that you mentioned,
which is something along the lines of ongoing reflection on their socialization within these
groups and requires a commitment to an ongoing lifelong process. Now, I think that kind of talk
is pretty, I don't know, hand wavy and saccharine, frankly, but it doesn't sound like it's stuff that sounds good
so that's my first comment i guess the other thing is that these many allusions to social revolution
and communist revolution actually he evokes the archetypal enemies of the free society
and compares this current social justice movement with historically previous opponents of liberalism.
And, you know, you have to assume he means fascism and communism there.
And also refers to that location, which I think we'll get to as kind of like a bastion of freedom.
And it talks about bias response teams amounting to being the Red Guard.
Peter this morning talked about bias response teams at over 200 universities.
He didn't say so, but they amount to the Red Guard.
Now, to sort of steel man his point of view, I agree with him that absolutely critical
theory and social justice has a social agenda.
They do want to do a kind of social engineering.
They want to have an effect on the broader society.
And that's something they're quite explicit about. So where I think he's going too far, or I disagree with him, is that I don't think that they're inciting revolution in my point of view.
He does set up the social justice as a kind of Manichaean enemy, an irreconcilable enemy of liberalism. And while I definitely think that there are some big
differences there, you know, I think he's really stretching to project it as a Manichean struggle.
Yeah. So let's hear that Manichean struggle from James, what social justice wants to do with
liberal humanism. And then I'll offer some comments as well, if this plays.
The critical theory movements initially advocated for a type of liberal humanism,
individualism, freedom and peace, but quickly turned to a rejection of liberal humanism.
The ideal of individual autonomy that underlies liberal humanism, the idea that people are free
to make independent rational decisions
that determine their own fate was viewed as a mechanism for keeping them marginalized in their place
by obscuring larger structural systems of inequality.
In other words, it, liberalism, fooled people into believing that they had more freedom and choice
than societal structures actually allow. So this lets us take a look, reveals the truth of what social justice and its critical
methods want. They want a social revolution that dismantles those societal structures.
They want to dismantle liberalism and replace it with something that they tell us rejects
liberalism at its roots. So that was James reading from D'Angelo at the start and then riffing on what it illustrates.
So I think that might be the kind of section, Matt, where you might have more sympathy for
James's view, right? Because D'Angelo is setting up herself the opposition between a kind of naive liberalism
and what social justice will will bring right yeah um i think so yeah i think there are people
people like robin d'angelo set themselves up as provocateurs and edgelords um and i don't think she would agree with that that's a hassle
but i'm sure i'm sure she wouldn't i'm sure she wouldn't that's just my opinion you know and but
i also think that there are other people that are taking them very very literally and yelling from
the rooftops that um that there's a revolution going on i think that the truth is somewhere
in between because d'Angelo seems very comfortable
cooperating with the neoliberal system, I think.
And I think running anti-bias training in corporations
isn't quite revolutionary.
Yeah, it's not tearing down the system.
But I think James' argument is that
it is tearing down the system from the inside.
But before I get back to james
bashing let me just continue to give him a little bit more credit because this is a clip where it's
another reading of an extract from the angelo's book and i i want to note here that while we'll
get into the way he builds up a mannequin binary struggle between
the forces of good and evil, his partner in this, D'Angelo's wing of the critical theorists, are
doing the same thing themselves. And this extract that he's reading from, I think, highlights it
well. Each of us has a choice about whether we are going to work to interrupt these systems or support their existence by ignoring them.
There is no neutral ground.
To choose not to act against injustice is to choose to allow it.
Although it does take ongoing study and practice before a social justice framework will fundamentally shape your work,
and this part's all in italics, to decide not to take on this commitment does not mean you are being
neutral indeed to decide not to take on this commitment is to actively support and reproduce
the inequitable status quo so in the wise words of some figure from star wars who I forget, Obi-Wan Kenobi. Only a Sith deals in absolutes. And
this rhetoric that there is no middle ground, either you agree with critical theorists and
are actively supporting their anti-racist position, and I don't mean like just being
against racism, I mean the specific anti-racism, the approach that they endorse.
Then you are in effect aiding societal systems of oppression and indirectly propping up racist structures.
So it is true to say that the worldview, at least outlined by D'Angelo brokers, no middle ground between ascent or complexity.
Yeah.
I mean,
that's,
I think perhaps that you said it better than I could,
than I was saying it before.
I mean,
my issue is with both sides here because both of them really play into this
polarizing worldview in which unless you're with us then you're against us so
choose your side and join the fight but i i have to interrupt with this because what you have teed
up is a clip that comes at the very end of the talk and just to illustrate this point that you're
making about it being a battle between the forces of good and dark. Here's how James ends
this talk. I thought this
was perfect. This is the truth about
critical theory, and we cannot let
this happen.
So I'm here today to warn you.
We are late to
this fight. This is already
well underway.
Thank you.
I mean, Matt, can you
see any, you know,
any theme there about heroes
standing up to the fight?
The swelling music in the background, right?
Have added to that.
Yeah, yeah. Yeah, and you know,
look, I don't necessarily condemn
James for that at all
because it's a political speech.
And I think that's the thing to just be aware of, that this is a speech of political rhetoric.
And to make those kinds of speeches, then you do this kind of thing.
You make calls to action.
Calls to action, calls to emotion, all that stuff.
And there's nothing inherently wrong with that.
calls to action calls to emotion all that stuff and there's nothing inherently wrong with that and in fact if i have an instinctive kind of reaction to it because i'm an annoying both
sides that's one reason but the other reason is is that i mean that's exactly the kind of thing
i don't like in the social justice framing of things as well that you're either an anti-racist
for instance or you're complicit and complicit or an anti-fascist
and you sign up to every single article
or you're against us.
And I understand that it's effective
and I understand that's how politics works,
but I don't have to lie.
No, and I think my issue is that
when you make a talk reeling against people
creating binaries and forcing the world
into this stark contrast of evil oppressive forces and good revolutionary forces it's just
a little bit lacking of self-awareness when you then do the exact same thing
like throughout the talk for the people that agree with you. And this is something in
general I noticed with the way James presents what he calls liberalism. In his description
of liberalism, liberalism is just everything that's good. It's what ended slavery. It's what
gives women rights. It's what allows universal human rights to exist and people to be respected as individuals.
Liberalism, although you probably haven't heard it put this way before, is a system of conflict management that allows advanced society to exist. It works by guaranteeing freedoms to speak or not, to worship or not, to make use of one's
property as one will, to disagree or not, to think for oneself as one will. Liberalism as a set of
systems built the modern world over the last five centuries. And with it came the lowest infant
mortality rates, the lowest poverty rates, the greatest access to health, travel, life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness that the world has ever seen.
And while liberalism is a complex political philosophy, right, and there's all different
types of liberalism, and it's certainly true that liberal philosophies play a large role in the development of modern societies and human
rights and all these kinds of things. It still feels that his viewpoint is fairly unsophisticated
in that he just picks all of the parts that are positive and calls that liberalism. And then
the aspects which are, you know, that liberal justifications were used to rationalize colonialism
and spreading civilization to the uncivilized and destroying superstitious worldviews. And
that's presented as like, yes, yes, of of course we all know that that's there we all
recognize that but that's not really liberalism but it it isn't entirely clear why james is able
to completely cauterize and remove the negative aspects associated with you know capitalist
exploitation or this kind of thing as these are nothing to do with liberalism yeah yeah yeah and
that's a that's a really common
thing it doesn't matter if you're a tanky communist a liberal booster or a social justice
person just adopting everything that is good is bound up in in my ideology and those other guys
you pull out the app the worst stuff you put everything bad in that in that box um it's
look i think it's i think it's mirroring the catastrophization and
demonization that goes on in these social justice circles at least on twitter anyway i don't think
i don't think more everyday people who are into this necessarily do this but you know this tendency
to paint your enemies as entirely nefarious and entirely immoral really or illegitimate is probably a better word is the tactic you see on
on all sides these days like a complete refusal to acknowledge that let's say let's say you're
a traditional catholic like a you know social conservative catholic now from from the point
of view of a left-wing person that is uh you know someone at least a twitter type online person that
is illegitimate like it's not just that i just, you know, I don't agree with your Catholic traditional opinions.
Like they are for various ideological reasons.
For example, for thinking that gay people are sinful.
Yeah, I mean, you know, and I do not think gay people
are not sinful.
I think they're totally wrong about that, right?
But I also don't think that someone who has that
point of view is is wanting to destroy the world i don't think that necessarily yeah i would agree
that it is it is possible for people to hold religious i mean i i think people do get this
because left-leaning people tend to be tolerant of conservative muslims to a certain extent in a way that they aren't as tolerant of
conservative Christians. Now, I think the right goes too far in painting the left as like loving
conservative Islam. But I definitely think there is a greater willingness to criticize aspects of like conservative Christian worldviews than any non-Western religion.
Yeah. So look, that's a complex issue about sort of squaring the circle there in terms of what sort of ideas do you tolerate?
Or at least talk about in a kind of a pluralistic kind of way in which ones that you don't.
We'd be getting on a huge sidetrack
if we went down that road.
So we should return to James.
Okay, let me write the ship.
Following on from this presentation of liberalism
as like a pure source of good, right?
The James starts to talk about the building
and the room that they are holding the talk in
which is in the national liberal club now for audio listeners who haven't seen the talk it
would be hard to overestimate the amount of mahogany and gilded trusses that are strewn
around this room and imagine as much mahogany as you can and then double it yeah
that's that's that's about it so it's ostentatious might be the word that i would use to describe it
and i think someone on twitter who started watching it said i didn't know it was possible
for a room to feel pretentious i really like that but the the thing is, as somebody from an Irish Catholic background with complex feelings about elite English culture, my reaction to that room is not to see it as an illustration of the beauty of liberalism, but rather to see it potentially as an illustration of a capitalist excess and elite English men's club
culture. And I completely get that you can have different reactions to that, or that it can be
both things, right? That it can be a room which has historically done many things to aid liberal
causes and been a room that excluded women from joining as members until the
I think the 70s or the 80s
right? Both things are possible
but I'm just going to play you two
clips about the way James talks
about the room because
I think it reflects
a kind of a lack
of critical reflection on that kind of thing
and I think those
kind of reflections are what the critical theorists are often talking about.
So here we go.
Now, if you will take a moment
and take in our surroundings.
We're in the National Liberal Club
in the Gladstone Library,
among the greatest bastions for liberalism in the world,
where a flag for liberalism was planted.
That's tip number one and this is tip number two also about the room.
He really liked the room.
Rooms like this one, the one we are in now, were built to promote and defend this system.
So welcome. That's why we're here. That's why this conference was held here.
Yeah. And to make a slightly more substantive follow-up point, I was interested in like,
where the hell is that gilded National Liberal Club and looked into the history a bit. I mean,
it's a very interesting storied history as like, you know, a lot of
these old political buildings are. But one point I wanted to note was when I was reading about it,
that at various times in the history, the club had been denounced for housing revolutionary
radicals. And the kind of positions that were associated with members of the club or the divisions between it, right? Like
Winston Churchill's portrait notably kept being moved up and down from the basement, depending on
his status and which political group was in control of the club. And it speaks to me to
two important points. One, that liberalism is a broad church. And yes, it often does involve
revolutionaries, because the people who established the social welfare state in the UK
were once considered radicals, right? So there's always this tension in liberalism between
moderates and liberals. So I think that's important rather than seeing them as always just in complete conflict. And the second is that it's too simplistic to present ideologies as being simply static throughout all of time. Like things change and there's many divisions within groups and so on. So like, I think this binary mannequin worldview, it's much easier to get people to join
your cause if you present the world as being like that. But it usually does an injustice to the way
the world actually is. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like the complexity of, of the world is, is not good for
rhetoric and, and politics. So it gets ignored. I mean, this is an aside, but I remember noticing the use
of a guillotine by social justice-oriented activists
in the streets for sort of symbolic purposes,
which was an interesting choice of symbolism.
And, of course, this was leaped on by the critics
of those protests as more evidence that this was a kind of communist-type socialist
extremism and revolutionary destructive thinking. So the irony to all of this, of course, this goes
to your point, Chris, is that the guillotine was used in revolutionary France, and which sprung out
of the Enlightenment liberal ideas that were terribly corrosive to the monarchies
of the time.
And at the time, the social conservatives saw the guillotine as an evil symbol of the
excesses of liberalism.
Okay, so I think, you know, it's just fun to think about these little inconsistencies between the sort of
simplistic meta-narratives that people impose on the symbols and the complex reality of so you're
saying that really science and progressive liberal worldview should be represented instead of by
compasses or a mathematical formula or whatever their their icons should be the guillotine that's
that's what you're looking for right matt i'm i'm saying that liberalism is a dangerous revolutionary
idea we need to get back to monarchism quickly before the world falls apart yeah yeah yeah that's
well i'm i i'm with you there i'm with you there yeah I'm with you there. Yeah.
As an Irish person, you love the monarchy, I know.
Yeah.
We're big fans.
So, okay.
I think this might lead us to another topic. So, we've established in James's worldview that the critical theorists want to dismantle liberal societies. And there's plenty of clips I can play
showing that. But another issue is how, right? How are they going to do that, destroy our good
liberal societies? So this next clip is James outlining the techniques that the critical social justice theorists are using to undermine liberal society.
So what their nefarious plan is.
And James, as a good guru, is decoding for his audience, looks like familiar, what their plan is.
So let's hear what it is, because it might be a little bit surprising.
What the theorists ranging from the Frankfurt School to the radical new left in the 50s and
60s to the postmodern deconstructionists to today's social justice warriors all understand
and count on everyone else not understanding is one simple truth. Constant cynical criticism is a solvent that can dissolve liberal societies.
Okay, and?
Critical theorists like Horkheimer, ranging through D'Angelo,
therefore understood that to tear down a liberal society you just need one thing.
You just have to get a large enough group of people to complain constantly about how society can be understood as unfair or unjust, as cheating them
or somebody they care about, whether that's based in genuine understanding of the circumstances or
not. They don't have to offer solutions. They don't have to understand. They don't need clear
perspective of what they're talking about. They just have to air their grievances constantly and make everything they can touch
seem problematic. Yes, so there we have it, Matt. The secret weapon, as decoded by James,
of the critical social justice theorists is their ability to incessantly moan about everything. And this is a corrosive acid, so powerful that it can dissolve the very fabric of liberal
society.
Do you think he might be giving a little too much credit to the power of moaning?
Yeah, I think he might be.
I think if we look at the history of revolutionsolutions they don't usually come about by moaning so yeah it is fair to say that moaning is a fairly inherent part of social
revolutions right like they they do tend to include moaning or as they might put it legitimately
critiquing the existing power structures yeah but yeah but look, Chris, if you achieve your revolution
by criticising things
and then getting people to agree with your
criticisms of things, then
what you've achieved is social
change, not a revolution, right?
Yeah, yes, true.
Unless you've dissolved all
of the structures of society.
Yeah, yeah.
So look, we're being a bit snarky here but look
i think the i think the fair thing to say is that yeah the characterization that change is making of
this technique of achieving a revolution and destroying liberal society it just doesn't
sound very plausible i think it also speaks to um myopic aspect of James, which is basically this is how he experiences critical theorists.
He doesn't like their content.
And then the large part, you know, they are, like the name suggests, critiquing aspects of society or culture, right?
Like approaching things from a critical perspective.
And obviously he doesn't like it.
But it's the fact that this is perceived as the kryptonite of liberal society.
And he actually argues that it's exploiting.
It's kind of like the exhaust part of the death star,
right?
Like there's this one weakness in liberal society,
which is they let people criticize them and they heed to the criticism.
That means that if you just incessantly criticize them and they heed to the criticism that means that if you just
incessantly criticize them they'll collapse and i i don't think that's giving credit to liberalism
enough because the history of liberalism involves criticism from a whole range of competing
ideologies as well as like uh you know marxists and communists and fascists and other brands of liberalism.
It is in the nature of liberalism to accept criticism and have diverging opinions.
But I just don't buy that that is the thing that allows society to be vulnerable.
It's like a feature.
Yeah, look, and I don't think it's a fair characterization
of what helen pluckrose and the team generally are doing themselves i mean they they are responding
to these political ideas that are out there having an influence in society and i definitely agree with
them on that and they're criticizing those ideas and i agree with them on some of their criticisms
and uh you know that's that's all good
the system is working i think yeah this is this is a because like it is hard to take james somebody
who spends a significant portion of every day complaining about what critical theorists are up
to in a cynical fashion as saying that this is the you know secret weapon because again it just
speaks to a lack of self-awareness i i think and i don't mean to make it um just avoid him
personally and like whatever he lacks but rather this speaks to like when you have a hyper focus on a specific issue that you you're often blinded to the broader implications of your argument or right or or or parallels, except the ones you want to make.
So James can make parallels very easily between critical theorists and the Red Guard and and communists.
But he doesn't make parallels between himself
and them um but there are obvious parallels there i mean look i i said this to helena
recently and she agreed with me as it was a fair point which is what their team is doing
is researchers activism they they are doing some kind of academic investigations and making academic critiques, but they're mixing that with political activism, which is basically against critical theory and social justice ideology.
So they're doing what the social justice people are doing. I don't think that there's anything wrong with that. But what I do have a problem with is that of either side,
making out that the other people are completely illegitimate
and sort of catastrophizing and saying that you just,
you can't do that.
So this is true on the social justice side as well.
I mean, I think it's fair.
Like, you know, we talked about James's online persona,
which isn't great.
I think he'd even admit that. But, you know know it's also fair to say that the response they got was pretty over the top as
well essentially the people that were criticizing were not not allowing for any kind of legitimate
criticism essentially I would say so I I got flack, actually, whenever this whole 2 plus 2 equals 4
for FFL was going on,
where there was a debate on Twitter,
God forbid me for discussing this,
about the mathematics
and whether 2 plus 2 equals 4
or there are more complex mathematics
that mean that statement can be more complex
and so on and so
forth the specifics about the mathematics i have no desire to get into but yeah please don't please
don't or i will i will stop this recording immediately yeah but and i can't as well i also
simply can't but the the online war or whatever you know the online kerfuffle that came about because of that involved James
targeting this statistician, Kareem, online, and then attack lines being drawn along those.
And in those attack lines, there was one point where somebody called James a far-right extremist
who was motivated by his desire to keep black people out of science. And some evidence was marshaled about disparaging comments he'd made.
Anyway, I defended James by saying, like, I don't think he is a far right person.
It's just that he has a very singular issue focus.
And it means that's all he cares about, right?
He's not motivated by a desire to push far right wing ideology. And people criticize me for the naivety of this comment. But so that definitely happens,
right? They get labeled these things and associated with like far right or reactionary worldviews.
However, because of that, or in reaction to that, I don't know where the lines of causality exactly go,
but it is the case that James doesn't do himself any favors
because this talk was given with cooperation
or in collaboration with sovereign nations.
And then recently he's been cheering Trump on
for making statements critical
or negative about critical theory.
And I think it's fair to say James leans in to the polarization
while at the same time decrying it.
And as a result, it makes people skeptical.
And I've described James as being on a Rubin trajectory.
And I don't think that's entirely unfair
because he seems to have
started out from a relatively moderate liberal position, but that has this singular focus about
the issues of social justice. But that's gradually come to encompass everything that matters in his
worldview. And anybody that opposes it, whatever their other views are, is fine.
And other people don't see it like that.
They say reactionary conservatives who oppose social justice are not necessarily the groups that liberal humanists should be allying with.
Yeah, I can understand the dynamics and sort of stepping away from James a little bit here and just talking about that general dynamic.
I think everyone who's engaged with this can feel that.
I mean, you can feel the pull towards polarization.
I mean, if you haven't been accused of being a racist on Twitter yet, then you're not using it right, I think, basically.
Or on the alternative, you'll probably be accused of being a socialist who hates America
or whatever.
So there's this intrinsic sort of push towards polarisation
because the people you're arguing with or any discussion
will very quickly be completely over the top
and it will seem to you as if those people are worse and worse
and you will drift towards the people who are agreeing
with you, essentially.
So I think James is following a path which I think pretty much everyone is in danger of following,
which is you drift towards the people who are nice to you,
and you get a more and more jaded opinion of anyone who disagrees with you,
and you end up contributing to this yeah this terrible polarized discourse
that we've got going on yeah except for us matt they're the only ones that don't fall into that
oh yeah we just we're so mature and it's the such emotional maturity again i want to just make a
point here just a very brief aside which is these kind of dynamics that we're talking about we are
not claiming to be immune from them rather we are indeed saying that they affect everyone.
And I'm not also saying that everyone is affected to the same degree.
But it's naive to think that these don't play into it.
And they relate to this topic and the presentation of a binary of the good liberals and the bad critical theorists. And I think you and I might
know some critical theorists, not tons of them, but at least people that are sympathetic to it
on Twitter. And even though we might not share their social revolutionary goals, it isn't the
case that they're all secretly plotting to destroy liberal society with their endless grievances no no i mean i
completely agree it actually really helps on a personal level to just know people you know like
genuinely like people that are on the other side of the fence i think it always helped for me that
that my mom that my mom is like super work right really super duper woke and uh and she's a nice lady she doesn't
want to destroy society i promise yeah and uh yeah so look that's really helpful and yeah look
we're really not immune to this i'm definitely no better than the next person i i went some way
along that route as james lindsey think, when I first started using Twitter.
Completely naive.
And people don't know, Matt, that your original username was PimmergettLicker65.
Stormtrooper69.
Yeah, that was me.
Yeah, it was my life for a few years.
No, this is a joke.
Do not cancel me for that.
That's not true. That's a joke. That's a joke. Just a joke.
Anyway, yeah. So look, I mean, that's the dynamic.
Look, it's not some shattering revelation.
It's politics, isn't it? It's political thinking.
It's polarization, yeah.
But I think in terms of like the scope of this podcast,
it's just that that polarization is useful for people that want to present themselves as authorities on any side you set up a cardboard villain and rally your side
the side of righteousness to stand up against the threat that's what this talk is yeah yep don't do
that people that's our advice don't do it maybe close to final point that speaks to this both the skew and the polarization cycle
comes when james starts to talk about people like you and me matt have the mistaken idea that maybe
this isn't a big deal and it hasn't impacted society and he wants to point out that it has
through cancel culture through how things have spread across different aspects. So let me
play him talking about that in general. And then I want to talk about his view about how this
ideology has affected social media in particular. So here's the first clip. This isn't just in our
universities, law societies, many corporations, even some cities now have diversity officers.
And the diversity training industry in the United States alone is above a $10 billion a year industry.
This is an industry that produces no tangible product whatsoever.
And almost none of what it does is supported by evidence in its favor.
Some of what it does is supported by evidence in its favor. Some of what it does is has evidence against it.
So just one point here is that I don't think it's strictly true to say that they don't produce any tangible product, because I might not agree with the diversity training lecture series.
Some of them, I don't know the content of all of them, but they definitely are producing lectures and trainings and stuff like that.
But they definitely are producing lectures and trainings and stuff like that.
So they are not producing a physical product, but there's plenty of services or corporate things. That is a product. That's why they get paid 10 billion.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Look, every academic is guilty of not producing tangible products.
So guilty. Guilty.
That's probably my reaction just to that accusation.
Look, people who make no tangible products
are okay. But the more important point is this extent of the spread of this critical theory
perspective and how it's seeping in to all areas of society. And we get a discussion about cancel
culture, which is topical. So let me just play this brief clip.
Social justice activists are very visible on social media,
and they're particularly keen to punish people
who are influential within the arts and within media.
Calls for the punishment of artists who have spoken against
or stepped out of line with social justice
are often referred to, as you've heard now, as cancel culture.
Okay, so that's James's summary about cancel culture. And what I wanted to note here was that,
so I'm not a cancel culture skeptic, first of all. I think it is a kind of modern phenomenon that happens that people have their careers attacked for things that they said a long time
ago or things that they say online.
In some cases justified, in some cases not.
But this is not a thing which is unique
to critical theorists and social justice people.
There are plenty of right-wing champions
to get people cancelled.
Indeed, Mike Cernovich has made something of a career out of it.
For example, the Guardians of the Galaxy
director was fired because he made some off-color joke related to kids or pedophilia or something.
And Mike Cernovich drummed up a campaign and he was fired by Disney. Now, you can say that's
them weaponizing the response of corporations to online campaigns
and their sensitivity to these issues.
But I think it's wrong to lay this solely at the feet of the critical theorists and
social justice people, because it seems that this is a pattern that a lot of groups follow,
and a substantial portion of them are right-wing archery campaigns
dropped out by Fox.
Yeah, I think I agree with you there.
I guess it's true that one could say social justice tends to place a higher priority on
protecting people from harm than on free speech, ideologically anyway.
But though right-wingers purportedly, or the sort of libertarian type right-wingers are
free speech boosters, they don't necessarily walk the talk. There's a fair bit of moral
condemnation, basically exerting some kind of force over people on moral grounds happening
across the board. So that's a much bigger thing than just critical theorists. And you have to
acknowledge also that it's got a lot to do with technology it's just a different technological age we're in at the moment
so a lot of it is simply driven by the fact that so much is so public and that that just allows
mobs of any kind of any persuasion to gather and make their force felt regardless of where they're coming from. Yes, yes. And so let me play a clip where James is talking about
how far this ideology has infected social media.
He wants to make the point here about the platforms,
but also the giant corporations that are endorsing this ideology.
Online platforms themselves increasingly ban and block
and otherwise punish
users who produce content that can be deemed offensive, as Peter pointed out, even by proxy.
YouTube regularly demonetizes videos. It seems to have transgressed some standard. These are
sometimes seemingly arbitrary. Facebook has become so vigorous in its censorship that
years-old posts that are being read out of context by its algorithms occasionally result in account suspensions and bans.
And Twitter has updated its rules to ban all kinds of speech, in particular that which they call dehumanizing language for religious groups, as well as gender critical feminism.
So this reads as a fairly familiar set of complaints, right, that are particularly prevalent amongst Fox News and that kind of focus.
But it is fair to say that like the IDW is big on this issue as well. And so I want to say here that it's not that these trends that James is lamenting are real.
Again, with cancel culture, I think there's legitimacy to some of the points that
he's making. But on the other hand, if you look at the top performing Facebook posts by day,
it's completely dominated by Fox News, Ben Shapiro, Breitbart stories, so on, day in and day out.
And this notion that the only ideology that is allowed on these platforms and which has
been enabled to spread is woke social justice activism, it just, it really doesn't accurately
capture the environment.
There's plenty of other ideologies that are rampant on these platforms.
And like James himself has a massive platform because of Twitter.
And what does he do all day? Reel against these ideologies. And he's still there. So I know
there's lots of cases that people like to point to, but it's not to say that Twitter or Facebook
always gets things right, but just the extent to which these institutions are controlled by social justice people seems
slightly exaggerated. Sure, you have James Damore, but why don't you have many more cases? And I
guess the argument would be that people are too afraid to speak out, but it becomes an unfalsifiable
hypothesis. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think we won't be able to dive into all of the issues around
censorship or deplatforming because it's just too big a topic. There's obviously legitimate
concerns one could have about delegating the authority to these big platforms, which are
corporations, and essentially leaving it up to them to decide what goes too far. On the other hand, it's a genuinely difficult issue.
I don't envy YouTube or whoever who are sort of forced by necessity
to have to make some decisions here.
I mean, sure, Alex Jones was deplatformed,
and that was arguably suppressing free speech.
But, you know, really, that was probably for the best,
most people would say yeah well yeah i
mean definitely i think a lot of people don't spend much time with his content that venture
opinions on him and like i do because of knowledge right and his content is a lot more extreme i
think than a lot of people realize it isn't just like waffling about interventional aliens it's
fairly consistent frequent exhortations for his audience for the need to do something potentially violent, generally against Democrats.
So, I mean, I'm not saying the political point, but it's more the call for violence and targeting specific people and so on.
So it's like there's validity, but there's also like this blind spot to that side of the content.
And I kind of wish that if people were going to complain about that, that they would do it with an acknowledgement of some of the reasons that there are needs to remove people from platforms.
platforms yeah i mean i think the modern situation is an interesting one because you have these different institutions which i think are dominated to one degree or another by groups with a different
political persuasion like from all the surveys it does seem for instance that academia has a very
strong skew towards the left and i guess the same would be true of many but critically not all of the
mainstream media outlets as well um you know the very existence of fox news and we have similar
news organizations in australia in fact our most popular newspaper the australian is is definitely
center right so yeah i mean i agree it's kind of not healthy that they're,
you know, obviously, the White House is a Trump government.
I guess that's the like, fundamental point for me, there's that you often hear, you know,
nobody is able to speak these truths. And yet every day on Fox News, and from the White House,
these messages are blasted out. So it's kind of like, yes,
as long as you just ignore that there is right wing media and that there are a large amount of
popular right wing cultural commentators and maybe the argument as well, people on the left
should be saying this too. But even there, it feels like at least from me, There are a fair amount of people talking about this daily as their main output.
So yeah, I just want to make the point that the social media issue always feels a bit like a
political football and that people are always looking for it from one lens. They find examples
of people being banned or of bad decisions and they never go and look for disconfirming examples,
you know, like tankies being banned.
That's not the concern.
Yeah.
It wasn't such a long time ago that Noam Chomsky wrote
Manufacturing Consent, which basically made the opposite case
that all of the media institutions were basically pushing
a right-wing capitalist kind of agenda.
So this is a point because it's still the case that leftists think, and maybe they have some
validity, that the mainstream media is biased against socialism or anything which is out of
neoliberal centricism is presented as like extreme. Now, I don't think
the case that they present is that strong. But, you know, Jeremy Corbyn and the way he was treated
in the media and stuff, they take that as very indicative of a hostility towards far left ideas.
So both sides are kind of claiming that the mainstream media doesn't represent their views.
I mean, I'm not going to argue that there isn't a greater prevalence for
sympathy for far left or woke arguments among Vox and The Guardian and these kind of outlets. But
James Lindsay at some point starts randomly listing off a bunch of articles he doesn't like
from mainstream sources. And I felt like, yeah, you could do that about almost any topic because
there's lots of opinion pieces and opinion columns in magazines that you could object to. I mean,
in some sense, that's what they're there for, to generate responses. So he's arguing, you know,
it's indicative of a cultural shift, but it still feels that there's like a selective attention problem. Okay, I have a clip that speaks to this related to how James knows the extent of
this problem. Examples aren't limited to these. I get emails literally every single day. It's
quite depressing talking about yet another walk of life that's been infected by social justice and critical methods.
Rock climbing, hiking, knitting, craft ceramics, Catholicism, Lutheranism, Americans and Buddhism, the Southern Baptist Convention.
Okay, and the list continues, but you get the idea. And the only point here I want to make just quickly, which basically follows up on this,
is if your sole attention is on a topic, the messages that you get or the people that contact
you will tend to contact you about that topic. So it doesn't surprise me at all that he gets
examples daily from people complaining about this ideology. It would be as surprising to hear
that I often get DMs from people complaining about this ideology. It would be as surprising to hear that I often get DMs
from people complaining about the intellectual dark web.
Yeah, I guess it has that characteristic of being too online,
which affects all of us, really, because you have this bubble
and it feeds you a constant stream of bad stuff that makes you upset.
So he mentioned people getting banned from these various platforms for
making religious statements that were considered derogatory and gender critical feminists being
silenced and so on so i think i definitely could see that there are lots of yeah edge cases because
you know i was someone who was a bit upset when many people on the left essentially shrugged their shoulders when Salman Rushdie got his fatwa.
And it was kind of trendy to say that the people at Charlie Hebdo had it coming.
So, you know, I'm definitely on the side of...
Defend free speech.
Yeah, and defend pluralism, basically.
And just be able to live with the idea that there are going to be people out there who say things that you won't like and just suck it up.
Offense is not a reason to kill someone.
I think we can agree on that.
Yeah, exactly.
And I'm sure these platforms are basically, you know, I don't think they actually ever really wanted to get in the business of censorship.
They were getting pressure from all directions.
They had to do something about hate speech that was, like,
really, you know, off the charts type stuff.
And I don't think anyone would have a problem with them
not letting their platforms get used for that.
And so it's not a simple free speech or not black black white issue i think um yeah yeah i think yeah
well as with last time last we end up with a three hour podcast which half of the people
like and half of them hit i i guess we should move on to anything that we missed and then maybe some final sum up points. So one point we have glided over
is the extent to which the views of the critical theorists
are linked to previous historical movements.
And typically you highlighted communism is a specter
which haunts these conversations.
And there are various occasions
where it's stated
critical theory is not communism. But even with that disclaimer, there are plenty of parallels
drawn to, as you mentioned, the Red Guards or struggle sessions and so on. And one point that
crops up in this talk and a bunch of others is the connection to the so-called Frankfurt School.
a bunch of others is the connection to the so-called Frankfurt School. Now, you and I,
Matt, as we disclaimed at the start, are not critical theorist scholars and do not know that much about the history. And the connections that are presented here between the Frankfurt School
and modern critical theorists is very much that they were inspired by this approach, and they acknowledge that themselves.
So, well, let me play a clip where James is discussing the Frankfurt School
and what they're about from his point of view.
The critical theorists in the Frankfurt School and since didn't and don't trust liberalism.
They were faltering Marxists who were already disillusioned with capitalism and who were becoming increasingly disillusioned with a society that seems to like it.
For them, the problem was that liberalism lets people make their own choices. And of course,
people can't be trusted to choose the right things. At the time, they were concerned with
people choosing fascism. So maybe that's fair enough.
It goes on from there. I just like, by the way, that ending where
there is the consolatory point that, well, they were opposed
to fascism, so maybe they had a point there.
In the 1930s
and 40s and 50s that might that might have been a reasonable
concern yeah and the fact that they had to flee nazi germany uh seems seems like it might have
been you know on their mind um but but it's clear they're not seen as like very good people right
and and i think his description as you know kind of of faltering Marxists is from all that I can see fairly accurate that well, Matt, is that like looking at the history
of liberalism, it's a massive school with a bunch of different thinkers that stretches over, I think,
50 or 60 years, or maybe it's still going in some form or another. And it has divisions within the
school. And they actually end up in the 60s and 70s being denounced for not being radical enough.
And you have people coming into the lectures series and doing a Brett Weinstein on them,
like chastising them for not being appropriately revolutionary minded.
So the point I want to make is, I think simplifying these large or long-term projects
and groups into, you know, single ideas that are entirely negative, it feels too simplistic.
And I don't like the opposite extreme where you deny everything that you say, you can't
say anything about the school.
So I think it's fair
enough to draw out themes that they had or how the modern critical theorists are interpreting them.
But I think acknowledgement that this group of people are diverse and that their ideas cannot
be boiled down to just like a hatred of liberalism considering that they existed in liberal societies for multiple decades and were part of governments to some extent like serving
on committees and whatnot it just seems if cynical criticism is this thing which dissolves society
how come they didn't dissolve the societies then like how come we're still here yeah i mean like yeah like you've got to
emphasize that i'm just a complete amateur trying to understand the kind of philosophy that went on
in things like the frankfurt school but i have read bits of it from time to time and this this
talk got me reading a couple of articles on max horkheimer and I probably only comprehended like five percent of
the stuff this guy has produced but you know as you say it is it is heavy going and it's actually
pretty interesting um like there's a bunch of quotes from him essentially talking about a
scientific worldview being the only reasonable way to kind of approach reality and I'm sure he's
he's said stuff that could be interpreted the other way.
So, yeah, look, there's a lot of stuff I could say,
but I think the main thing I'll say is that I think the...
My hot take here is that the CircleSquared group
has made a little bit of a mistake, in my humble opinion,
in attempting to trace...
So the stuff that they don't like is the stuff that's
very much applied philosophy to the social sciences or to to social studies so the stuff that
the stuff that you and i are familiar with that actually the critical x studies journals for
instance that exist in psychology and sociology and anthropology. These are like four steps removed from the philosophy
that was happening in places like the Frankfurt School.
And yes, you can trace back ideas through this winding path,
but, you know, having read, so I'm more familiar
with the actual literature that actually appears now
in these applied settings.
And yeah, if you don't like that stuff, that's one thing.
But I don't think you can trace a direct line back and lay it at the feet of these philosophical groups.
Yeah, and there's a lot of emphasis placed on that they're seeking to actually apply these theories to society,
the critical theorists this is. But in academia, almost everyone, especially within the social
sciences, is encouraged by funding bodies and by their academic institutions to claim that their
research can be applied to society. Whether or not it actually can is a different issue,
but it's a fairly universal thing
that there's a push for you to be able to frame your research
as being applied or having applications.
And I'm not saying I think that's a good thing.
I actually think there should be plenty of space
for just doing research
which doesn't have
these specific social applications just to find things out. But I do want to note that there isn't
something that's just unique to the critical X field. It's in mainstream psychology and so on as
well. Yeah. Look, I think another thing I'll point out is because a colleague of
mine actually prescribed a critical social psychology textbook in our faculty, I did
end up getting familiar with the contents of those. And in the first chapters of those textbooks,
they outline the, I guess, philosophical and conceptual antecedents, like the different lenses or whatever that they apply.
And yes, they mention schools like this.
They mention postmodernism, but they also mention Freudianism, Chris.
Like it gets a whole section, like as big as the postmodernism.
Psychoanalytic approaches are huge and are a huge influence, I think, in a lot of critical theorists or at least postmodern scholarship, as far as I saw in anthropology in the 90s.
That absolutely astonishes me.
Within psychology or orthodox psychology, Freudianism is completely discredited.
It's probably neo-Freudianism, to be fair, or like Jordan Peterson's Jungianism.
But like, in any case... I don't like it much either, Chris.
That doesn't help.
I know.
Look, I'm not advocating for them.
doesn't help i know and look i'm not advocating for them i i just acknowledge that i had to read stuff where people were interpreting things through that lens so so yeah um so i think
what we're saying in summary this is going to be a consistent message is things are complicated
people that give you simplistic accounts which have good and evil forces are often
doing an injustice to the complexity of the world even if there is some legitimacy to the way that
they paint things that's that's all i think i want to say about that that's that's good that's a very
anodyne summary and i can sign up to it a%. That's right. That's all I'm good for is just making like,
so ultimately what I want to say is nothing at all.
It's just things are complicated.
Wow, you took a brave stand there, Chris.
You would be surprised how often that is a brave stand
in the online world, at least.
Okay, so there was one other point
which actually feels a bit random,
but I did want to get to it
because I think it also speaks to the tendency
to extrapolate too far from the available evidence
and where we might be accused by James
of sticking our head in the sand
and ignoring the very real
danger signs. I'm just going to play this clip which is related to diversity statements.
Not only are these requirements political litmus tests, at least potentially, for hiring,
the compelled confessions they sometimes contain can be potentially useful for firing, too, should somebody later step out of line.
Even he said he's a racist.
Okay, so a hot-button topic in heterodox quarters, for a while at least, was these diversity and inclusion statements that people were required to include in job applications.
that people were required to include in job applications.
And so here, James is saying,
because people need to write these and they sometimes make statements
about where they've fallen short or whatever,
that this information could be kept on file
and used to fire them.
But first of all, has that ever happened?
Because that seems like it would be a huge issue
in regards to privacy and employment
laws so that's one and two is i i see people making like a big deal about these signing
statements and stuff but way back before i'd even heard the word woke and i had not even flown my
nest in belfast when i was trying to get a place in like an electronic goods store
as a part-time job, I remember having to write things on the application that were like pretty
nonsense about, you know, just like job applications and applying for university places
often have these hoops that you have to jump through where people produce statements that
are relatively meaningless. But I think part of the thing is just to simply show that you can
write something that sounds good, that like shows a commitment to fairness or equality or diversity,
whatever it means. And there might be political implications for that. But it just seems to me
a little bit of a chicken little scenario that this,
you know,
it's going to lead to people being fired and that this is something we need
to hold the line against.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Actually,
I was just this morning listening to another podcast,
Two Psychologists,
Four Beers.
And I might,
we might put a link to that episode in the notes because they talk about
this issue of.
Also, they give us a positive shout-out from the first episode,
so there's a double reason to do so.
Oh, really? Yeah, absolutely, yeah.
So we can reciprocate.
And so they...
I really liked their take on the thing, by the way,
so it's worth a listen if you're interested in that.
And they said something similar, which is,
OK, it's basically silly, yes, it's an exercise in writing something that sounds good and and people
copy and paste it into each of their applications and really what does it mean it doesn't mean very
much at all um i've never heard of um any one of them being used to fire you later on no no i mean
i don't like them.
I think they're silly.
It's not kind of...
No, I don't think they do anything.
I don't think they actually achieve anything.
I just see it as like a meaningless bureaucratic requirement.
Again, I'm defending the status quo.
Oh, God.
That's my lot in life.
But anyway, so, all right, look i think we we have gone through this content
in some detail and we're returning to a bunch of themes over and over but let's try and keep
things below the two hour mark so my unless there's anything else you want to hit do you have
your big takeaways from this content yeah yeah no look i definitely agree we
made a promise that we would try to be shorter so let's let's do this um and we've definitely
kept to that that's right it'll probably come in at 10 10 minutes shorter anyway um okay so my
conclusions um yeah look i mean i don't have such strong feelings about this as I did on our last episode.
And we talked about the dark horse.
Oh, by the way, we pronounced their names wrong.
Just to correct.
I should have known this given the amount that I've engaged with their
contact, but they are not Weinstein.
They're Weinstein.
Yes.
That was an error that many people pointed out.
And just my, and your by extension mistake
my apologies yeah so look this is uh a political speech it's it's in in a rhetorical mode uh so
it's got i mean and you have to keep in mind he's speaking to an audience of people from
sovereign nations i assume they're not from sovereign nations, I assume. They're not from sovereign nations.
They just set up the conference.
Oh.
I think this isn't a room of, like, evangelical Christians.
It's a room of, you know, British people that are sympathetic.
Yeah, sorry.
So, you know, it's not intense.
So I'm trying to evaluate on it because it's on its own terms
because it's not meant to be, like like an academic article or anything like that.
It's done as a political speech, but as such, it's pretty light.
It's light on the content.
As we talked about it, the examples and quotations that are given to support the argument.
Yeah, that's right.
The monkey with the virus lives in the city.
Yeah, that's right.
The box, the monkey with the virus lives in the city,
you know, the social justice people versus liberalism theme.
Yeah, you know, it's a bit of a reach.
You know, so even though I could enumerate a bunch of details that he mentions that I would nod my head to and say,
yeah, yeah, no, that's a fair point.
Yes, there are Kafka traps that are out there
and there is this conflation and switching forward,
back and forth between, say, systematic racism
and what are not.
So I could enumerate a bunch of those specific things
where I would nod my head on.
But I think in terms of the big picture,
yeah, I think it's a political speech.
A lot of rhetorical flourishes and evocative imagery.
So yeah, it is what it is.
All right.
Yeah, i don't
find much that i disagree with what a shocker but the the thing that i would emphasize maybe that
is slightly different is that like last time we were dealing with people whose expertise
flits around between a whole bunch of different subjects. And yes, the Weinstein brothers were talking about the problems with academia and whatnot.
But with James, it feels like if we're treating him as a guru,
he is a guru in the sense of he's detailing this one specific topic,
which he claims expertise and deep expertise in,
which is critical theory and social justice,
and that he can break it down to other people. And maybe he, I mean, he clearly has spent
significant time thinking about the topic and reading some selected material. But what that also leads to is this monomaniacal focus on a single issue to exclude
all others and seeing the world and everyone in it to an extent through what their position is on
that one issue. And I think, you know, when you go back and you read history for your one focus,
you can find all these connections, but you're maybe ignoring
lots of other connections, which you could just as readily emphasize. So I'm not someone who thinks
that people can't have their focus, but I think we should be willing to call out when they are
presenting it as the only thing
that matters for society when there's clearly many other things which matter yeah well look I mean I
um so yeah in terms of the guru thing I uh you know I think he does cast himself as a bit of a
guru because he's like Jeff Jeff Goldblum in um in Jurassic Park right well he's not like him
because he was eating on the toilet well neither of them were eating on the toilet, Chris.
Yes, you're right.
In that sense, he is very much like Jeff Goldblum.
Yeah.
But yeah, in terms of that
focus, I mean, here's
an interesting thing. I don't know about you, but I've found
that when people
like a researcher of some
kind really focuses on a topic and
makes it their their job
then in general what i find and i certainly found this myself i'm curious what you think chris
generally people become more dispassionate about the topic because you tend to treat it more as a
technical thing to be understood and and sort of solved you might have been attracted to it
um for instance i'm of i know people that have been attracted to it. For instance, I know people that have been attracted to studying addiction
because they had some strong feelings about wanting to help people and so on.
And then as they get more into it and into it,
they develop a more detached kind of dispassionate view,
which is, I think, generally a good thing.
Matt, I have an excellent example of this.
I'll keep it very short so as not to interrupt your flow. But I was as a teenager in a maybe in a Sam Harris way interested in Buddhism and meditation quite significantly. I had meditation practice, was attending groups, was reading a lot about Buddhism.
instead of going to do law and and you know have a successful career as a lawyer i would take a course that would allow me to study about buddhist history and buddhist philosophy and that's part of
the reason i ended up at the school of oriental african studies in london but actually studying
buddhism completely changed my perspective on it because i learned about you know the traditions
and the history and the divisions and that divisions and that my image was this completely
idealized, uncritical perspective. And it actually deepened my interest in Buddhism and the history
and the traditions, but it somewhat destroyed the marvelous image and passion that I had for
Buddhist practice, which some people would see as a shame, but yeah.
Yep. Yeah, that's a perfect example. That's exactly what I'm talking about. So
something different has happened, I think, James, and it's ironic really, because I think it's,
I see the same thing in terms of some of the academic research on, you know, these issues
like racism and so on, like rather than adopting that kind of view, rather it kind of leads to a monomaniacal kind of focus where you see the thing that you're studying absolutely everywhere.
You know, it just becomes this all-consuming where nothing else, the importance of everything else in the world just doesn't compare to this one thing.
And it sort of goes the other way, I think.
And that's unhealthy. So my
observation here is I think the thing that is potentially happening with the people that James
is criticizing is happening a little bit. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Well, maybe just in case you're
listening, James, I will again say that I think you're an obnoxious ass, but I don't
hate you. And yeah, maybe it's useful to have someone like him out there in the ecosystem. So
I'd be interested to hear pushback from maybe not from James himself, but I doubt he'll want to respond. But if he or anyone else that thinks we're not representing things correctly or we're
kind of missing the point, I'd be interested to hear the arguments.
And you can do so by sending us the email to decodingthegurus at gmail.com, probably,
or by reaching us on Twitter, which I think is also decoding the gurus isn't
that right yeah i think so yep oh no a guru's pod all right okay there you go good thing you're here
so yeah okay all right thanks chris i think that's a pretty good place to leave it so
uh goodbye from both of us. We had a good time.
Hopefully it doesn't end up being too long.
In a couple of weeks, we hope to be doing Jordan Peterson.
So we will post a link to the content we're covering a week beforehand.
Thanks very much.
Bye-bye.
Bye-bye.
God damn it.
That's a silly bye-bye.
I'm definitely going to keep that by then.
All right. Thank you.