Decoding the Gurus - Special Episode: Welcome to Weinstein World with special guest David Pizarro
Episode Date: August 27, 2021The Weinstein brothers have been busy bees over the past few weeks/months(!) and it left Matt and Chris with a conundrum. How do they cover them as part of an intro segment without it turning into a f...ive hour podcast? The solution was to make a two hour stand alone special episode purely dedicated to exploring the wonders (and shivering at the occasional horrors) as we try to map the terrain of Weinstein World. To help us navigate the alien geography and provide a 'relatively normal person' sanity check we have enlisted the help of the famed psychologist, David Pizarro, also known for co-hosting Very Bad Wizards (a small, upcoming ghost-hunting/philosophy podcast).Together with David we decode ancient mysteries, like why does Eric always wear a jacket?, we solve deep existential puzzles, like whether vodka can cure all conflicts, and we ponder heretofore unimagined possibilities, like how successful an audiobook of Fifty Shades of Grey read by Sam Harris and Heather Heying would be.So we hope you will join us on this exploration and remember our core message: *You do not have to promote anti-vaccine rhetoric & unproven miracle cures during a global pandemic*LinksVery Bad Wizards(!): David's excellent podcast hosted with philosopher Tammler SommersVery Bad Wizards Episode 191: All the RageRebel Wisdom interview with Eric Weinstein: Vaccines, Ivermectin & Dark HorseRebel Wisdom: Better Skeptics for the Dark HorseRebel Wisdom: Yuri Deigin Responds to Bret Weinstein on Vaccines, Ivermectin & QuilletteBret and Heather 92nd DarkHorse Podcast Livestream: The Blankest SlateClaire Berlinski & Yuri Deigin's Article on Quillette: Looking for COVID-19 ‘Miracle Drugs’? We Already Have Them. They’re Called VaccinesArticle on Medium by David Fuller: On Vaccine Safety, Ivermectin and the Dark Horse Podcast: An Investigation
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Decoding the Gurus, the podcast where an anthropologist and a psychologist
listen to the greatest minds the world has to offer and we try our best to understand
what they're talking about i'm professor matt brown and with me is
associate professor chris kavanagh and we have a guest with us and we know his name but i'm not
sure of his title actually and it's very important i i suspect it's professor the king of all the
worldly realms is that about is that above professor or below professor?
No, associate professor.
Definitely below professor.
That melodious voice that you hear is the world-renowned David Pizarro,
host of this very small, obscure, academic niche podcast very very bad psychics very bad very bad
wizards that's it which he hosts with a ghost hunter and philosopher tumblr summers so david
is a psychologist uh moral psychologist is that or social psychologist i'm a social psychologist only because moral
psychologist wasn't really a title when i started doing but yeah i'd say social psychologist and i'm
and to answer the question associate but there's a story behind that i just haven't filled out my
paperwork there's nothing wrong with associate professors even especially specially appointed ones those
are the ones that that's the title you want the non-tenure equivalent so thanks for coming on
dave we've got a another special episode it's always a special episode when we have a guest
but this one is extra special special special because we're going to get you to help us
do a bit of a review of the crazy mixed-up world
of the Weinsteins and give everyone a bit of an update
of what's been going on since our last episode on them.
And even though we've probably talked about them far, far too much
and we don't want to be thought of as obsessives
even though chris arguably is uh it definitely deserves a whole episode to just see where we
were and see where we are today and and how we got there and it's great to have you on in particular
because the very bad wizards episode 191. It feels like an eternity ago,
but that was around the time
of the Black Lives Matter protests.
And there were some tweets and things there
from Brett and Eric that got under your skin
and you hit some really good points.
So do you remember that time, Dave?
I do.
And first of all, thank you so much for having me.
I would just want to say,
not only uh am i
excited to be on your podcast so i can talk to you guys and meet you because i've listened to you guys
and have not had a chance to meet you but to be on the weinstein podcast episode i mean the
weinstein episode this is like you know this is some big shit for me this is uh this is because
i've been waiting for you guys to do the episode
and here i am like inside of it this is this is guru royalty this is like being there with
and whoever's married with right but yes i very much remember um i don't remember
the content of what what i said when i was upset orler, because as you might feel like once we publish an episode,
I forget everything until the emails and the tweets come in angrily. And, you know,
we have been doing a podcast for a long, a long time in podcast time. And we have, I think,
We have, I think, a fairly big chunk of our following has come to us from people who first listened to Sam Harris and people who would be sort of sympathetic to the thinking of the IDW in general, which is fine.
We appreciate them.
But it wasn't so obvious to us until we said anything against them and then all of a sudden we realized oh wow there are a lot of people who are not happy with us for criticizing them but yeah you you
guys haven't been that shy about criticizing them though even i mean there's a connection which listeners of your podcast will
know that tamler's stepmom is christina hoff summers right which is a very interesting and
entertaining dynamic it actually makes the endless interpersonal psychodrama of the intellectual
dark web in tamler's case it actually is a family drama getting blocked on twitter by your step
muller that kind of thing it's very yeah it's very close to home for him yes christina has you know
she is part of the original dark picture spread of the idw oh was she in the bushes she was in the
i think she was in the bushes and she was in the, I think she was in the bushes. And she was, you know, she was dressed fabulously in, you know, whatever.
Leopard print, that's right.
Yeah, that's right.
Just like Brett in the same photo shoot.
They have matching leopard prints.
This is going off topic, but I have to mention it.
It might even be a lie, but the photographer who posed the people for those photos, I've seen online that that photographer is skeptical of most of those figures and that he partly intended the pictures to be subtly undermining.
And if you look at the Brett Weinstein photo, it does look like he's stroking a phallic ship
shrub so oh my god i want that that i want that to be true so badly yeah i'm like i'm not saying
that makes brett wrong i'm just saying if he's stroking phallic shrubbery because of some photographers this dn i i would quite enjoy that
that would be you know it's like those disney animators who would secretly put in a phallus
in two frames of a children's movie yeah this is this is a bit like you the episode you did
on the stanley cooper like the shining where i don't know if you've heard of it, but it's a movie about people doing interpretations of The Shining and reading.
And there's one guy that just was reading a lot of phallic imagery into stuff which seemed highly, highly unphallic.
When you see dicks everywhere everywhere maybe the problem lies with you
you know that's funny that's funny but yeah no we've not been shy and criticizing i think
but it is important to us to um to always to always this isn't this is hard to do i think and people we may have failed miserably at times but to
speak of people with respect even when we're criticizing them and there's certain people
certainly people we've disagreed with who are i would consider friends sam harris included
in that number and so i think that day though might represent might represent the time when I had just gotten pissed off enough at some tweet that it just set me off.
And I don't have a relationship with either of the Weinstein brothers, any of the four famous Weinstein brothers.
You know, I didn't feel any of that, oh my God, they might hear this kind of, there was no sentiment holding me back from expressing my anger at what I think might be a theme
of what we discussed.
What I view as sort of deep irresponsibility, not just about what they believe, but about
how they are leading, like who they're leading where.
how they are leading, like who they're leading where.
Like there is a, I think in general, an unwillingness to deal with the problem of having followers who you know are going to misuse your information and work in ways that even you would disagree
with.
And that's really what I think pisses me off the most
about some of these, especially lately.
Yeah, I think when they've, like, part of the issue
with the Weinsteins and the IDW world in general
that most robs me the wrong way
is when you present as a kind of secret value
that you're willing to have the hard conversations
and get into criticisms and
you don't care about the personal elements or the tribal factors. And then the reality is much more
like most of what you see is very strongly tinged with interpersonal psychodrama stuff, right? Like
you criticize this person and they're my friend so
that or this person is a bad faith actor oh that term bad faith by the way has been getting on my
nerves so much it's it's like started off as something that that made sense as a phrase say
and now it's just completely completely meaningless all it means is somebody who disagrees with me in a way that i don't like like it's yeah yeah well well it's a bit of a trend is it where every every time every good
thing gets weaponized and turned into this awful imitation and charade of the good thing and
you know sense making is isn't a word that triggers me now whenever people say sense making
trade-offs trade-offs
we can just trade trigger words but i like and so i think that you know we've been accused
by mainly by critics in the leftist side of the sphere of being alt-alt IDW or like IDW-like.
And I tend to think that there are aspects
of what the people in heterodox or sense-making spheres
are complaining about, right,
with like woke overreach or so on,
that I think has legitimacy to some of the complaints.
And I don't have any problem saying that.
So it kind of annoys me that it's taken, if you want to criticize anything to do with
wokeism or that kind of thing, that you're immediately associated that the intellectual
dark web is where you should go.
And for me, it's like, no, just because somebody is complaining
about cultural appropriation of white people cooking noodles, it doesn't mean I want to sign
up for Jordan Peterson's 12-month course on the Bible. Yeah, absolutely. I mean, I think that
there's so much irrationality. There's enough irrationality to go around. And yeah, depending on who the last
person it is, I've criticized or we've criticized on our podcast, that's who you might get lumped in
with that month. And I think that, for instance, when the Black Lives Matter started happening,
a lot of people, I think that their feeling was something like betrayal, that I was actually so liberal in my views about
race. But it's something that to me has been like just, you know, it's obviously been a part of the
way that I see the world ever since, you know, I was in high school, let alone since I started
the podcast. It's just that we don't talk that much about it. But in the absence of talking about it,
people will impute all sorts of beliefs onto you.
And this is one of the reasons that I like you guys so much.
Tell us more.
Yeah.
Hopefully you'll edit this out so I don't look like a simp.
You guys are just reasonable seeming.
And it's a weird thing to make into such a big compliment.
But nowadays, it sort of is a big compliment that it seems as if you are moved by actual reasons.
And this means that you won't ally yourself with somebody
just because you will criticize them.
And I've seen you say both, for instance,
of Sam Harris, good things and bad things
about the
things that he says and that that would be a breath of fresh air in the landscape of podcasting
in our little corner of the internet is sad it's yeah you know it's sad that you can't predict
before an episode is recorded what somebody's going to say about a particular person. It's interesting, isn't it?
Like that's no great thing, is it?
To be moved by reasons.
I mean, yet it shouldn't be a big thing.
I mean, look, my co-host is often not moved by reasons either,
but I have to put him in check.
The mystic forces.
And again, it's not as if I think of myself
as better than these people.
I think I just don't have that much stake
in espousing the particular views.
It doesn't matter that much if I say
I don't like this particular viewpoint.
And I'll be huge credit to our audience
for, I think, over the years, either learning from us or being drawn to us because they were already like this, that it's okay to disagree with each other, criticize, and still actually like each other.
and still actually like each other.
You know, I think that's one of the things that might have drawn people to our podcast
where we can yell at each other
and be angry and disagree,
but it says nothing about
the respect we have for each other.
Yeah, I really...
But in these circles...
Yeah, yeah.
It's all bound up in the personal
and the emotional and egos
and things like that.
And it's odd.
Yeah, I just wanted to echo that.
Like, it's something I've said a a lot which is that i think dispassion is really underrated these days
like you know it's a it's an old-fashioned academic virtue to have a dispassionate interest
in a topic and for it to be yeah you know just sort of intellectual and and at a at a distance
from your self-image and all of those things and And it's kind of not a cool thing to say,
but I see it as a real benefit to, you know,
when I think about my non-online research,
the fact that you do treat it as a puzzle to be solved
and not something that's connected to your deeply held values
and how the world ought to be, that's a plus.
Yeah.
It's not a great feat. I think part of the issue with that though matt is like that's so often invoked now that people
say look i i don't care about the i'm not emotionally invested in this or i'm just rationally
looking at things from a objective point of view you you know, dispassionately. And it's so often not
the case when it's invoked that there's a legitimate thing, you know, the same with
sensemaking or whatever. There's nothing wrong with the term sensemaking, right? There's nothing
wrong with this passionate analysis. But when I hear that, when I hear somebody say, I don't have
any tribe or I don't belong to any political tribe.
I immediately think you're the most extreme partisan who just doesn't recognize it.
But there are nonpartisans.
They do exist.
Yeah.
I mean, look at the word rationalism already indicates probably where you fall.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's sad. It's sad.
all on um yeah it's it's it's sad and i think a lot of this is just wrapped up in the incentives that that are around us right so we can see ourselves sometimes being drawn to saying
certain things and podcasting about certain topics because those get us the most tweets it gets us the most retweets gets us the
most new whatever patreon subscribers and that's just you know sometimes to the point where if
we've done some episode where we made some political statement we're just like next time
let's talk about a movie because we would just want to like cool people down a little bit and
and just it'd be like that's not what we're it's not the kind of audience we want to cool people down a little bit and just be like, that's not the kind of audience we want to cultivate.
I'm just saying, ghosts.
If you guys went by ghosts,
that seems to like, that's all people care about.
It doesn't matter who your guest is
or what your culture will take.
If you want your attention to be swamped,
just get Tamler to talk more about the evidence for ghosts.
It's funny that you say that. The next
movie episode will be
Scooby-Doo, the documentary.
You can tell Tamler
the moral of that story is that it's never a ghost.
It's always an old man.
He never
watched it until he must hear
like are you sure that guy wasn't a ghost wasn't that the double beard guy
i think it was a deeper commentary of like skeptics and
well while we're lightly mocking my co-host um that's i'll say another thing, which is that I think the relationship that I have with my co-host and the mutual respect that we have is what allows us to disagree. And so, you know, we're constantly mocking each other. But that's also something time, the very topic of this episode, we'll see Eric
tweeting like, oh, why can't Brett and Sam just get in a room together and hash this out? Well,
because that's never what they were going to do. They were never friends like that. Whatever mutual
respect or the stroking of each other's egos or the sucking of each other's dicks that goes on
in some of these circles, it's not really about mutual respect. It's about whether or not you will get your followers to agree with me and we can
get everybody mad and show the other people who disagree with us that they're wrong,
as evidenced by the fact that the minute a disagreement arises things go to shit in within that space yeah it's interesting
you talk about you know that having a wellspring of respect for your co-host allows you to have
arguments because like i just don't have that with mark it's obvious it's obvious
we offer it from mutual esteem for each each other and lack of respect.
Well, the problem, this is where I went wrong.
Like when I tell Chris too much, he knows too much.
So he knows, for instance, that I'm like hung over
and eating a cookie in the shower.
Like it's hard to have respect for someone.
This is true.
We do share too much about our personal lives to each other
in incidental
conversations about recording a forecast but yeah but i mean this feels like it feels so mundane to
simply say that like being able to disagree with someone and not lose your shit and cut all contact
right when you receive criticism it's that like this isn't unusual and especially in the academic
sphere and you know academics can be thin-skinned they can be super invested in their theories like
i anybody who thinks academics are these objective paragons of rationale they haven't interacted with
many academics but the thing that academics can do is really harshly criticize each other and their ideas and then be on relatively
good terms. Like at the next conference, people devote book level critiques and then, you know,
they might hit each other, like, but they, they kind of are forced together. And like,
we interviewed Evan Thompson, the scholar of Buddhism, and he, he recommended at the end of it, I think a 10-piece special issue
of a philosophy journal that was dedicated to his book. And you know the way those book
symposiums are, that they're often very critical pieces. And I just cannot see the Weinsteins or
most of the people in the intellectual dark were being able to handle that fairly mild critique
where people take your work, search for critical stuff.
And at the end of it, you come back and say,
I really appreciate the critical engagement
with the content, but here's why you're wrong, right?
Yeah, so it's just, it's like a weird thing
that that's in any way virtuous
because it's so normal.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I don't know, you know, like I don't think that this is specific to the intellectual dark web.
These happen to be the people that are on our Twitter feeds and who are interested in the topics that they that they discuss.
I'm sure if you went to like whatever, any industry that you have a collection of people who are thin skinned. But it just, what bugs me is that they can be people who's very, very outwardly proclaimed
to be not that.
At least, you know, that like some Hollywood exec or some actor who's like a diva, if they
tell you, you're never going to work in this town again, you were never under any guise that what they really were seeking was the truth.
You know it's an industry, but when people purport to be dispassionate truth seekers
and treat their followers like a cult leader would treat their cult followers,
it seems, you know, yeah, know yeah it's odd well on that note
steering this back to eric and brett i think you're episode 191 i'm gonna refresh your memory
about it because i think it's a good starting point for okay good um because yeah as you guys
mentioned like us you're you guys are in principle are fans of heterodox takes and free speech and all that stuff but what you noticed at the time
of the blm protests and this was before i was really tuned into these guys um chris probably
was more so i might have listened to a couple of things
uh you know here's some of the tweets you mentioned of Brett's and Eric's, where Brett called the BLM protests, described them as threatening every value and principle that binds us together and the American Revolution.
Eric Weinstein said that the crime of driving while black has become the crime of thinking while white.
driving while black has become the crime of thinking while white.
And the thing that really annoyed you guys was Brett Weinstein drawing this strong parallel.
Like this is the thing we've noticed too,
where everything gets related back to them
and their personal kind of history.
And they related these national protests to the local drama
that happened at Evergreen and his personal grievance.
And here's the thing the points that
you guys made which is that does the idw have to be such fucking drama queens do they have to be
doing so much catastrophization these hyperbolic comparisons and these personal narratives of
grievance of being persecuted and suppressed and also just this underlying current of narcissism
um running through everything and i'm like holy shit these guys have have got half the
garometer going on there what's did did we steal this and then forgot that we stole it i mean what
happened i i could never accuse you of of that given how i, clear it is to anybody who's not that invested in these teams.
But it's an amazing, you know, I'm not a fan of attributing mental illnesses to people I don't
know, just as a psychologist, a non-clinical psychologist, I can't even diagnose somebody who might obviously have, but, but there is something that is
very labile about the responses and is, as you say, catastrophizing.
So like, if we'll just point to the behavior, the behavior is bringing it, or, I mean, it's
like Evergreen was like his personal 9-11, you know, this is like the roots of, this
is his 1619 is when he got kicked out of Evergreen or not even kicked out.
I don't know.
I actually don't know what happened exactly.
But it's a disgusting amount of self-involvement of the sort that I think a healthy mind ought not have and by definition does not have.
I just, yeah.
and by definition does not have.
I just, yeah.
This will be jumping forward and we should move on to the real of the narrative
of what they've been doing.
But I just want to mention that in a recent interview,
Eric did with David Fuller, this host of Rebel Wisdom,
which we'll get to that channel.
But he mentioned that you may wonder why in his videos he wears a
suit. I'm sure that's something you were concerned about. You've often been curious,
why is he so well presented in videos? You'll notice that I almost always wear a jacket
because I am the establishment in waiting, not the sort of rebels living in the trees, enjoying terrorism, calling it freedom
fighting. Yeah, it requires an incredible amount of discipline to do this. I was just talking to
Sam Harris two nights ago. He said, well, you're anti-institutional. It's like, no, I'm anti the
group of people who inhabits the institutions. Why do you think I'm wearing a jacket in sweltering heat?
I am the institution class.
I'm just an exile.
He explains the mystery of that to David, that it's not because he likes suits.
It's fucking hot and he's uncomfortable in the suit. So he's taking on that burden because he wants to signal to the ruling class
that he's ready to step in
at the elite level of institutions and right the ship.
So that's why he's wearing the suit
to show that he's ready to join.
You know, when they invite him up, he can step in there.
And the thing is, that wasn't a joke
right like i'm sure in this in this video you've been wondering since you can see me they have like
why is chris wearing a shirt and yeah the reason is because you know if the covid pandemic if people
need to see that they can they can bring me up to the panels so that you know i can let them know
how to resolve this shit.
I mean, what he's just said is that I take myself too seriously.
Like he has said of himself, the reason I wear a suit is...
I mean, look, I'm wearing a Marvel Comics t-shirt.
So clearly I'm not going to be able to pop into the ruling class and say shit.
But that's hilarious.
You're actually...
But in actual effect you know usually in the
movies the hollywood movies it's the guy in the ironic marvel shirt who is the one with the crazy
idea like what we should do is test the ducks and we can get the serum and like he's don't listen
to him no he's a brilliant genus look at his shirt nobody right nobody would wear that without some deep wellspring of insight so
i i've learned i've learned something new today which is that some people when they wear clothes
they have reasons yeah you obviously haven't paid enough attention to jeffrey miller and gads
sad it's all about signaling when you're ready to fuck and your your fertility period you need
to let people know when your testosterone spikes with uh your t-shirt choices
all right so yeah like as matt said at the start you're being treated as a relatively normal person
okay good this might be a a fiction that we've created,
but in comparison to me
and the level of Weinstein knowledge,
that's probably fair.
Matt's somewhere in the middle.
He's devoted several podcasts to the Weinstein,
so he cannot claim to be non-invested.
I do blame you guys for a lot of what I know about them because,
because I follow you on Twitter. And sometimes I just, as I was saying off air,
I can't help myself. I'll click through because you'll say,
can you believe that they said this? And then I'll be like, no.
And so I'll click. I was doing this yesterday.
In fact, I was, I was on a long flight.
I got delayed.
I was on a layover.
I had Wi-Fi, and I'm reading my Twitter timeline,
and I was like, I guess what I'm going to be doing
is watching large chunks of the Dark Horse podcast.
I can remember when I gave Matt as an assignment a four-hour conversation between Douglas Murray
and Eric Weinstein and I think that's possibly the closest Matt's came to resigning
there was a point in our three of that conversation where, like, I think both of us were questioning our life choices.
So, yeah, we shouldn't meta-analyze this too much, but it's dangerous.
Verging on self-harm sometimes.
Okay, so, Chris, you're going to take us through a little bit of what's happened.
What's our jumping off point here?
After that brief introduction, look, I'm going to do this in succinct fashion, Matt.
I'll be the master of ceremonies and take you through Weinstein world from where we left them.
And let me remind you, we've got two brothers we're dealing with here and a wife to Brett Heller-Hain, who is an entity in their own right, although Matt sometimes suggests otherwise, because he's a raging misogynist.
So, yeah, you know, you've seen it, David, off the air.
I mean, I can tell. I could just tell.
So, I mean, he's Australian.
so i mean he's australian so the the where we left them was that brett was firmly on the ivermectin anti-vax train but they they you know they're doing the usual thing of
framing it as that they're just asking questions they're worried about institutional capture and so on. And Eric has, in the meantime, remained relatively aloof from the conversation.
He responded a couple of times just to say, thank you for asking.
I don't have an opinion, uncharacteristically, on ivermectin.
Oh, and also, Eric's podcast has been on an extended hiatus.
Oh, and also Eric's podcast has been on an extended hiatus in typical Eric fashion.
He's given several conflicting reasons, hinting at dark forces that were conspiring to prevent the podcast.
But Eric's contribution is mostly around detailing what those dark forces consist of and what he's going to do about them so maybe eric is the easiest
brother to deal with yeah look in some ways eric's gone the high road in terms of this sort of
abstract nebulous conspiratorial stuff whereas brett's gotten since we first covered him he's
gotten really specific he's intangible he's he's gone all in on the anti-vax stuff so where things began to unwind
is since taking that very hard stance they were pushing ivermectin making pretty strong claims
around vaccines being unsafe having some very strange people um some very strange guests on
talking about the vaccines causing like terrible...
Baby's brains to explode.
Baby's brains exploding, that kind of thing. And meanwhile, all of the studies around ivermectin,
which was at the time quite an ambiguous thing, all the subsequent evidence seemed to be pointing
in the wrong direction for ivermectin. Yeah, I would maybe clarify that ivermectin had many, many potential treatments,
low-quality studies, some of which were positive.
But it wasn't the case that there was a strong body of evidence suggesting it's a very promising thing.
It was like many things in the pandemic, just simply something that people were starting to look into. There have been positive
results in in vitro studies, which again, I feel like I'm not a clinical drug developer or anything,
just somebody with an interest in science and skepticism. And I understand the pyramid of clinical evidence,
which is in vitro studies where you see this amazing effect in cells in test tubes is often
not translatable into humans or animals. It's kind of like battery technology. People find these
initial great effects, but they can't actually turn it into anything that would be
usable. So the level of skepticism, I think, was flipped on this, you know, in the same way
hydroxychloroquine got. So that's all my, I know you weren't suggesting it was a strong evidence
piece, but I don't think the attention that was getting was warranted.
So, so Dave, let me ask you ask you this did have you heard of the better
skeptics project um you know in passing because i've again from you guys tweets um i i started
going down that rabbit hole and i couldn't for the life of me figure out what happened and
whatever that day was i didn't have the time or emotional energy to dig too deeply into it um from what I understood it
looked like some attempt at at um you know like uh good faith uh antagonistic sort of uh uh you
know dispassionate presentation of evidence but i don't know was it started
for this ivermectin stuff well i don't want to put you off it but
it it is described by the um people who run it as an exercise in guerrilla sense making but chris yeah so but you've you've joined us onto the like better skeptics wormhole so we'll
leave eric in the dust for now because he's not really involved in this but so better skeptics
is a project organized by a guy called alexandros marinos i his name is, this person could be described as Brett's Uber
fan. Like, you know, I'm not a man averse to long Twitter threads, but I have never seen Twitter
threads the length that he produced to defend almost every claim that Brett made. Like Sam Harris released a podcast with Eric Topol, which was
quite explicitly targeted at Brett. And this is part of the emergence of people within the
heterodox IDWSVs that began to be quite critical of Brett, right? Claire Lehman, Sam Harris,
Yuri Dagan, who's a character that will come up in
this Better Skeptics Project. But it wasn't people just like us who have been long-term
critics of the Weinsteins or that. It's people who would be seen as ideologically on their side. So
Alexandros made an uber thread, which essentially line by line attempted to dissect Sam Harris's podcast and essentially declare it all bad faith,
all wrong, no valid points made in any of the contentions. And this is the guy who was
organizing the Better Skeptics Project. Now, he was organizing it with his wife,
who I think is a journalist, and they put up $10,000 of their own money
to act as an incentive to get people to participate.
You, off-air, Tanya, you mentioned, you know,
Sam Harris issuing some-
You called me Tamler.
This is your one warning.
It's the second time.
He's done it to me.
He's done it to me, if it makes me feel any better, Dave.
Have I called you tamla
no you've called me matthew smith because smith is a very boring last name like brown
your son it's the it's the ghosts in this here ability so uh yeah that project like you mentioned
off air that sam harris has put up some cash if people could convince him he was wrong with him being the judge.
It's sort of similar in that vein.
Sorry, it was a project where it was going to be targeted specifically at the evidence for ivermectin? produced including the mental one with the two guests called three steps to save the world
which has the like unhinged entrepreneur steve kirsch talking about baby's brains exploding
and whatnot and i didn't see that one was it pia corey was pia corey the other one pia corey with
rogan i think was one and the robert malone was the the person who claims to have invented the mRNA vaccine, but nobody else agrees that he invented that.
So this colorful cast of the fringe pseudoscience or people with obscure claims, Alexandros decided that like these three podcasts, that if anybody could find any factual errors in that, that this project would
be designed to show that. And he framed it as basically he believes in Brad, but he wants to
incentivize people to really dig into the claims and, you know, try and take it apart. And he's
going to get independent judges to score the claims. And the whole thing will be, like Matt says, an effort in guerrilla
sense-making. So one criticism that would immediately be made is that you're actually,
you've already taken a side in this. It's kind of strange for a partisan to be targeting
their own side, right? I'm turning a cannon onto the things that I actually consider to be
largely on the right side. So, you
know, it's a bit of an odd partisan, I guess, and I'll take that, I'll own that sort of, you know,
characterization. But at the same time, the whole challenge is structured in a way such that if
somebody truly cares about the truth, and it doesn't matter what their preconceptions are,
if they agree with me or if I disagree with them
or if they've never heard of anything to do with this before.
And they were interviewed by this YouTube channel called Rebel Wisdom,
hosted by an ex-journalist, David Fuller,
which started out as spinning off pro-Jordan Peterson content,
like made a documentary about jordan
peterson and then went into other figures offering rebel wisdom so brett has featured there and
various other figures from the alternative sense making ecosystem um so this project was heralded
on this rebel wisdomdom channel as,
okay, let's get down to the nitty gritty.
Enough of the interpersonal drama.
Let's just get down to the brass tacks
and assess the details of the claims.
It's where the rubber meets the road
for a lot of the topics we've been covering on Rebel Wisdom.
The problems of finding truth,
the challenge of sense-making,
and it shows all of the problems with the fragmented media ecosystem, the difficulty in agreeing what's true, and it has huge costs and consequences on what are life and death questions.
So on the basic steps of it, it sounds like not a terrible idea, right? It's almost like setting up a scientific community and having them review things by their peers.
There is a clip for this project basically saying that their goal is to do better review of the evidence than all of the relevant experts, like all of the medical authorities, all of the, you know, the scientific communities. They want to do it better because those guys have been doing a bad job of it thus far. We've seen with COVID that the official authorities have sometimes been slower catching up or they haven't been that reliable always and so forth.
And on the other hand, you've seen groups of just random people like Project Evidence that came up, I think it was in the spring 2020, were one of the first to put together an extremely detailed case for the lab leak.
And they were just an anonymous group of researchers and they put up a phenomenal amount of work and that's just collective well
you have the drastic group of people right again just like grassroots organic people who
collectively managed to really change the yeah change the narrative it's like people who want
to do away with taxes but then pool their money to help each other build roads.
So you'll be shocked to learn that this project did not go exactly as planned.
So I have no idea what, I'm kind of excited now,
because I have no idea, is it over?
It's over. It's finished. It's issued its final report.
Now, let's see, given that you're a naive person here, right?
And all you know is that the CEO of the project is an Uber Brett fan. So with no other information, no details about the judges, just a guess, what do you think the outcome of this project will have been?
My hope is that the final report, while overwhelmingly favoring the evidence for ivermectin, at least found one or two potential problems on one reading of the evidence so that they could preserve their air of skepticism and rationality.
Oh, my God.
How did you guess?
If this isn't evidence of psychic perception,
I don't know what is.
That was spooky.
Yeah.
So they got, I think, three or four that they validated out of 40 something
submitted objections, but Brett and Heller in the recent episode, take this as look,
this project was designed to take us down. It was an adversarial attempt. And we actually,
we thought this was the bad way to do it, you know, because you can take
individual statements out of context and so on. And yet it passes us with a clear bill of health.
So what does it matter what all these supposed experts say when this BS project,
that's the initials they chose for themselves give them a clean bill of health
and sorry the people who were submitting
their objections were then getting
judged by who? Well first it's important
it's interesting who was submitting because there was very little engagement
from virtually anybody.
It's almost like people didn't regard it as a good faith project.
But there was a big fly in the ointment in the form of Yuri Gagin, right, Chris?
Yes.
So are you familiar with Yuri Dagan?
Dagan.
Sorry, Dagan.
It's only the name that I saw amongst all the Twitter threads about this project.
I think you'll love him because Yuri Dagan, first of all, he's one of the strongest advocates for
the lab leak hypothesis, which I have various reasons to be critical and skeptical of the
claims made therein. But Brett had him on his podcast as one of the valued
resources. I think he called them the A star, the best available for parsing the research on
the genetic stuff to do with why lab leak is likely and other evidence. So Brett pumped him up as a very, very competent, reliable sense maker, if you will.
And Yuri Degin's background is that he's a Russian entrepreneur focusing on life extension technology, like cryogenics and that kind of thing.
And he also is a fairly combative Twitter presence, it's fair to say.
So the interesting thing was that he came out strongly in support of the vaccines and
drew the ire of the lab leak community, large portions of it, because strangely, it's almost
as if the lab leak community has attracted
like a fair share of conspiratorially minded people it's weird there's like a unexpected
overlap there between anti-vax sentiment and lab leak hypothesis advocates what a strange corner
of the world where the the thing that lumps truths together are simply their conspiratorial nature.
It's just so odd to me that, you know, these are two completely independent things,
like the truth or falsity of the lab leak hypothesis and the effect, you know,
there is nothing wrong with a world in which one of these is true and the other one is false.
It's just solely a desire to see the world in terms of the rebels and the
gorillas and the outsiders who know the truth and the insiders who are part of
the system. And it's like for people, you guys probably,
I think have touched on this if I recall correctly,
but for people who have worked in a system like a university system or,
you know, a professional society or a loose collection of people studying the same thing.
It's just impossible to think that these things work out so cleanly in the way that they think that I couldn't get a conspiracy going.
I'm not saying that there aren't, you know, the CIA has done plenty of shit, but this is one of the organizations with the most resources in the world.
And still that shit comes out.
And to think that any, I don't know, it's just odd.
Yeah.
It's hard to overstate how much that's encoded in the DNA.
Like of all the gurus that we look at, it's almost always maxed out on our scale,
right?
Conspiratorial thinking.
And it's just in the case of Brett and Eric, I can't help but think it's just this desire
to feel important and special and have known something.
It's this, again, breaking my own rules, but it's like their mom told them they were smart
and they have spent their life not feeling as smart as everybody else. And now they finally have a host of followers who
are telling them, no, they are smart. They're fighting for all of the things that are true.
And the whole world is against them. And you know what? On any given Sunday, nobody would give a
fuck about what they think. and they just got launched into this
national stage international stage of people telling them they must be right about something
so anything that comes out of their mouth it's to their shock and dismay somebody comes on and
says i believe in lab leak but i don't believe in ivermectin what yeah i thought you were a rebel i thought you were a gorilla you know not to get
into whether or not these like any of these people are the scientists of the sort that you would
trust to evaluate this is why i like this so your podcast to me is fundamentally about epistemology
and there's a crisis of epistemology and we uh we're so attracted to people who tell
us what to believe oh i think all of us they think fundamentally and there are people filling the
that need right now who should not be who should not look there's a there's a feedback loop that i
think makes any of the you know even if you want to regard it as you shouldn't speculate
about those things, Brett and Eric have specifically personally stated that they get
what they described as a perverse pleasure from feeling that they believe something that the
majority think is wrong and feeling that they're so ahead of the curve that other people can't even see it on the horizon. And you imagine that when you have that personality characteristic and to go
deep in that Weinstein lore, they've discussed having an uncle who basically give them an
unconventional education, encouraging them to seek out that kind of thought process.
And when you have that characteristic, and then you have
the modern social media ecosystem, where there's this just a desire for people who are just going
to constantly shit on establishment or the orthodoxy or mainstream thinking, it's like this
horrific feedback mechanism where even if you had reasonable points you're going to get caught up
in the churn of bullshit and just driven further and further and in Brett's case the dark horse
podcast I remember when they were hesitant to voice anti-vaccine sentiment then they have on
Geert van den Bosch who is a fringe theorist talking about natural immunity being better
than vaccines. And there's still like a hesitation and a lot of throat clearing.
And then it gets to the point where you have a non-credentialed entrepreneur talking about
baby's brains exploding. Do you really say baby's brains exploding?
We're paraphrasing, but he was describing it causing babies to be born with their brains
splatted
split in half split in half that's right that was the phrase yeah so you mean we mean into two
hemispheres yeah that's that was yeah that it's never been heard of before but but like claiming
with no irony that you know it's the crime of the century and the three steps to save the world so
there's obviously been an escalation in rhetoric just in the past 12 months and now there's a
walking down of it but we'll get to that i mean but just to pick up on your point david i really
agree with you i think like we're not philosophers but somehow actually you're you're right that it
really is all about epistemology.
And the interesting thing about these movements and these characters
is the claim to epistemic authority.
And you can think about a lot of these ingredients as whether it's
the cultishness or the conspiracy theories or the fact that you cannot
trust the establishment.
They all work towards positioning themselves
as a source of unique, trustworthy knowledge
and to go to them.
So it's, yeah, it's just like,
I don't think you can understand it
without focusing on that.
It's scary because, you know,
we've done quite a bit as a society
to try to build up expertise in specific domains, you know, division of labor.
We have to.
We have to give up the steps in which we might vet every individual person.
And we have to trust entire fields to produce knowledge.
And I don't know shit about climate change.
I just have to
trust whatever climate change scientists there are and the minute that gets eroded then we're
right back where we started where it's you know big chief told me big man in sky mad this is my
anthropology by the way that's a yeah i assume that's what every uh non-white society ever uh how they talk
this is giving me flashbacks to gatsad recounting his engagement with a post-modernist
map if you remember i don't believe in the sun i believe in walking hyena in the sky but david's right i mean the scary thing
about it all is that it points to how fragile yeah everything is and as you say it relies on
trust and these networks of trust and the trusted institutions and so on and
look god knows our institutions are perfect, sure. But
it's a bit like, you know, the economy is fueled by confidence. And when the confidence goes,
it can crash quite easily. You know, knowledge is like Bitcoin. We are completely volatile now
in terms of our trust in our institutions in the same way that my Bitcoin investments go up and down every single day.
And it's like that.
Like that's a point that didn't need an analogy,
but I found one.
I'm going to, at this point,
insert a quote from a noted philosopher
who we all respect quite deeply,
who I think makes this point very
elegantly on the recent podcast. So let's hear our esteemed colleague.
And I'm not so sure it is at this point. Again, I think we're in the presence of something like a
religious or pseudo-religious phenomenon. People are just not thinking clearly. And
mere contrarianism is becoming part of their identities.
There's something pornographic about all this.
This reflexive distrust of institutional authority is like the pornography of doubt.
People are infatuated with this stuff.
And there's a zealotry around it.
And the quality of the thinking is so bad in so many cases.
Given my experience on other topics,
it's impossible to shake the feeling of familiarity here.
This is what it's like to argue about religion
or the 9-11 truth conspiracy.
Well said, Sam.
And by the way, just to mention, listening to that, I very rarely hear Sam at times one speed, and it's almost erotic.
He is dreamy, as I've always said.
said um i i listened to that whole section on my own and i emailed sam and told him how well i thought he put it and i and sam has a real shot at actually convincing that group right like i don't
i don't think the people who listen to you or i are the that group that needs to be convinced but
there are a lot of people who listen to sam who i think might actually be affected by what sam says there and i love the terms that he used you know he's
it's just well put and it's it is perverse you know it's i don't know the podcast he did with
eric topol was very good as well he's been good at this like just before the podcast came out i made a tweet
saying what sam should do you know like armchair criticizing what he should do with his podcast but
he did it right he got an expert on and went through the claims and so he definitely deserves
credit for the the stance that he's taken on that especially given that he is so sympathetic to the
interpersonal aspects like he is someone who generally doesn't criticize given that he is so sympathetic to the interpersonal aspects like he is someone
who generally doesn't criticize people that he has interpersonal relationships with so the fact
that he's willing to in this case means that he really clearly thinks they're doing something bad
look if yeah if sam took the time to chastise me that way i would listen i mean i seriously would because i don't think he
would spend his time saying the stuff if he didn't think it was truly dangerous and look you know i
don't need to say all of the things that that one might have to say about you know not agreeing
with everything he says certainly um record disagreeing But that doesn't mean that I can't, in this case,
think that he's just like the voice of reason, man.
And this is Sam's backhand to Brett's face.
This is the slap that I think will be heard
across all the IDW.
It's a bit like when he released that podcast,
because I think it's also directed that
eric to a certain extent these comments and his podcast attempted to resign from the idw where
eric responded by saying you can check out anytime you want but you can never
eric has some corny tweets man oh we're gonna get to them but i look i was supposed to be master of
ceremony so i'm going to return you to the life extension Russian entrepreneur, Yuri.
And I actually have a clip from him to let you hear him because I think you'll like him.
So as Matt said, the Better Skeptics project would have just farted into the wind with nobody paying any attention to it,
farted into the wind with nobody paying any attention to it, except that Yuri Dagan,
this previous person that Brett had held up, essentially decided to submit a lot of criticisms in detail. And so he kind of inundated the project, I think on the first day with 21
submissions, and they rejected 18 automatically, because there was a rule that says you're only
allowed to submit three which already i was going to say it was the font the font was wrong
well yeah so equivalent to that and also the twitter account that they had set up
was automated to tweet out that this claim had been rejected.
That's right.
So it was just, you know, claim rejected, claim rejected on the first day,
which is a wonderful signal.
And then the founder went to Twitter and started taunting Yuri about failing to follow the rules.
So Yuri requested that people just copy and paste his his criticisms if they want free money
and then there was that being rejected because of duplicate submissions and like the whole thing on
the first day was already coming up with the limits of guerrilla sense making apparatus but so
yuri eventually despite engaging on this project he doesn't have faith in this
project and he has produced an article for quillette with claire belinsky which is very
very harshly critical of brett and goes through in depth because claire layman is also sympathetic
to the criticisms right oh yeah and so after he releases that article with with claire belinsky he then
goes on david fuller's rebel wisdom podcast for a two-hour episode where he takes them through
a one-hour slideshow detailing you know showing the pictures from studies the kind of thing that only me and Matt might be interested in. But the kind of thing which
the heterodox fear, you know, this is what they do instead of going to lectures is watch these
conversations. So it was a really, really thorough rebuttal. And Yuri clearly knows what he's
talking about when it comes to these kinds of studies, because part of his expertise is that he has been assessing clinical trials for the past decade.
So he's actually asked by David Fuller for his credentials at some point.
And he's like, you know, why the fuck does it matter?
Just believe what I say or don't.
But then he teases out of him that he actually has like a decade of experience
assessing clinical trials.
What is your background and what is your expertise in this area?
I don't, who cares?
I present you evidence and claims, please evaluate them on the value of like of the
evidence.
It doesn't matter who's delivering, as long as they're delivering coherent
arguments substantiated by evidence, facts, links. So this is it. People are like, oh,
you should listen to Robert Malone because he's the inventor of a Marnet vaccine and
he has a PhD. No. If he says bullshit, stupid things, wrong things, or if he doesn't provide the evidence and
there's counter evidence from coming from, I don't know, five-year-old, listen to the
five-year-old because like evidence trumps credentials. Sure, I get that, but I think
you have a, what is your background? Why do you have a medical background? No, I don't have a medical background. I have a drug
development background for the past decade or even longer. So
I mean, if you need credentials, I have been developing new
drugs, analyzing drug development, clinical trial data
for the past decade or animal data.
So it might have been relevant.
But anyway, I'm going to play a clip of Yuri in that interview
talking about his criticism of Brett and how he sees it.
And it's quite a nice encapsulation of his character.
And also to call out Brett publicly.
Well, I mean, Brett is the biggest source of this misinformation.
He's the biggest voice.
He's the biggest source of this misinformation.
He's the biggest voice.
Basically, he is the leader of the movement for ivermectin false efficacy and vaccine false dangers.
Like, Brett is the spokesperson for the movement.
So, and he's also a friend, or at least I still consider him a friend.
Maybe he no longer thinks of me as a friend and maybe there's a bit of a disconnect between like what people in russia the level of shit they can tell their friends
and still remain friends and i don't know people in the united states that they can't like there
may be so thin-skinned orned to them like criticism more than vocal criticism
or even like being a little bit of a jerk when voicing criticism to them that's a deal breaker
friendship's over i don't know in russia we like we fight first then we drink vodka and then
everything's fine in russia vodka drinks you i really i i can't dislike yuri like yeah he's actually uh almost encouraged me to appear and
debate the lab like i've i've made clear i can't debate the technical details but i think i can
highlight the conspiracism and that kind of
stuff, but I probably will do it just because I enjoy Yuri. He seems to have the right attitude
about it. But so he does a dissection of the arguments, this in-depth, each point showing,
you know, the diagrams that they showed on the Dark Horse podcast, like, for example, saying that the spike proteins are concentrated in the ovaries.
And then he shows that actually it's a graph where they cut out the other four organs
where the concentration is much higher.
And anyway, the paper says the concentration is way, way lower
than anything that could cause any significant effect.
I don't know what to call that tactic of taking things out of context, like visually or charts,
but that's such a classic move, man.
You know, as if the size of the diagram that you show has absolute meaning.
There was another sign from the diagram in one of the biggest ivermectin studies
the one that i think is now being retracted or at least has huge questions over it was that
the graphs they used were the default excel bar charts using the default colors and they had the
like uh series one randomly one, randomly still there.
That's the kind of thing where people in the alternative ecosystem are like,
what the fuck does that matter?
Don't be nitpicking.
And you're like, no.
Every academic understands
what that implies about
the quality of the
thoroughness which this paper
has undergone. And that paper is also see if this
raises any red flags it's in a journal with one issue so there's a couple of word insights right
but uh yuri's yuri's debunking there is a good illustration of why that ivermectin stuff is a
conspiracy theory because
none of the claims are hard to debunk but the thing you notice is that there's so many of them
and it's just like playing whack-a-mole where you know one bit of evidence turns out to be rubbish
but they've got a thousand other ones so it just has that structural similarity to pretty much all
conspiracy theories yep exactly that's yeah it's it yeah, it's a hydra of bad evidence.
Yeah.
And, you know, so like the Better Skeptics Project,
they put a capstone on it.
It descends into farce, mainly internet drama,
with Yuri being called out by various people and judges saying that
they've been attacked by Yuri online. And then various
things coming out that academics would understand the issue where the three independent judges
all see the scores that they submit. And there's various discussions about like how,
I think there's a, they need to get over a barrier of nine to even consider a submission, right?
To do the sense making to try and work it out.
But there becomes a tacit agreement on the second day that basically you shouldn't be
assigning scores of four and five, except in very rare cases, which means that almost
by default that nothing reaches the level of being assessed.
And then like the things that are assessed, there's a lot of generosity applied to the
claims, right?
It's all things where India, maybe there's one academic who said ivermectin is widespread.
Therefore, we can take it because one person said it was widespread.
So that the person then claimed that India
has reduced its cases because of ivermectin is not false. You can't say it's false because
somebody said that ivermectin is widespread in India. So the project falls apart. And they like,
just as an illustration of the thought that goes into the project, it's called the BS
project, right? And the reason for that is
that they put the icon of the no right you know the kind of red yeah yeah but you don't hear that
you say you can't hear a diagram is that what you're saying is that the bold claim that you're
making yeah so so even the advocates are referring to as the the BS project in the shorthand.
And the judge comes out saying they felt informal pressure to lower their scores on the second day.
And there's just tons of stuff.
Even the fact that they baked into the document that they would revise all the rules each day according to whatever.
And there was no criteria for how they would do that.
They would just take stock of criticism on the internet and then revise.
You know what this is, Chris?
This is guerrilla bureaucracy.
They're reinventing the p-hacking.
You know, they could have just read BAM's article and see if themselves the baller.
So Yuri doesn't have any faith in the project. And the guy, David Fuller, the rebel wisdom guy, he hosted them, but he was just,
he was just somebody who thought the project could be useful, right? He's one of the people
that is interested in alternative sense-making and so on. So he, he highlighted the project and
was like, here's an idea. He raised some criticisms of it. And he's actually probably the only person in that space
that's managed to ask critical questions of Brett
and various figures, James Lindsay, except for you,
who then goes on to get all contact cut, right,
from these figures, including Jordan Peterson.
So I think he's a good actor,
maybe just a little bit too heterodox and
kind. And he features Yuri. And then this gets taken as bad faith. They didn't wait for the end
of the project to pronounce. Yuri went on and he did his slideshow and he took his material,
which he'd submitted to the better skeptics and
this is taken as you know they're operating in bad faith now they have undermined the project
and they're no longer good faith actors so brett and alexandrus regards them as now hostile entities
oh my this you know this is the kind of thing that they would say i don't know if they have but this is what they would say they would say you know i'm not saying that someone got to them
but i'm just saying that this is what it would look like if someone had gotten to them and it
just makes me ask the question you know is is someone is someone i'm i'm concerned maybe for
their safety because they're they're acting as if somebody has gotten to them maybe their family i don't know i don't know how somebody you know that is also the thing that
then the that uber fan or very solid people would say like what are you talking about he expressed
concern for their safety he's not crit he's worried about them and he didn't say somebody
had got to them he said it might it's what it would look like if someone got to them
like what are you guys this is this is reason making in the online info sphere but dave what
what do you make of this i mean like putting aside all of those just methodological and
issues and bias with a project like this better Skeptics thing. It seems to me that something like that is fundamentally flawed
because what they do is they get right into the weeds,
right off the bat.
They focus on very particular little claims.
And as we know, one can cherry-pick and construct a grand narrative
and a conspiracy theory from a bunch of little details that may in themselves
be true. So the issue with what someone like Brett is doing is not those tiny little claims,
but rather how they put it all together to create this conclusion that we should be very,
very worried about vaccines and essentially encouraging people not to get vaccinated and to use unproven treatments
instead you know the way that i um have felt when i hear them talk is is like you would you would
think that somebody who had consulted with counsel as to what they should say or not say. And they seem like they're often careful to say, I'm not anti-vax. I'm not,
I never said vaccines shouldn't be used. But there is no way you can listen to them for any
significant period of time and think that they're not. So it's a kind of doublespeak that they're really, really good at actually, where they avoid any liability or any responsibility what question that I came in wanting to ask you guys, which is, do you think that they believe this shit?
who listens to any of this stuff.
But she has fallen into the YouTube black hole of listening to Alex Jones at previous times.
And she's firmly convinced that he's such a grifter
that he just completely doesn't believe anything that he says.
These guys are harder.
These guys are not Alex Jones.
It sounds like they might have convinced themselves.
And I don't know why they chose ivermectin.
I have no idea.
But do you think that they actually think that they're really being objective at this point?
I think they kind of do.
I mean, thinking about Brett and Heather say on this specific thing, yeah, I don't think they're very good thinkers.
I think they are conspiracy theorists.
And, like, we know how careless they are in terms of their research.
Like, we know they don't read papers and stuff.
And we know they misunderstand things.
And I think it's highly connected to that narcissism thing.
to that narcissism thing.
I mean, narcissists really do have that amazing self-confidence so that they do a cursory glance at something
and feel that they've just, you know, without any background,
do convince themselves that they've figured it all out.
So it's a bit like asking,
does Trump really believe that he's the smartest man in the world
and that, you know, all that stuff.
And it's kind of the wrong
question isn't it like every psychologist knows that people people deceive themselves before they
deceive anyone else don't they yeah yeah and and it's hard it's hard to to you know if i were them
looking at them i would say they're just doing it for the Patreon, sweet Patreon dollars.
But they probably don't think that.
I think there's too much like from being so immersed in their content.
It's clear to me that it's a whole mixture, right, in terms of their self-image as these rogue intellectuals is tied up in their position now with this.
And their income is now tied into the increase in Patreon support that they've generated from it.
And, you know, just interest appearances on Tucker Carlson and so on.
So it means that I think trying to disentangle like where the influence is going,
it's hard because there's influences going in all different directions from them to their audience, from their audience to them, from their bank to their, you know,
and lots of it is bound to be unconscious as well so i do think however that
brett has to consciously know that he is not addressing certain arguments and like i don't
know how if he is seriously deceiving himself that he's answered them he has like a level of self-deception armor that any role player would be
hugely envious of.
It's,
you know,
plus 30 to avoid any self-doubt.
Right.
Right.
By the way,
did you guys,
I assume since you watch everything you watched Eric Weinstein unveil his
website on Joe Rogan.
So painful.
Wasn't that one of the, one of the cringiest things I've ever seen.
It really, really made my penis soft.
It actually made me.
That's one of the times where I felt sad for Eric.
I was like, oh, I don't like I think you're a self-aggrandizing asshole.
But oh, God, it was worse than the worst episode of
curb your enthusiasm oh this is the this is like when trump is like one of those g8 meetings and
like the french and the english are all laughing at him and he's just like you always feel sorry for almost but like with trump
he's such a you know he's he doesn't even have the pretense of intellectualism right he's a buffoon
but like eric has his water wiggle he calls the shots yeah and he's swinging it around and he's
he's built a website around pull that up jamie right? In a weird, a very bad read of a situation
for something that's supposed to be flattering.
It's such a bad read.
I mean, Joe, I don't watch a lot of Joe Rogan,
but have you got, you guys haven't done it.
No, we will though.
Yeah. Okay.
I was going to say he's naturally on the list,
but I've not seen such animosity toward one of his own guests.
Yeah. And then they get into like, I actually agreed with Eric in this discussion about music and universality. I can't remember what it was about, but it tinges all of the rest of the conversation nearly because joe was just being argumentative and dismissive
right yeah super dismissive i mean and you know because he had lost his patience i think calling
him he's saying you know i don't understand anything that you're saying right now yeah
yeah well i well i saw an interview with eric weinstein and sabine hofstadter did you guys
see that one at all?
No.
Actually, they were both guests on another program,
and there was a bit of a debate between them. And Sabine Hofstadter is another sort of whatever public educator
of physics sort of thing.
And she's quite good and is known for being like a no-nonsense
kind of physicist.
She's not into, for instance, things like string theory and stuff
where you can't actually collect data and get evidence.
And they're talking about his grand unified theory,
and she's making a lot of very sensible points.
And Eric is doing what he usually does,
which is to use more complicated language
and kick it up to a higher level of abstraction.
And she's a physicist and she's i just appreciate it because she was flat out saying to his face i have no clue what
you were talking about eric yeah so it's one thing if joe rogan doesn't get it or if we don't get it
but i found it refreshing and you know this is connected to some of the other little
um dramas we could briefly uh revisit whereas when people who really do know their stuff look at these highly technical
claims to you know special accomplishment it it never seems to stack up yeah no there is a
there is a reason that you know these big paradigm shifts that happen in things like physics have happened from within the academy.
Like, I don't know.
I mean, it just seems like a reasonable thing to believe that some fringe person isn't going to upend all of physics.
People would be worshiping at his feet.
uh yeah this is something though i did notice that you mentioned where he he uh ramps up that level of jargon and abstraction yeah maybe abstraction isn't even the right word because
he's just jargony and i thought well he must not have been a very i don't know that he was ever a
professor but he can't have be a very good teacher is this brett or eric eric that he was ever a professor, but he can't be a very good teacher. Is this Brett or Eric?
Eric.
Eric was never a professor.
Yeah.
He's just, you know, he's in the private sector where that actually makes you more respected in the room.
When you can say big words that people think are smart,
you actually get the consulting gig.
But in academics or whatever, you know,
Richard Feynman spoke in a way that we would understand.
Yeah.
Yep.
Actually, you know, and it's not even super uncommon.
Like, it is relatively rare.
But, for instance, at my institution, for a little while, they had, like, a specialist statistician, right,
who was hired specifically for the purpose of helping with the stats.
And it's a small university where I work. and I didn't have anything to do with it. But people were sending me his stuff because they'd
begun to notice that something was wrong because he was the expert. He claimed to be an expert in
statistics and I wasn't around when he was hired, but they found that nobody could understand
anything that he said. Nobody could understand anything that he wrote. And people with just a
tiny bit of statistical ability were noticing that some things in the anything that he wrote and people with just a tiny bit of statistical
ability were noticing that some things and the stuff that he submitted just kind of didn't add
up and they asked me to check and look it turned out this guy was exactly the same he was actually
a total fraud um he'd been hired out of desperation it's very hard to hire a statistician
yeah in australia actually because they're kind of rare and um yeah so these people
are around like people who can sell themselves and get by as you say much more common in the
private sector than in universities it is and i have some experience there and it's hilarious
it's hilarious yeah to illustrate this i'm just going to read a recent tweet from eric which is
discussing his relationship to libertarianism. So let's see
if this illustrates any of the points you make. I view radical libertarianism as almost literally
the linear approximation to a free society where you take all nonlinear ways we impact each other
and send them to zero in the libertarian limit. Conversely, they see my world as
prohibition theory on a completely free society. So I don't know what you're talking about, and send them to zero in the libertarian limit. Conversely, they see my world as perturbation theory
on a completely free society.
So I don't know what you're talking about.
Like to me, that's very clear what he's saying.
He's made it more complicated.
No, that's clearer.
It's a perfect analogy.
He needed to draw those references just to make it clear.
You know, it wasn't clear until he mentioned perturbation
theory yeah let me write yeah you need to add all the non-linear interactions in or approximate them
but you need freedom and its adjustments that was just a front of second thread my Weinstein
translator is I want libertarians to like me and i want to sound smart
yeah that it's often fairly straightforward to see what is involved and getting lost in the
jargon it's like a you know a chinese finger trap or whatever i'm sure that's racist
we were taking yeah it is you were we were we're talking offline about our verbal
tics and how when we listen to ourselves they annoy us and how we could feel that they are
linearly how's that linearly related to the degree of our lack of confidence in what we're saying but
they're not verbal tics for him they're just throws out complicated words for people to sound. He's smart. So like,
that's the kind of insecurity that is,
you know,
it's very typical of narcissists,
but you should be able to,
I feel like just a little bit, a little bit of listening to him.
Anybody should be able to pick up that.
He's not actually,
he's not smart,
smart,
even when he doesn't have the waterway goal.
He's not smart. he's not smart smart. Even when he doesn't have the water wiggle. Yeah, he's not smart.
He's not smart smart.
I just got to say, he didn't have a water wiggle
when I was talking to Sabine Hofstadter,
but he did have like a cardboard toilet roll holder.
Which he was using like a water wiggle.
It's good to have props.
Yeah, he was holding it.
I think there was a rubber band around it and he was
he was using that but speaking of insecurity i could read another tweet from eric weinstein
yeah boom look at the itty bitty balls on little timmy that's my wife's and my work which one
maldecina used initially knowingly and without citation as you know you scum you just called me a crackpot
and simply to take our work look forward to hearing from me good day hashtag parasite hashtag harasser
oh hashtagging oh my god you two post-modern bastards have jumped around from the the very careful narrative that i had scoped out and matt you've now left
on the area but before even finishing this project
itty bitty balls tweet which requires context right because who is little timmy itty bitty balls
on the chaos dragon chris i'm just noting that, one, David needs to go to bed at some point.
Yeah, that's very true.
And two, that we may not have time for the entire saga of everything.
You guys are going to have to devote two more episodes to this.
We will have time if we follow the regimented plan.
But look, okay, we'll get rid of get rid of anybody balls timmy at this point so
do you know who that is your guest oh yeah yes i listened to that episode with great interest
because i wanted to know what was going on with gauge theory and if it was going to
finally provide us with a unified theory and um i i enjoyed it and anybody anybody can
listen to eric and tim nguyen speak and if you don't come away thinking that it's very clear
which one of them knows their stuff then i think that there's something broken in your basic
perception of other human beings yeah i think yeah yeah and i think that we's something broken in your basic perception of other human beings. Yeah.
Yeah.
And I think we can tie up the Eric bull in a very simple knot,
which is what he's been doing in the meantime is insinuating that he's going to destroy,
potentially legally sue his critics who have been preventing him from releasing podcast episodes via some unspecified
mechanism. And he's essentially suggested that he has the dirt on all of these figures. Many of
them have appeared on our podcast, right? Tim and Dan Gilbert, bad stats. So he started releasing his evidence. And it's fair to say, like the first one went down
just like a lead balloon. He basically took a comment where Dan Gilbert on the Discord server
had made a thing saying, oh, I heard Eric said that he wanted to rape children. So that's what I'm going to spread across the internet.
So it's obvious in that framing that that's a joke, right? Like that somebody is saying,
oh, I'm going to interpret this in a malicious way and spread it. And he didn't do that. But he
used this as an illustration of like, this is the kind of information I have about my critics. And these are the kind of people they are. They make these horrific child abuse jokes.
Well, no, no, no. He describes them as threats against his family.
Yes. Threats against his family. Yes. So like you would imagine that you probably lead with
your strongest evidence. And he basically said, in the coming days, you will learn what I've been enduring with.
And there's a possibility that Eric has to deal with some unhinged fans.
I imagine that's possible.
But from my experience with Kim Nguyen and Dan Gilbert, they're reasonable people, two
online like all of us, but they're not going to be hunting Eric's family down or, you know, trying to accost them at the crossroads.
So this notion that this tweet is that, you know, and we got tagged in, by the way.
I saw that. I saw that.
Is this the kind of guru that you want to protect us from decoding the gurus?
What have you got to say for
yourselves so you're you're officially uh uh bad guys tm yeah and this is the first time eric's ever
directly referenced us so a watershed moment and then in the the days to come he actually tried
one of his fans and various people saying what can we do eric although it's
fair to say most people responded by saying what the fuck is this eric this is someone making a
joke in the discord like even his fans were like this is we'd like just release the podcast but
the uh the next day or a couple days there was somebody released he retweeted somebody who said
you know what can we do eric? And Eric's advice was, I'm
paraphrasing, but it was essentially, please get my critics and like deal with them. Because
if these people can't be addressed, I don't, I don't have the ability to do it.
And yes. Yeah. So he's very concerned about the, is it a Streisand effect? Is that the
one where he doesn't want to? Yeah, he does. No, he coined a new term. Oh, Streisand squeeze. Streisand squeeze. Oh, Streisand effect is that the one where he doesn't want to yeah yeah he does he no he coined
a new term oh i'll squeeze strice and squeeze oh yeah there you go so he's he's mentioned that a
lot and he very much encouraged his fans to go into bat for him and you know do your thing twitter
type stuff and there was very little response yeah except oh it didn't work. Except, oh, this is beautiful. I have to tell you this.
There was one account, FreeFloat55.
You've not heard that name before.
No.
This account just joined Twitter randomly.
And it was an unusual account because it was mainly interested in the minutiae of the Tim
Nguyen and Eric Weinstein feud.
And it had an odd tweeting style saying,
in what world is little Timmy a respected person
over Eric Weinstein and so on.
And it's the only other account that used the hashtags
harasser and parasite, which Eric used.
So it's a very strange account, but I'm not insinuating anything.
I'm just asking questions about FreeFloat 55.
Well, you know,
you should be deeply afraid of the inevitable litigation
that will come your way.
It's just a hypothesis, dear.
This is just,
we don't deal.
What is that account still up?
It disappeared and it came back and I didn't want to name it because I was enjoying so much.
Like if it's not Eric,
I will eat my shoe live on camera.
Like the,
nobody else tweets like this.
And it's like the only account to use the
hashtag like how bad do you have to be at making an alternative so it's called free float 55 and
i'm just checking now it's since been deleted and i i can't believe i didn't i can't believe i
didn't screenshot those tweets yeah dave because i because just in terms of the use of length,
like Eric has a distinctive mode of expression
and I tried to approach it in a very sceptical way
that I would eat my hat if that wasn't Eric tweeting that.
It was referencing minutiae about like Weinstein world
that I don't even know so it's like it's
either an uber fan that just appeared or yeah right it's uh eric so
can you imagine the embarrassment of being like followers get him and then like nobody nobody like yeah it's so cringy and it was it was abusive
that like free flow account was like swearing and stuff so that's why it was i i like didn't
want anybody i mentioned to people but they didn't want anyone to call it out because i
i just want to observe eric in his natural habitat like unleashedashed Eric Weinstein. But even with that, about four or five people that are not me said,
aren't you just an Eric sock puppet?
And he was like, sock puppet? What's a sock puppet?
Wait till he finds out about IP addresses.
So, okay.
So that's Eric.
He's gone.
We'll close the Weinstein side out.
I've got a couple of clips, you guys.
I like to take Weinstein clips and I think you need to hear them.
So first of all, since we've been talking about Eric, here's Eric.
So he did the podcast on Rebel Wisdom.
This Rebel Wisdom channel has a lot to answer for in the recent months with the Weinsteins.
And this is Eric talking about, he basically said he didn't agree with Brett.
And he actually, first step, this is him talking about Sam's criticisms.
So listen to how he framed them.
Well, I think Sam kept his sword mostly in its sheath.
I think that Sam is a,
Sam and I both maintain different versions of a principle.
I'm more radical than he is.
I believe that there is a lot of residual wisdom in a corrupt system.
I believe that our institutions are degrading.
They are greatly degraded.
I cannot stand the leadership class,
but I believe that all of those things,
like all the things that are in place in a hospital
to make sure they don't cut off the wrong leg
if you're having an amputation or something,
these things are part of the wisdom.
They were put there in part by people who are now dead
where nobody remembers why they're there.
So I think Sam has an instinctual feeling
that the system works.
Now, obviously, there's the personal dimension here,
but we shouldn't get distracted by the soap opera.
These are hugely significant topics of importance to everybody.
That weird music wasn't in your head, by the way.
That was in the background of the clip.
What?
Yeah, I love that because he's essentially saying, like, we are the descendants of, you know,
the real geniuses who, you know, discovered fire,
built the aircrafts, but we are like the monkeys who don't know how to do it. So we're just
worshiping the technology. And some of the information of the ancients is still there
in the institutions, but it's now run by like corrupt bureaucrats who don't understand how any of the systems actually work. By the way, you know, those systems like what's in place to prevent you from getting the wrong
leg amputated.
Those are the ones that Sam trusts, but I'm a rebel.
Yeah, I'm pretty, I trust those as well.
I'm pretty sure that's just a marker on your leg as well.
Oh man.
So that clip was just to load up the better clip.
Okay.
Okay.
I mean, it borders on gibberish.
It does, but this is how Eric needs to frame that.
He thinks Sam has a point, right?
He has to couch it in all this kind of vague stuff
because he can't directly
just say Brett is wrong. And this is him talking about like, he does express that he disagrees with
Brett, but this is how he frames it in that discussion. What's going on with Brett, what's
going on with Ivermectin and the Joe Rogan podcast with all of this stuff is downstream of a total leadership vacuum.
I know what to do to build leadership. I know what I would do if I were a member of the
establishment in terms of sitting in a seat at an institution. We have careerists, we have
peacetime careerists where we need wartime generals. And I know what to do as a wartime general. I
don't know what to do with peacetime careerists in a war footing. Now, everything is downstream
from that. Blaming Brett Weinstein, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. You told people not to wear
masks because they don't work or in fact,
they retain germs so you can get sick from your mask. So don't wear masks, but make sure that
the health professionals, I mean, that's such an affront to the mind that, um, and you're still
sitting in your position. You're still lying to the public. I don't think we understand that the era of
pre-internet public health is permanently over for the rest of our lives. You cannot come up with
cute little rhyme schemes or, you know, my personal favorite is there's a tradition of
storytelling in public health where you try to get celebrities to do things.
Sorry, I let that go on too long
got interesting um oh my god so you can't blame brett right because the who said they didn't
recommend mask wearing for the public at the very start of the pandemic like this is something
dave that i just i'm so there's like like a personal thing that deeply upsets me because if you followed the recommendations of the WHO, the CDC, from the beginning of the pandemic, what you would have done is social distance, practice good hygiene after a month into the pandemic, started wearing masks in all occasions, but you shouldn't have been out in public in crowds anyway, because they were saying, avoid those, don't do that. Right. So this notion that if you followed
the advice of the experts, you basically had a death wish. It's just bullshit. Even the mask
thing, it's a, it's a short term thing. And they were already recommending that you don't go out
in public or meeting groups. right and if they were wrong
about the masks then they became right when they said start wearing masks and now you're still mad
at them for lying like lying not being wrong lying so why why were they lying why does he think that
them switching a month in to say no shit wear, wear masks. Like, why is, why were they lying for that month?
What was the end game there?
And why are you still mad?
Why are you still mad now?
Look, either you're supposed to wear masks or you're supposed to not.
Like, I mean, I think the interesting thing here is the subtext or the reason for making
such a big deal out about this.
The subtext or the reason for making such a big deal out about this,
he's so keen to destroy the credibility of public health.
And this is just like he made such a big deal over their finance,
the thing that they did with inflation.
What was that called, Chris?
Oh, the Boskin Commission.
The Boskin Commission or whatever.
This was the smoking gun apparently that completely invalidates all of economic theory and economic management just like
his revelations about physics demolishes physics just like brett's revelations about mouse talamirs
destroys the entire pharmaceutical industry and and probably evolution as well so the point the
point to all of this is to try to like his term is fud have you heard of fud yeah fear uncertainty
doubt yeah so he he thinks that these nefarious groups are all about sowing fear uncertainty and
doubt whereas the truth is to what end yeah that's what that's what they do that is their that is their
entire thing to to take any little ambiguity and to use a crowbar to turn that into a huge amount
of doubt and and fear in order to attempt to disparage other sources of knowledge and center
themselves as being ready in his nice suit to step in and be a wartime general
and take the reins wartime you know this guy owns a sword you just know it you know he has like
some samurai sword over his mantelpiece you know i'm wondering why he's not dressed in army fatigues
like the coving is supposed to be signaling readiness you should go the whole
hog just wear a general suit with badges and purple hearts and shit captain crunch just captain
crunch himself out um but here is the the fucking cowardice that really makes me mad
where it makes me just say like fuck you because he to deflect the very real damage that his brother
is doing to to not even in a in an honorable sounding way defend his brother he is wanting
to have his cake and eat it too he wants to still stay in with the cool kids and and yet not
blatantly throw his brother under the bus he's playing this line where anybody who wants to
continue to believe in brett's ivermectin bullshit can continue to do so because you know eric didn't
come out and say he was wrong but clearly sounds like he knows that his brother is wrong and is too much of a coward
to call him out on it. And it, I would not give three fifths of a fuck about these brothers.
If it weren't that so many people are listening to them and this is just causing grief causing suffering and causing death that that you can't just get up and say
you know what get vaccinated i don't care what my brother says about this he's a smart guy i love
him i don't care what he says though get vaccinated have some fucking balls man yeah or ovaries or
whatever it takes because you know you mentioned, you mentioned, Dave, about like the actual consequences
and the context around this.
And part of the reason that a lot of the criticism
of Brett became more pointed
was that there was this case
where there was a British man
who had been vocally skeptic about the vaccines
and the relative threat of COVID.
And he was sharing brett's content and he
basically live streamed almost up to the point where he died right from it so it's like god it's
a tragic event and of course it's a you know it's it's just an anecdotal story we can plug in we can
plug in the statistics chris can't we and we can we know by the audience reach and
so on that we can confidently expect he's there's more than one anyway go on sorry yeah it's just a
it's a dramatic illustration of something which yuri and various other people are saying has to
be happening behind the scenes and obviously it is because when people don't take the vaccines
and there's a deadly virus going around that is
killing millions of people in the global pandemic people die and there's an amusing element to it
where brett's fans are leaving reviews for horse paste on amazon right and it's it's hard not to
have a kind of macro macabre that's the way you say that, humorous reaction to it.
But it also, like, that shit's real.
Like, people are not getting vaccinated and eating horse paste.
And you're like, man, it really, all this stuff, all this drama around the IDW
and how hard it is to call people out and stuff.
Like, in this situation, like like how hard is it just to say
like what you said you know you should get vaccinated and you can still have all your
criticism of institutions but this is a deadly pandemic and the evidence shows that these work so
get vaccinated whatever else you do yeah if eric thinks that brett is wrong and he's talking like this, then this is just evil.
It's just evil.
You know, it's shameful.
It is.
It is.
Look, there's two final clips.
So maybe this will bring us back.
We can come to an end on a positive note.
These clips are going to really lighten your day.
So one is, you remember the Better Skeptics Project?
Remember that, Matt?
That we were trying to finish out?
Well, here's Brett responding to that project.
This is how he reads what that project found.
I thought this is a dangerous way to do this. It's prone to
several different kinds of bias that I don't see protected against in it. And I was very concerned
about, you know, a process that, you know, incentivize instead of people having skin in
the game, it incentivize them to go nitpicking and, and all of this. But anyway, in the end,
it gave us not a totally
clean bill of health, but a remarkably clean bill of health in light of how much landscape and how
many complaints certain people had made. So given that that process concluded and that that process
does say something about the quality of what we've been doing here on Dark Horse, didn't David have
some obligation to say, well, you know,
here's the process that I suggested might evaluate this.
And here's the conclusion, which is not what he did.
He actually circumvented it. And, um, frankly, I resent it,
which David knows because I've said it to him.
There you go, David. Totally.
You could take all that back what you said there because
yeah and he it's almost like he addressed you personally i present right right i don't know
i felt it at least he didn't call me tamler
um i mean what an amazing amazing ability, amazing ability to read into something the way that you, only the way you want to read into it.
Imagine, it's like you delving into your Reddit and finding someone issuing a defense of you and saying, well, we had our criticisms, but on our Reddit, if you look, there's somebody who thinks that we are the dog's
balls and like really what else matters at the end of the day until to like wrap it in that rhetoric
you know i was really concerned i i know that there are biases that creep into the process
and then to use i believe the phrase that, what's his name, Nassim?
Antifragile.
Yeah, his skin in the game, who just reminded me that I think that Taleb actually has shit on Brett quite a bit.
It didn't surprise me.
To wrap it all into that oh oh man yeah i don't i sometimes when i see the dark
course i think who isn't hate watching this aren't we all here to hate watch it and then i have to
remind myself no no no you should don't don't read the youtube comments because... Don't go into the... This is the one thing I truly can say to all listeners
and you, Dave, and anyone.
Don't go into the corner of the internet
where Brett's true fans reside.
The Dr. Roller Gator water is good God.
Stay away from that end of the internet.
It's a horrifying place.
Yeah.
I just went on to the IDW subreddit
and there's a nice little list of names
of people who belong
and links to Eric and Sam and Jordan.
Is this one of theirs?
Well, there's lots of subreddits
which are not pretty critical.
Sam Harris's subreddit is half-heat. I think there's lots of subreddits which are not pretty critical like sam harris's subreddit is
half hit and like you know i think there's usually a healthy if you've got a healthy mix in your
subreddit that's good but there's one i think it's just called idw and it's like it it is it is not
that it is like pure it's the pure distilled essence of the idw in subreddit form and so if you're looking at that
that's a yeah that's a beautiful thing and i'd like so you thought that that clip was bad this
is the last clip we're gonna let you go to bed very soon all right but i think this go with the
bang this is a good one to end with so to to editorialize, this is at the end of the process where you've had
Sam Harris release two episodes. You've had Yuri Dagan do a two-hour slideshow presentation with
David Fuller. Then David Fuller comes out with a massive long article in Aereo, which is quite
sympathetic to Brett, but which essentially says, you know,
he's just trying to make sense in this ecosystem, but it at the same time says,
but he's got trapped in the neck bubble and he's promoting disinformation. And so there's that article. Then there's this huge article in Medium, which David Fuller also releases,
going through the evidence for each of Brett's claims and collating all of the
refutations. And he releases a video series where he's interviewing people kind of slamming Brett.
So these three things come out on the same day. And that's part of what Brett is reacting to.
So he has that. He has Eric has appeared with Davidid as well essentially doing as much as eric can do to say
negative things and then brett and hella released the podcast which essentially avoided all mention
of the ivermectin vaccine controversy until it got to the q a section and then they addressed it in a few short segments. So this is an extract from that clip
of why they haven't talked about it and what they're going to do moving forward.
I mean, there is a lot more to say, but basically,
there's been very little careful scientific pushback. There's been a lot of social pushback. And what we have
said privately to people is this feels very postmodern. It feels very familiar. It feels
very much like there's a social universe and a set of social conclusions that people insist that we
must come to. And trying to figure out what is actually true should not interface with that social universe,
nor does social pressure change what is actually true. And so we have made a conscious decision
to not be talking about it as much anymore absent big changes in what we understand to be true.
We are not going to play defense. We are not going to respond to critiques that don't have new
information in them and the people making them know what that means. And there's just a lot
of evidence that continues to grow that suggests that the position that we have laid out both in
what we wrote and what we have said on many previous episodes um holds and if that changes if anything about that reverses we will
absolutely come to um to to you our listeners there you have it i you know what can i just
say fuck you guys for uh ruining the rest of my night?
First of all, it's because of you guys that I can even just through hearing, I can recognize all of their voices just because of your tweets.
Second, tonight, I'm just going to be on like r slash IDW trying to get into the minds of these people.
But third, her voice is kind of sexy and smoky which is giving me that misinformation
i think like most of these figures have a very good authoritative voice
for what they're saying i would pay to listen to a two-channel audio of heather and sam harris you know in each ear
like whispering what's blowing down what's that book that was like a spin-off from the twilight
series that became like a erotic sensation the bdsm shades of gray yeah like sam and heller
reading 50 shades of gray i feel that you, that would be, forget the Patreon money.
That's where the real rubber hits the road.
But David, this is all sounding very postmodern.
You're not discussing the substance.
You're not discussing the scientific.
Who cares that Heller has a sexy reading voice?
It is insane making.
It is being gaslit by somebody i don't care about it's like when she
says that stuff i'm like wait how is it post-modern to disagree with you about like the scientific
facts like and how could you accuse a scientist of being post-modern when it is the most post
what she's doing is the most postmodern
postmodern thing that you can imagine it's like i literally feel like just uh uh anger bubbling up
in me at being gaslit by the sexy voiced woman yeah i should have ended with the russian
you should have ended it with the Russian.
Then I would have gotten straight to sleep like a baby.
Maybe we should tell your listeners that we are in very, very different times.
Yeah, I mean, just to reiterate, we scheduled this at a time that is extraordinarily convenient for me and Chris.
And well beyond Dave's bedtime.
And I'm consciously aware of that.
So thank you so much, Dave, for staying up late,
despite all the glass of wine.
I appreciate it.
I had a lot of fun.
I hope that we can do something similar again.
The only question is who cannot make me go crazy.
The second thing I feel like apologizing for is
that we not only kept you up very late but we we kept you up late mainly to sit there and listen
to us ranting about our obsessive pet projects it's you know so i don't know next time we'll
have to let you i no need to apologize for that because as you know, listening to podcasts is an intimate medium.
And so if I had the option of just listening to you guys,
as I was trying to fall asleep,
but this in this way,
I get to talk back.
Yeah.
That's,
you know,
I tried to tell my,
like,
Matt,
we don't need to put out another Weinstein episode of it.
You know,
it's too much.
And my is just always,
no, Chris, give the people what they want.
They want this, come on.
I know you don't like listening to it,
but I care about our Patreon.
So, I mean, he's now trying to editorialize
that he's reluctant to do it.
But behind the scenes, I'm just his little monkey.
He grinds around to talk about the Weinsteins, Chris.
Say what they've said.
You know what I love is if you're not patrons of these guys,
then you should be because if you would just get the visual,
you would know who's lying and who's telling the truth very, very clearly.
Look, Matt is seasoned.
All this research on gurus, he's perfected the facial twerks.
He's got like charisma oozing out of his pores.
I'm thankfully grateful that none of our listeners can be seduced by his boyish come hither looks. Because, yeah, the common comment that we actually get when people see videos is like, they're just surprised that I don't look like a fucking craggy thousand year old man.
They're generally very complimentary about your appearance, Mark.
Silver Fox has been mentioned more than once, right?
Silver Fox has been mentioned more than once, right?
Well, I think there's one thing we can all agree on is that everybody must start listening to you guys
because of the sexy accents.
That has to be what's driving most of your traffic.
Maybe we should read Fifty Shades of Grey.
I'll do the female voices, Matt.
I'm imagining a new tier for the patreon um it's like black black label
he stepped firmly onto the leather chair and strapped me down rigorously
nobody wants to hear that my only question is how uh two, two English accents could be so different.
That's problematic.
That's problematic.
That's just got to go.
That's got to be cut.
That's just good for your patrons.
that's gonna be cut so uh yeah for your patrons yeah but i like matt said i have to say you handled me and matt's obsession and the meandering post-modern route that we took despite our
extensive notes to to try and avoid otherwise and you also handled about 30 or 40 minutes of random banter before we began the 30-minute banter introduction to the podcast.
So this man is a podcasting trooper.
Because you also recorded an episode, right, prior to starting this?
We only recorded our little support section, which for Tamler and I is 83 minutes.
That's good to hear hear i'm glad to hear
that well there's almost no need for us to recommend um our listeners to check out very
bad wizards because i'm pretty sure the the venn diagram of our audiences is where like a a very
small circle embedded within that large circle but for the three or four people that don't, do check it out.
Yeah, and when you guys start your anti-vaccine descent,
we will call you out.
You guys are going down.
That's right.
That's what friends do, Dave.
Yeah, we're going to snap into your Patreon gap.
We both know which one of us would be falling into an anti-vaccine trap and it
it's gonna be the guy who believes in ghosts
yeah people keep insinuating that basically we're you know kite chasing we want to take down the
weinstein so that we can enter the intellectual dark web as the, I don't know, like a Sith.
You kill them and you inherit their power.
The kings are dead.
Long live the king.
Long live the gurus.
But the real mission we have is really to take your spot.
It's a very bad business.
And our Reddit is a fucking like a polyp. Oh, that's right. It's a top dog business. And our Reddit is a fucking polyp.
Oh, that's right.
Which is topped off from your subreddit.
So that's maybe not the nicest way to describe the kind effort of our fans to develop a subreddit, which is really good.
But yeah.
So we owe a lot to you.
You're our grandfathers in many respects.
Well, thank you.
We are old.
You'll be able to take our spot soon.
We're near death, I promise you.
But thank you guys so much for having me on.
This was a blast.
Yeah.
According to lineage selection, we're all working for the same ends anyway.
So at least us white people.
All right.
Well, enough bantery, exit-y things.
Cue outro music.
So cheers, Steve.
Everybody listen to Very Bad Wizards
and don't listen to the Weinsteins for medical advice,
but do listen for entertainment every so often,
not every week.
And for Gage Theory.
That's how we should we
should end everything for gauge theory yeah for gauge theory