Decoding the Gurus - Supplementary Material 16: Riding a Phoenix to Rescue the Gurusphere
Episode Date: October 8, 2024We plunge ever deeper into the convoluted world of guru punditry and are dazzled at the theatrics at the 'Rescue the Republic' event, inspired by the profound insights of Eric Weinstein on political s...peeches, and thrilled at Michael Moynihan's hard knock interview with the moderate heterodox thinker Megyn Kelly. Join us won't you?00:00 Introduction and Health Check Adventures04:15 Exploring the GuruSphere and GuruCon08:57 Matt and Chris Debate Round 1: The Unholy Alliance16:35 Russell Brand and Jordan Peterson's Prayer Time24:51 Bret's Amazing Metaphor: David and the Phoenix36:01 Matt Taibbi's Speaking Truth to Power with the Bible40:24 Rage Against the War Machine43:25 Eric Weinstein's analysis of Kamala Harris58:44 Joe Rogan's Bias and Broken Conspiracy Prone Brain01:13:53 Michael Moynihan softballs Megyn Kelly01:26:11 Cynical Chris and Moderate Megyn: Alex Jones & Tucker are right!01:32:57 Hard Knock Heterodoxy01:47:35 Matt and Chris Debate Round 2: Left and RightThe full episode is available for Patreon subscribers (2 hr 1 min).Join us at: https://www.patreon.com/DecodingTheGurusLinksRescue The Republic WebsiteRage Against the War MachineAll the videos from the Rescue the Republic eventEric Weinstein deciphers Kamala's speech for Chris WilliamsonMegyn Kelly Enjoys Watching Legacy Media Crumble | HONESTLY
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Decoding the Guru's supplementary material where I take the reins and I do the
introductions and Matthew Bright, the psychologist, sits there and takes it while I, Chris Kavanaugh,
the anthropologist, give the introduction, make the analogies. I call him Rodney to my Delboy.
Do you get that reference?
No, I do not get that reference, but...
It's very complimentary.
British people will understand.
So it's very good.
Trust me.
Okay.
Fine.
Fine.
Fine.
Well, good on you.
I'm glad you've got lots of energy.
You're going to have to carry us this episode because of all the delays,
you're getting your health checks and you have to catch buses and trains
to places and I've been waiting and now it's the late afternoon.
My old tired bones are aching.
The levels are low.
You've got to build me up.
Well, this is a supplementary section, Mart.
So we're allowed by the people listening.
They allot us a little bit of time to mention delay events.
Not too much, but I can just mention, yes, today was a bit of a hassle
because there's this thing called like an annual health check in Japan.
It's very impressive.
You know, lots of jobs and places do it, but like you kind of go to your
location and you go through these little like stations and they take
various measurements, blood, they take your
blood pressure, eye test, ear test, the whole thing. And it's very much like your little character
in the theme hospital or two-point hospital. Does somebody tap your knee with a little hammer?
No, no, there is no reaction test, but there is eye test and whatnot. But genius that I am, I had arranged the booking and you're not supposed to eat
before it, and then I went to the place on my campus where I expected it to be.
And it was not there because I booked a time at the other campus, which is one hour
away, a completely different location.
So I had to travel all the way over there and then get a new time and then not continue
not eating and I'm back.
So that's, that's it.
I've got my measurements taken, but that was a bit of a annoying
jaunting around Tokyo day.
Really?
It's good.
Well, I know you like testing yourself.
You like measuring yourself.
You like quantifying
Body I personally just prefer not to know I long overdue a decade overdue of
Having a health checkup. I'm supposed to have a serious one being of my age, but I just I figure
What I don't know can't hurt me. Aren't you supposed to get like
Inspected a turret know, can't hurt me. Aren't you supposed to get like inspected at your age? Like colon cancer, isn't that a concern? Don't even mention these things. If you don't say the word,
then we can't get you. Oh well, I'm going dangerously into the realms of indulgence with this, but I'll just mention Matt that there is an anime over in Japan. I don't get you. Oh, well, this is I'm going dangerously into the realms of indulgence with this, but I'll just mention, Matt, that there is an anime over in Japan.
I don't actually know if it's that popular now, but it's like a little anime where the immune system is portrayed as like anime characters fighting other anime characters.
You know, it's like cancer is a character and the red blood cells and all this.
And my sons are enjoying it a lot. You know, it's like cancer is a character and the red blood cells and all this and my
Sons are enjoying it a lot. So I'm getting like a kind of adult version of Kurtzgesagt
Yeah, if you'd ever wondered what Kurtzgesagt would look like, you know as an anime well, that's the series for you I forget what it's called. But um, I have to watch it every night because my
Youngest kid is
obsessed with it at the minute. So there we go. Very good. Very good. All right, we'll have you
just come back clean. What have you got for us today, Chris? What's happening? Yeah, a lot of
idiots said a lot of nonsense in the Guru's sphere, but they can't stop. They will not stop every week they're out here, out doing themselves.
And there was a kind of Guru con event. This is Brett Weinstein's rescue the Republic. That
happened. And that was like a black hole for all the, like, you know, sometimes the term grifter is overused, but in this case, it was a meeting of the biggest
grifters, lots of gurus, lots of polemical idiots, and also people that I thought had gone from the
discourse. The food beard showed up. The food beard is like Vanny Harry from skepticism in the 2000s, where she was, you know,
decrying chemicals being in foods.
You're eating chemicals, Matt.
It's chemicals.
And there she was on the rescue the Republic event talking at the same thing,
the same thing.
So it's a really good illustration of the, the crunchy conspiracist, right
wing populist crossover that the
conspiratoriality folks and others have been documenting.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Completely wild.
Just a conglomeration of the worst possible people.
Think anti-vaxxers and maggot chuds and Grifter influences and conspiracy theorists just all blended together
to a great big frothy rhetorical milkshake.
Disgusting.
But you can't ever estimate how seriously they take themselves.
Like the splash screen on their thing and on their promotion stuff is got, you know
that there's a famous photo of someone, I think it's George Washington in a boat going across the river, probably to
bonk the British over the head with something. There's a new constitution.
Right. Yeah, the new constitution. Instead of the traditional characters, you've got Russell Brand
and Donald Trump sitting at the head of the boat. And Brett Weinstein is there in the middle looking at Pierre Cori and all the anti-vaxxers
there.
They're all there in the boats because they're the new people here to rescue the Republic.
Rescuing the Republic with Trump being the one who's there to do it, of course, because
Nye, this is the unholy alliance. RFK Jr. was one of the top-billed speakers, right?
And RFK Jr. is now on board the Trump train, toot, toot,
helping them.
And they've even got like a terrible, terrible new slogan.
Instead of MAGA, it's MAHA, make America healthy again.
Yeah, bit of a nod to the anti-vaxxers there.
It's all apparently a resistance against the conglomerate of industrial complexes.
So it's the complexes that are the bad things, the military industrial complex, the medical
industrial complex, the censorship industrial complex, immigration industrial complex, it goes on.
Oh, academic one as well. So yeah, you can see the sort of glue that binds it all together.
The common thing is anti-institutional, conspiratorial. And it is an interesting
indication of just where the current state of, I guess,
right-wing politics in the United States, which is that it is conspiracy theories
that bind it all together, which puts it in our turf, Chris puts it within
our belly wick, I think.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I mean, the other sign that you see there is they had like Rob Schneider,
sign that you see there is they had like Rob Schneider, the kind of used to be well, not even used to be super famous, but like was at least a Hollywood figure comedian. It's a bit like
Kevin Sorbo, right? You know, ex Hercules is now a, a mega Republican or whatever. So you had
figures like that and you had Zuby, the anti woke rapper and
Antootsie Gabard, of course, showing up there.
So you just like had, you know, it is the kind of people that you might see
at the Republican convention these days, you know, Hulk Hogan or whoever.
Like a kind of weird clown collection of old actors and comedians and fringe politicians and anti-vaxxers and yeah,
like an impressive collection of the greatest minds the world has to offer.
Yeah. Chris, I think the other thing it's worth emphasizing is that I think there's a temptation
amongst generally progressive, sensible people to characterize
this kind of thing as essentially extreme riot phenomena.
But it's not really.
I think that misses some important things.
It's got Robert FK, Genity.
Don't get me wrong, I see your suspicious face.
But it has a bunch of people there like Jimmy Doar.
Yeah, Jimmy Doar is for him. Matt, you're not making your case well here because this is like
saying, look, it's got a wide range of people like Constantine, Kissin, you know, Lex Friedman.
They're all terrible. I'm just saying the thing that binds them together is not purely right wing stuff.
It is a bunch of conspiratorial woo health.
Like we've talked about this before, Chris,
where Brett and Heather in many ways
are these crunchy woo health people,
like refugees from the 60s.
Yeah, but they are, yes.
But the other plank that connects all of these people is that they're there to promote Trumpism
and market.
But that's right-wing.
I mean, yes.
I'm not denying that at all, Chris.
I'm just saying it's limiting to just think of it as a purely traditionally right-wing
thing. It's got an awful lot of anti-vax and conspiratorial and woo health.
Flaky stuff mixed in as well.
Yeah.
My, my suspicious fears comes because I just think that like the
conspiratorial thing is the explaining explainer there, the same as JP Sears.
He is a crunchy, you know, life coach man, but now he's a MAGA guy as well.
So like, well, these, well, these days, I mean, we've been conditioned by Trump
and MAGA to think of right wing stuff.
It's like fundamentally anti-institutional and stuff, but like it isn't, it's a new
form.
So I see what you're confused about.
You are saying it's not the standard Neocon, like it's not George Bush and all that.
It's not the conservatism of, it's not even like, it's not even purely hard right.
Like, like there were extreme right-wing people around the Bush administration, for instance.
They're the guys that orchestrated a lot of those wars that these guys see as delegitimizing the government.
But I'm just saying this is a different kind of faction.
The bit that I don't, this is why I don't see that.
Like I mean, I'd see the point about like the mapping, the traditional neocons, but
everyone there is like, right, they're Jack Pesovitch types or they're Tulsi Gabbard types, or they're people
who pretend to be like centrist or ex-leberals like Brett or RFK Jr.
or whatever, but they are all MAGA reactionary types who like, so that's
the bit where if you say, well, it's wrong to classify them as right.
I'm like but but who is on so where's the left-wing influence in that group?
They are absolutely right-wing by modern American standards, right?
But but you're like defining right-wing is whatever they are. It's like a bit of a circular argument, right?
No! defining right wing is whatever they are. It's like a bit of a circular argument, right?
There's been a weird shift, right? Where the conspiracies and the
weird anti-institutional stuff is a big driving force.
Yeah, but it's right wing populism. I just think it's like a new bottle. They're all talking, what are the concerns about anti-immigration,
about protectionism and things like that? Oh, yeah. There's certainly a lot of
stuff there that is right-wing, like restore family sovereignty, anti-immigration, as you say,
but like weird libertarian stuff as well, like secure monetary freedom from the finance industrial complex. But that's like Alex Jones libertarianism, which is like alternative currencies and stuff
that you know, it's like libertarianism in America is like a strongly right-wing phenomenon,
right? Whenever they survey.
Yeah. I think the reason why we're getting confused is that you're defining right-wing
is whatever the reactionary weirdo non left
wing people are in the United States right now, right? Whereas it's it's a different
it's it's evolving.
Well, one of us is confused. I agree. But it's it's perhaps not me. But we can let
others decide they can listen a judge for themselves. So who's confused? Matt or me? Am I simply
dividing people as right wing in a circular way? Or is it because
they are in fact, just saying all the standard things that people
on the right populist reactionary right often say? Who can say
Matt?
They haven't always been anti-vaxxers.
Who? The right wing? No. Yeah, yeah, but yeah, just a bit.
But like Alex Jones was at the, you know, there was like,
Matt, I agree.
I agree.
There are, I'm not saying there is no,
there is nobody there who would have previously
been associated with kind of left-wing crunchism.
But I just think that movement has been strongly co-opted
by MAGA in the modern era.
And that is not like a confused thing where, well, is MAGA right wing?
No, MAGA is right wing.
MAGA is right wing.
So if you're all pro-MAGA, if you're on a boat with Trump to rescue the Republic,
you're not like a diverse spectrum of political views, right?
No, of course not.
It's just that you're defining the right wing, which is whatever MAGA is today, right?
No! I'm saying there's neocons, there's right wing populists,
there's frontier political...
There's libertarians, yeah.
There's like a spectrum of right.
Yeah, so if you just categorize stuff as, oh, it's right wing,
then you're just not really... Like, it, it's, it's right wing, then
you're just not really like, it could just be a bit of a thought terminating thing
where you're, you're not actually thinking about all of the weird shit that's,
that's driving people.
No, but that's good.
You know what we have to, we have to create, generate controversy and conflict.
We agree on too much because on the left, you have progressive, you have moderates, you have communists, whatever.
You've got all these different factions of people with different views or whatever.
It's just a broad category of saying, you know, left and right wing.
But there are different factions within it. It doesn't mean they're all the exact same.
I'm not saying they're not right wing. I'm not saying it's not a right wing reactionary conflict.
Are you sure that's what you did say?
I'm saying if you want to understand it,
the appeal and it is populism,
but it's a conspiratorial anti-institutional thing,
which is a somewhat new thing.
That's all.
All right. Right in your answers in a postcard.
Who's right, Matt or Chris will put it off on the page.
Now, but nonetheless, Matt, whatever
the source of the radio is, you know, it's like that thing in Game of Thrones.
Like what is dead can never die.
What is stupid will never stop.
It will continue to spread.
And I feel playing a couple of clips
from some of the speeches. We can't get through them all because there simply is too many to cover.
But there are some highlights. So first, this is Russell Brand and Jordan on stage, and you're
going to hear some crowd work because part of this event is, you know, you've got live crowd, you've got to get them engaged.
So listen to this.
Or if they're terrifying you into fear of the future and using force and compulsion to regulate your obedience.
And I would say unless you want to be slave like sheep who have no proper destiny to play, then find the divine invitation and forgo
the terror and force.
Ladies and gentlemen, I happily concede this unofficial debate rap battle to the great Jordan Peterson.
Now I know you've got some fantastic speakers coming up. I can see Jimmy
Doar down there. I've had a magnificent conversation with Jimmy and above all
else when I speak to Jimmy Doar he impresses upon me the necessity for
unity, the necessity to
remain vigilant, the opportunity to find alliance between one another, to focus on the issues
– health, ending war, free speech, not personalities. And if I have your permission, I would like
to end in a short prayer on this holy and auspicious day. You got a bit of ranting, a bit of word salad from Jordan Peterson at the beginning, then
you got Russell Brand playing master of ceremonies or some description.
I see Jimmy Dore back there. That's Jimmy. And then high-minded ideas, Matt. The most
high-minded ending wars, peace, health, love.
Health.
Just as who could be wrong?
Who could be against these things?
You can see there, though, in his few lines
that there's just a small shift required of Russell Brand
to go from his previous version of conspiratorial word salad
anti-institutional.
Left-wing revolutionary. of conspiratorial word salad, anti institutional.
Left-wing revolutionary.
Left-wing revolutionary to this kind of right-wing coded.
So, you know, I'm just saying, just saying.
I agree, I completely agree.
It's easy for people to slip across.
We are both in agreement there.
That's fine, that's fine.
That observation fits both models.
I'll say.
But you heard him tee up a prayer, Matt.
Now, of course,
good Christians and whatnot will know that the Bible has various injunctions about
being performative of your religiosity.
And, you know, Russell, it's not about personalities.
It's not about, I'm making a show of things, right?
Jordan Peterson on stage with him.
Yes, he's shouting out to him, you know, saying,
oh, big up Jordan and whatnot.
Yes, Jordan is in a two-face suit
with his like red and blue thing
and they're strutting around the stage.
But it's not like they're both going
to kneel down on the stage and performatively engage in a prayer. Is it?
Heavenly Father, Lord Jesus Christ, I call upon your name on this occasion. May it augment
an era of peace. May we reach out our hands in friendship, in particular to those that
we might imagine we would oppose.
May these institutions that were once regarded sacred, so sacred in fact that any incursion
upon them as on January 6th was regarded as a kind of heresy. May the values that warrant
these buildings, these institutions that flag this nation being regarded as one nation under God return to the
forefront. May I pray Lord Jesus Christ in your holy name that all Americans of
all cultures and colors and persuasions come together in your name. I ask
Heavenly Father for a new era of peace, that Satan be cast out in your name in
all his forms but in particular in the
bizarre, Kafkaesque, Huxleyesque, late Orwellian form of totalitarianism, bureaucracy in the
name of care. Lord, I ask for true republicanism and true democracy, that every individual
may feel their freedom, their freedom to open heartedly engage in discourse and conversation
with one another in good faith and enter the deception, the lies and the censorship and the control. Respect the honor of the individual, the sovereignty
of the individual that we are all fallen individuals and that we may serve in your name.
Yeah, yeah, that's quite a prayer. Chris, it is a shame that we don't have visuals on our podcast
because like you said, the cast
on the stage there, it does look like a collection of Batman villains, doesn't it?
You've got the two-face Joker, then you've got the Lothario.
And meanwhile, you've got the crowd kind of milling around there who look like these characters from a far side cartoon.
Quite accurate, quite accurate.
I've not heard that many prayers before, Matt, that reference January 6th, Kafka
and a true republicanism during the exhortation towards the Lord.
That's a unique kind of prayer style that he's invented there,
Russell, in his short time as a Christian,
almost as if it's not really about the religion.
Then it's a little bit more about playing up to a certain religious audience.
One could cynically suggest that. January 6th, getting
the shout out as well. Yeah, that's right. A revolt against these corrupt things that
people are treating as sacred. Yeah, clearly he sees prayer as just simply like an empty receptacle for him to do his normal spiel.
Yeah.
Yes, and we should also mention that there was a tweet put out by Russell Brand that
received some attention where he said it might seem a bit soon to be baptizing people,
but the Apostles did it on day one.
So here we are.
And he included two pictures of him doing an adult baptism.
Looks like somewhere in the UK, probably with himself
and another man both in their underwear, him in his tighty whiteys,
the other black boxers and no top, just in your underwear, baptizing someone
who looks like he's wearing a Star Trek uniform. I don't know if you've seen that, but I did see
under the comments that somebody was saying like in this religious group that he's become attached
to, adult baptisms, yes, they happen. They never happen.
Like shirtless and in your underwear before.
That's that's not what usually occurs.
So it's it's just another tick in the performance.
Like if you wanted to baptize someone while in your underwear.
Sure. You know, like maybe there's a reason to do that.
But when you're posting it on Twitter,
there is something of a performative element
that seems hard to ignore.
Certainly, certainly, yeah.
Yeah, well, it gives him a chance to show off his,
you know, rather svelte body.
I think that had something to do with it.
Does it?
Well, if does that get people's things going? So yeah.
And Jordan, you know, just to say Jordan as well, famously conflicted
about his religious things, but kneeling down beside Russell on stage with his
eyes closed, looking deep in, in the mood there.
So yeah.
He's on board.
He's on board. Yes.
So that was Russell and Brand and Jordan Peterson's prayer time.
Next here, next from one of the key figures.
I don't know how central he was actually in terms of like getting the stage organized.
I kind of feel like Brett couldn't do that.
But he's tried this many times
to get these kinds of events off the ground
and they often haven't led to this level of success.
So all the different due to the attempts and whatnot.
So this is, I think, one of Brett's crowning moments.
And of course, the man was there himself.
Now, since this is an event that Brett wants to do well at it, he needed to set up some
concepts for the speech that would be important. And everyone is trying to get the audience
reaction. You heard like Jordan and Russell doing it, right? You're going to hear Brett doing it
here as well. But you know, Brett can be a little bit highfalutin
for these kind of events.
So let's hear him set the groundwork for a line that he's going to deliver that will
electrify the audience.
Here we go.
The most important things we pass between generations are myths, stories that are so
powerfully important, they are encoded in a special sacred layer.
And in our case, the myth we need comes to us from the Greeks,
the founders of the ancient West,
the one from which the modern West ultimately emerged.
It is the story of the phoenix, a mystical bird that instead of making chicks,
lights its nest ablaze and raises anew from the ashes.
Watching the modern West burn, I believe it is no accident that this story points us to a hidden solution,
a remedy for which we just so happen to have the ingredients.
One of our explicit purposes in this gathering was to galvanize the Unity movement,
bringing representatives together from across the global West.
And if you will allow me to draw on another myth, I believe our mission will become clear.
I call the thing that has captured our system Goliath. It is the force that prevents all meaningful change.
In the biblical story, Goliath is a giant, a man, a large man,
but a man all the same. In our time, Goliath, like everything else, has scaled
way up. The force that wants us to be terrified to exercise our First
Amendment rights in our own capital, that's Goliath. Now look around you. Do you all see what I see? David has scaled up. We are David. We are mighty and our time has come.
So there you had the myth of the Phoenix introduced and Brett likes this David Goliath story and he did get an applause line there when, you know, look around you.
We are the meek, we are David, but together we will take down this Goliath.
But that isn't the applause line I want to highlight.
But what did you think of that, Matt?
Well, yeah, I don't think I'm the target audience.
All the clips I've heard from this event, including the ones you played, Chris, I don't think I'm the target audience. All the clips I've heard from this event,
including the ones you played, Chris,
I didn't hear much specifics.
Like it's a lot of rhetoric, right?
Oh, it's a lot of rhetoric.
A lot of rhetoric, but you know,
a little bit weak on specifics.
I wonder, did you hear other stuff that was more specific,
like actual specific things
or was it all like that?
No, it depends what you mean.
Like, I mean, the food bib had very specific chemicals she was upset about and was holding
up like packets of crisps in, you know, in the US that has this ingredient.
So that's quite specific, like I'm conflict, but the solutions are, they're always the
same like, you know Like drain the swamp, drain
the swamp type solution.
Drain the swamp, touch nature. You know, Huberman, they should just get his protocols because
basically it's, it's that and whatever Joe Rogan might have othered that week as well.
And you know, unity, unify across the spectrum around Trump. Right? Like that's the we got to unify. We got all these
diverse perspectives off. Everyone agrees on anti-vaccines. Everyone agrees that we have to
stop Kamala and all that. Yeah. Stop immigration. Yeah. All that stuff. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So
well, okay. Well, so we've set the groundwork map. We've got the myths laid out. You got the phoenix,
an important image.
The West is burning, Chris. The West is burning.
They brought the greatest minds from the West together for this event. Now let's see if
Brett can inspire them at the end of his speech. if he can get a line that they can get behind.
What's he got up his sleeve?
Now let's put the two myths together.
Goliath made a terrible strategic error. He is ungodly powerful, but he's dumb as a box of rocks.
His error was this. He terrorized all the competent, courageous people and set about driving them
from the institutions. Now they gather in a post-political unity movement and come to
know their power. We have every single person you could possibly want on our side.
We have all the courage, all the integrity, and all the know-how.
The question is how to drive the Lyth out and infuse all that talent and insight back
into the system so it can be renewed.
In 1787, Ben Franklin was asked if the Constitutional Convention had produced a monarchy or a republic,
and Franklin famously replied, a republic if you can keep it.
Today, David and the Unity movement face a
similar question. What we must deliver is a republic if we can Phoenix it. I have
learned from decades of study of human nature that important concepts emerge
independently. Did you get the line there? Was? Was it, a Republic, if you could Phoenix it?
If we can Phoenix it, yeah.
And he didn't, to be fair, he moved on fairly quickly after.
It was a little bit of a confused, yeah.
That's just very typical, Brett.
Like setting up this elaborate alternative theory of the Republic and whatnot,
and then thinking there's this cool line that he's going to be like Franklin, this kind
of quotable line that everybody knows.
And it doesn't really work.
And one, it's not grammatically correct.
It doesn't work grammatically.
It's just so incredibly labored, isn't it?
Take these two metaphors, these two legends and mush them together.
So they're going to Phoenix it.
They're going to Phoenix it.
They're going to build a republic again from the ashes because it's all burning.
It's all totally corrupt.
All of the good people, all of the people with integrity, the people with courage, the
people with ability are up there on stage.
People like him and Jordan that have been driven out of the institutions and they want back in.
Let me in!
I had this image of, we've got all the people here.
We've got Bubbles the Clown, Giggles McWiggles.
We've got the Joker, we have Lothario.
We've got Tootsie Tumbles, Coco Loco.
We got a whole raft of Angie Vaxxers.
They're going to take Rob Schneider.
He's going to take care of things.
Yeah, it's amazing to see the reality juxtaposed
with what they are in their own mind.
Right. Like just like the incredible self-importance of it just comes through all the time, isn't
it? When it's just the contrast between what you're seeing and hearing, which is a clown
car versus just how incredibly seriously they take themselves. It's beautiful.
Well, plus Brett online, like you can never, you can never do justice to the
level of self-aggrandizement that Brett will display because he described how
this event was going to be like the fulfillment of Woodstock, like very much
part two to Woodstock with the same cultural impact of Woodstock. Is that fair?
It does not have the Woodstock vibe. I mean, from the shots I saw of the credit, I'm not sure where
it was held, but it just looked from the images a bit like a parking lot. It's a pretty nondescript
area of tarmac and there's a bunch of sort of lumpy far side people
standing around in their shorts and t-shirts
kind of staring gogol-eyed blankly at things.
It does not have the Woodstock vibe.
Yeah.
I mean, Woodstock had a whole bunch
of the leading musicians of the 60s and 70s.
Right.
When was Woodstock?
The late 60s?
69, I think.
Yeah.
Well, they were still around.
I mean, they stayed around, right.
But in comparison, you've got Zuby, Rob Schneider.
Yeah.
It just doesn't quite, I guess you've got Russell Brand.
He was in films.
It wasn't quite, I guess you've got Russell Brand, he was in films and Matt like literally a day ago or so, Brett was on Twitter warbling about, you know, Elon and how he's now decided
that this, the valuations of Twitter that came out presented as having lost all this
money that like that's wrong, right?
And he understands nothing about economics, but he's sure it's all like a conspiracy to try and damage Musk. But at the end of it, he says,
anyone who spoke or attended the rescue the Republic rally in Washington, D.C. on Sunday,
and then read the Wall Street Journal's preposterous article about it, knows that this
tactic is in the air in the run up to the U to the US presidential election. The news is not the news.
The analysis is not the analysis.
The science is not the science.
The value is not the value.
We're living in Plato's cave.
Follow the white rabbit.
And like I've said so many times, he's immune to cringe and he thinks he's so
like he's a revolutionary leader and that.
But Plato's cave, just another game getting abused there for Plato's cave.
You can't go over 100 meters of that cave provided like being misrepresented.
Yeah. Anyway, that's what he was up to.
I'm not done, though, Matt.
I'm not done, though.
This isn't as bad perhaps
as on the nose as the other ones, but just to give a bit more vibe of the carnivalesque
atmosphere that was there, here's Matt Taibbi being introduced. I think it's by Lara Logan.
Just listen to this. I like this. See if you can pinpoint this spot where I noted like,
oh, that's a bit unusual.
I couldn't pinpoint this spot where I noted like, oh, that's a bit unusual.
And Matt Taibbi has a voice that reaches beyond the feedback loop.
It breaks through the information dominance and it's very, very important. So I want to ask him to come out on stage.
Where is he?
Where is Matt?
Matt Taibbi, we need you.
So who screamed there?
Yeah, that was the sounded like it might have been an unhinged
big Tybee fan in the audience, right? It to be clear, that was the announcer who did that.
RAAAHHHHH!
It was like another Hinged Primal Scream.
When he comes out, he's like, well, thank you for that gracious introduction.
I was like, did you enjoy the other Holy Yell?
There were just so many moments
that where it's like the kind of thing
that could be the Wes Anderson film
where the mic kind of does feedback
and then they go, wow.
It's that thing then.
Yeah.
Yeah, I imagine that Taibii doesn't usually experience
that kind of excited screaming.
No, no, and Taibii as well, uh, yes, he's gone down this road of being,
you know, a conspiracy prone, populous leaning kind of guy, self-aggrandizing.
But his, his cadence and delivery is still very much that of a bit of a wonky
journalist, slightly awkward guy, right?
But he's here, Matt.
He's on the stage and he did give a speech that was well received.
But I just want to point out another instance that you might regard as pandering.
We saw Russell and Jordan praying on stage.
Now, Matt Pabe, hard-nosed journalist, he isn't so bias as the, you know, stoop to prayer because no,
he wouldn't do that.
And unlike the busy bodies of the internet age to whom words are just another overproduced,
overplentiful, unnecessary and vaguely hazardous commodity, like greenhouse gases or plastic
soda bottles, people like Madison understood the value of language.
In 1787, you might have to walk a mile or five
just to see a printed word.
It was probably the Bible.
Now I'm not religious, but I've read the Bible,
and of course so did they.
They knew the Gospel of John.
In the beginning was the Word,
and the Word was with God, and the Word was with God and the Word was God.
And this was a reference to Genesis.
In the beginning God said, let there be light.
And the world was born.
So for them, the Word was infused with the power of creation itself.
It wasn't a small thing.
This wasn't just law.
This was metaphysics.
This was cosmogony.
We were a little country run by a bunch of jumped-up tobacconists and corn farmers who
needed an ally to withstand the wrath of European royalty. And we got it by lighting a match
under human ingenuity and creativity and passion.
There you go. Pause for reception. But just I find that that he would move into
essentially like a Jordan Peterson-esque reference to biblical stories and their importance and just a little on the nose, Matt, with this particular cry.
Well, I'm noticing again that it's all very vague, like big on metaphor, big on
sweeping statements and rhetoric, but yeah, very light on details, right?
It seems to be the common theme.
Yeah.
Hey Chris, a quick question. This is off topic, but is this, this event, I remember another event, very light on details, right? Seems to be the common theme. Yeah.
Hey Chris, a quick question.
This is off topic, but is this, this event,
I remember another event, Rage Against the War Machine,
which was organized by different people,
but it was linked to it.
It has a similar kind of thing.
Did you come across that one?
Rage Against the War Machine?
No, was that the band?
Were they involved? No, I mean, no, it's a play on.
No, it wasn't.
But it's a play on that reg against the machine.
No, I was just checking.
But you have to mention what it was.
You can't.
Oh, OK.
So it's a different event, different speakers.
But I see them cross-promoting each other
and a lot of people tweeting about the same thing. This happened in September 28th so quite recently as well again at the Washington Memorial.
The day before the rescue republic event. Yeah so this one is you know abolished the CIA,
the military, industrialistic state, disbanded don't not one more penny for wars in
Ukraine or Gaza.
Yeah, conflict those two things.
Uh, pardon, Julian Assange.
Yeah.
Anyway, slash dependent.
Oh, well, yeah, it's all the same.
Look, Jimmy door, Ron Paul, to see Gabbard and it's organized by libertarian
people in America.
Imagine that Matt imagine the libertarian party having
a bunch of right-wing go-heads. That's surprising, given how diverse their political senses are.
Yeah, yeah. But again, this speaks to our little debate we had at the beginning.
This is, yes, it's on par for like an extreme libertarian
point of view, but you know, a few years ago, this would be stuff that you might
see at a hard left type get together.
You know, peace now, end the, stop the military industrial complex.
Oh, stop the war.
Sure.
But like the, you know, Ron Paul and Rand Paul always have been like right-wing chuckleheads in libertarian
suits.
Just pointing out, it's an interesting agglomeration of things.
Agreed.
I agree.
I'm being very careful not to incite a second debate.
You're exercising restraint as well, Chris.
I am. I appreciate that.
Well, so that was what Brett and friends were up to. RFK Jr. also gave speeches. You can
imagine, right? You get the idea. Kursi Gabbard, what's she going to be saying? And they're
all talking about how we need to unite. We need to,
you know, restore freedom, all these kinds of things. And how are we going to do it?
Well, there is one figure who's known for really respecting democracy and the rule of law.
And that is kind of it, Donald Trump. So there we go. That's what we got to do.
There we go. That's what we got to do.
Now, another member of the Weinstein family appeared with Chris Williamson
offering us modern wisdom and good on Chris having Eric there.
You know, it's important that people have Eric for multiple hours so that he can talk and provide his insights to large audiences because God forbid that we forgot whatever
Eric wants to waffle about. Thank Lord we have people like Chris and Dario, the CEO and whatnot,
ready to bring the Weinsteins back. I could think of nobody better, Chris, to hold his feet to the fire and really push
him hard on some of his more extreme claims.
I'm sure he did a great job.
It's probably better not to play any clips from it.
Well, unfortunately, I have some.
So there was a clip that went around and I think it's hard to do justice to about playing
like the full length of how far it went.
But I've broken
it into two parts, Matt, so that we don't get overrun by Eric. So Brett is there, he's open,
he's a pro-Trump guy now. And as we know, the Eric Weinstein specialist to feign non-partisan
elder statesmen above it all positions, right. He wouldn't be so crass to come
out in favor of a side. It just so happens that almost always his critiques and whatnot are
focused on the Democrats and left-wing figures and the woke and whatnot. And he's not so vocal
when it comes to the far right. They've been misunderstood, misrepresented, you know, but.
Eric doesn't have a horse in this race, Matt, and Chris Williamson was wondering,
you know, Kamala Harris, she said various statements, which are a little bit
waffly, a little bit word solid.
And what do they mean?
What could it mean?
Let's sit down and analyze her speech.
Is it just, you know, politicians chatting shit?
Or could it be something else?
Eric has some ideas.
Can you please try and explain to me what you interpret by what can be unburdened by what has been?
What does that mean?
I don't know if I should say, I don't know if I should say,
there's a line in Marx
where sometimes you hear certain phrases like a world to win. AOC uses the phrase we have
a world to win, which comes from the end of the Communist Manifesto originally written
in German. It was the name I used to hang out in the revolutionary bookstore in Cambridge,
Massachusetts with the communists
because they print everything in every language. So if you're trying to learn multiple languages,
they'll print the same text in all of these languages and you can compare.
It basically says you have to wipe out what has been to arrive in the new.
Where's it from? What can be unburdened by what has been? If you'd like to continue listening to this conversation, you'll need to subscribe at
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