Freakonomics Radio - 410. What Does Covid-19 Mean for Cities (and Marriages)?
Episode Date: March 26, 2020There are a lot of upsides to urban density — but viral contagion is not one of them. Also: a nationwide lockdown will show if familiarity really breeds contempt. And: how to help your neighbor. ...
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No need for a long preamble today.
We all know what's going on with COVID-19.
So today on the show, we'll focus on the economic damage at the individual level and what one
economist says is the best immediate response.
This is the time to write unconditional checks.
And in this era of lockdowns and very close quarters. We'll ask a psychologist whether familiarity
really breeds contempt, and if so, what to do about it.
You know, I think the most important thing
is to have humility.
Humility is recognizing that you could be incomplete or wrong.
Very hard to do.
And how to help our most vulnerable neighbors.
So it's really important that I can quickly find
the best plumber,
the best babysitter, maybe find the lost pet.
From Stitcher and Dubner Productions, this is Freakonomics Radio,
the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything. Here's your host, Stephen Dubner Productions, this is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything.
Here's your host, Stephen Dubner.
Ed Glazer is an economist who teaches at Harvard.
There are wonderful things about being proximity to other human beings.
We learn from other human beings, we can work with them,
but there are also demons that come with density,
and the worst of these demons is contagious disease.
Glazer studies a lot of economic issues, but he's got one particular obsession.
My whole life's work has been trying to understand cities and how they work and how
they sometimes fail to work. In 2011, he published a book called Triumph of the City, How Our Greatest Invention, Our Greatest Invention, he calls the city, how our greatest invention makes us richer, smarter, greener, healthier and happier.
But in the age of COVID-19, cities also have the capacity to make us sicker.
As the time that we're talking, New York is responsible for almost a third of the total
cases in America. So it certainly seems as if density is continuing to do its worst. If you
look back historically, these things have been rocking cities for millennia, right? We think
about the plague of Athens, 430 BC. We think about the plague of Justinian, which almost a thousand
years later hit Constantinople.
If you look at sort of the entire European medieval period, there's a sense in which cities are not particularly safe places.
As late as the time of Shakespeare's London, you've got a six-year life expectancy loss by living in London relative to the rest of England.
That was, by the way, still true in New York City in 1900.
And what's going on in cities to create this danger?
There are two things going on, one of which are the cities are connected globally.
And secondly, the cities are dense when you get to them.
And so the cities are the ports of entry for the new disease, whether it's the rats carrying the fleas or a traveler from Wuhan carrying the virus.
And correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe we have now the largest
percentage of the human population in history in urban areas. Is that right?
Certainly.
So we have had, you know, earlier spikes in urbanization followed by huge declines. I mean,
I'm going way back to the large cities of Mesopotamia and Egypt and so on.
Are you worried that COVID-19 and the role that
urbanization may play in its spread will turn the tide against your beloved cities?
Of course. Even worse, I'm worried that it should turn the tide against my beloved cities, right? I
mean, it's not as if I sit here during COVID-19 and say, the important thing is to continue making
the case for urban life. I mean, these demons that come with density are very real. Historically, effective governments
have always been able to tame them, although sometimes it took many decades to make that
possible. I have at least the hope that an effective government can contain the pandemics
of the future, if we had managed to lock it in China earlier, if we had managed to get more
research on vaccines of this nature earlier. So I tend to be an optimist if we can manage to get
effective enough governments. I mean, 150 years ago, cities were universally killing fields.
And for most of my life, they most certainly have not been. And that, of course, required
mass amounts of public investment. America's cities and towns were spending as much on clean
water at the start of the 20th
century as the federal government was spending on everything except for the post office and
the army.
But it was something that we managed to do.
I guess I remain hopeful that we can continue to do it.
But let's not, you know, let's not ignore the fact that pandemic is an existential threat
to high density living based around face-to-face contact.
So, it's relatively early days in the pandemic, at least in the U.S., and we don't know what the
damage will look like in terms of loss in life, but the economic damage is already coming into
view suddenly and intensely. So, I'd like to hear your thinking on that, especially the economic damage
to individuals and families. That damage is not going to be evenly distributed, is it?
You're exactly right. So if either you have substantial assets or you have a large,
highly stable employer, your financial worries during this shutdown are really relatively
small. Now, if you're living hand to mouth and your employer just shut down and all of a sudden
you've got no income coming in, then if you've got a couple of kids to pay for as well,
and you can't just move into your parents' house because maybe they're on the other side of the
country or maybe they're in a nursing home. And then you're looking at just an absolutely terrifying world.
How can you compare this situation to past economic calamities, whether it's
pandemics or wars or financial collapses?
I mean, the last sort of pandemic of this scale is really 1919, the influenza, which occurred at the same time as a
great recession. I don't know that we've ever sorted out what role that pandemic played in
creating the recession. There were many other things that were going on. When you think of
the fact that one fifth of the American labor force is in retail trade, leisure and hospitality,
those are the sectors that are
absolutely on this front line. So I could easily imagine that we start seeing joblessness numbers
that look a lot more like the Great Depression than anything that we've seen beforehand.
These jobs are ones which seemed like they were the future. Now, what if all of a sudden we're
terrified of face-to-face interactions. Where do those jobs go to? And
while there may be a few jobs in delivering the Amazon grocery products that we then turn to,
that's a trickle of what we had in the 32 million Americans who work in these big industries.
And if this is a permanent shift away from the face-to-face economy,
it's one that will have catastrophic impacts on those Americans with less formal schooling. Okay. I would like you to walk us through quickly what you see the
current aid package, federal aid package, looking like. It seems that there's a fundamental choice
to make, which is, are you going to help from the top down, meaning fund the firms in the
industries that are most in trouble, and hopefully they will take care of their employees and customers, or are you going to fund from the bottom up individuals?
So, most of the time, I am not a fan of universal basic income. You know, six months ago, two months
ago, my view was that it was crucial to get more Americans working. Income inequality bothered me
much less than the rise of prime age male joblessness. The fact that, you know,
when I was born 52 years ago, only less than one in 20 prime age males were jobless for most of
the last 15 years, more than three in 20 prime aged males have been jobless. I think of this
as being sort of an absolutely catastrophic thing for America. And so that's where I was before
COVID-19. Now, all of a sudden COVID COVID-19 strikes us, and none of that applies.
In the case of the financial crisis or any sort of normal recession, what you're trying to do is
shore up the financial system and then make sure people are still spending, make sure people are
still working, make sure that the economic system functions as well as it possibly can.
During a pandemic, that's not what you're trying to do at all. What you're trying to do is you're trying to make sure everyone goes home. We don't care if
nobody's working. We want those people to be at home. And so this is the time to write people
checks. And you're not writing people checks the way that you would be during a standard recession
with the idea that this is going to gin up some stimulus and make sure the dollars for their
system. That's not why you're doing it. You're just insuring them. You're making sure that the mom who worked as a waitress, who has a couple
of kids at home and who has no idea if she's ever getting her job back, you're just making sure that
she can put food on the table. If you're going to ask yourself what you're going to do to eliminate,
you know, the short run suffering, let's ensure those Americans whose jobs have vanished for the
foreseeable future. And this is the time to write unconditional checks. Now, there's a question as to why make it unconditional. I think my
preferred model is one in which everyone gets the checks. But let's say you come around to next
year's tax season. If you're earning more than $200,000 and you spent that check, you're going
to pay 100% tax on that check. If you're earning between one and 200k, you're going to spend 50%.
But if your earnings are less than 100k, then the money's free and clear.
And why would you do it that way instead of withholding checks now from anyone earning $200,000 or more?
I just don't want anyone to think about it.
I just want the money to get out.
Just get it out right now.
Let's sort it out when we aren't all terrified of a pandemic.
Let's sort it out later. One thing that is clear is that just the experience between rich and poor during this pandemic seems to me even more unequal than the usual experience gap between rich and poor.
So I think in some sense, this is just an order of magnitude more terrifying at the low end of the income distribution than at the high end of the income distribution.
I believe very strongly in relief right now, policies that stop economic Armageddon from spiraling out of control.
So having some sort of a moratorium on foreclosures is perfectly sensible.
Doing a few things that would slow down any sort of bankruptcy proceedings for any particular companies is probably the right thing.
Let's talk about Italy for a minute.
Let's start with the history of the quarantine.
So as far as I know, this is a Venetian response to the Black Death.
They're forcing boats or people, in some cases, to stay for 40 days, hence Quaranta.
And it's an attempt to sort of stop the disease from entering into the area.
And so you really do need a state that is
strong enough to actually enforce these types of quarantines for them to be effective. And I think
that's one of the things when you look at, let's say, the modern Italian experience versus the
modern Chinese experience, that the Chinese government is just much more effective at
imposing a lockdown or a quarantine than its modern Italian equivalents would be.
Other than the virtues of a more authoritarian government to dictate a quarantine. Other than that,
why do you think the Italian situation has gotten so much worse than really anywhere at this moment?
I was struck by the number of people who were cheating in some ways. They weren't. Cheating
is maybe too strong, but they weren't. They were still shaking hands. You know,
they weren't doing proper mass. They weren't following the quarantines. There's a sense in
which, you know, many Italians are skeptical about orders given by their government.
There's not necessarily a strong cultural norm of following them, perhaps for good reason.
But certainly that makes things harder.
And whereas in many cases it's right to, you know, ignore nonsensical orders from the government, during a pandemic, having a government that you trust is really valuable.
So with COVID-19, there's potentially a critical shortage of hospital beds and equipment.
Now, in the U.S., at least, governments are typically not very involved in health care facilities the way they are in schools and police and fire departments and transportation and so on.
And I'm curious whether you think that may be a shortcoming, a blessing, and whether this pandemic may change the way we think about the relationship between government and hospitals.
So it's interesting. Historically, the line was often quite blurry, as it was with universities, right?
And they have certainly evolved to be a clear distinction between public and private,
where the public hospitals, they have to take the poor patients, they have to take emergency rooms.
And whereas the non-for-profit private hospitals have evolved in one economist's words into something more like doctors cooperatives. So I think there's a lot to like about that system.
But of course, there are larger issues as well. No individual hospital is set up to deal with
the catastrophic risk of a pandemic. But I think there's a good case to be made that whoever we
decide is going to be the U.S.'s chief pandemic officer going forward. But I think there's a good case to be made that whoever we decide is going to be the U.S.'s chief pandemic officer going forward, and I think there's a
reasonable view for having a pandemic czar in the country after this, such a person would want to
think about how it is that you're going to actually deliver a lot more capacity to hospitals,
because I think it's very unlikely that any individual hospital is going to do it,
because you're trying to deal with 50 different things every day that are painful, excruciating,
but you are not set up to think about how am I going to deal with if all of a sudden
a once-in-a-generation pandemic shows up.
If we were to compare military preparedness and the dollars connected to that with pandemic
preparedness and the dollars connected with that, my guess is that it would be an incalculably
large spread.
Now that we've actually got a pandemic
that threatens to really attack the root
of modern economic and civil society,
does this seem like terribly short-sighted planning
or does this seem like, well,
the world throws things at you and you have to adjust
and adjust we shall now?
I mean, I certainly agree with the spirit of your question.
I mean, I think there were enough warning signs,
SARS 17 years ago,
swine flu 2009,
MERS eight years ago,
Ebola over the years.
There were more than enough warning signs
that something like this was a real possibility.
And if we had had any ability to look forward to this,
we should have been spending radically more money
than we're spending. So the comparison to military forward to this, we should have been spending radically more money than we're
spending. So the comparison to military spending is apt, but it also makes sense to compare our
spending on pandemic preparedness with our spending on routine medical expenditures, with our spending
on Medicare. We as a nation do not underspend on healthcare. We spend an enormous amount of money
on healthcare, but what we spend on are the sort of routine medical business of the country. We're set up to do that. We're not set up to spend money
for the risk that has happened, for the pandemic that hasn't shown up. And I think that's the
crucial thing going forward, is that we need to recognize that this thing has the capacity to do
trillions and trillions of dollars of damage. And so it's worthwhile spending at least billions and billions of dollars
to actually protect ourselves to mitigate future risks.
With all the changes that are happening right now in response to COVID-19,
a lot more remote working, a lot more remote education,
a lot of people considering if all the things that they've done on a daily basis,
kind of as habit, are really so valuable.
I can imagine all kinds of, you know, shifting of supply and demand in real estate, among
other things, if more people are working from home and so on.
So I'm just curious if you look down the line at any possible silver linings that you see.
So it depends a little about whether or not you think that currently we're all making
a bunch of mistakes about interacting with each other or traveling. And if you think that we're
making a lot of mistakes, then we might realize those things are mistakes. I think for some of
us, maybe it will teach us to prune some of the unnecessary trips in our lives. That's good.
I think there is a sense in which if I think that there's a single political dividend,
this certainly reminds us that having a really functional public sector is really valuable.
That, in fact, you don't actually just want a government that's about, you know, taking from one group and giving to the other.
There are actually real jobs for government, like preventing pandemics.
And, you know, you really want a government that's actually capable of doing that.
And to the extent to which voters in this election, and I'm not saying where that should lead them and who they vote for,
but the extent to which voters realize that actually it's really not about which person
you think is being on your team, but it's really about who's going to do the most capable job of
producing a government that can actually protect all of America, that would be a really salutary
outcome. So many of the recent viral outbreaks and pandemics, maybe all of them have originated in non-human species, non-human
animals. And there's a pretty strong argument that without the environmental destruction that's a
product of capitalism, that this would be happening much less, if at all. That's what's
driving these animal-borne diseases and pandemics. So I'm curious, you are, at least according to my
reading, a pretty strong, I don't know about dyed in the wool, but strong free marketer. How do you get the bounty of the free market without the destructive capacity of the environmental destruction? So how do you think about that balance? I think there are tremendous virtues of capitalism. I think everything is about balance. And a pure capitalist system is not one that will necessarily protect us against pandemic.
It is not one that will necessarily protect the environment.
That does not mean that the right answer is some non-capitalist system.
It means that you need a public sector that protects just as we have a private sector that creates.
And if we're worried about protecting the natural ecosystems, we need to have a public sector that views that as clearly one of its jobs and that it takes steps to do that.
On the show last week, we discussed that NASA imagery showed that air pollution in China fell so much during their COVID-19 lockdown that many, many more lives will be saved from cleaner air than will be lost, directly at least, from COVID-19.
So how do you think about trade-offs like that? What does that suggest for policy going forward?
Well, if we think that there are that many lives that will be saved by reductions in Chinese air
pollution, then we are at a very bad place in terms of the policy ex ante. I was in India in
December, and I was amazed by the deterioration in air
quality in and around Delhi for the last three or four years. Again, it's important that we
recognize that horrendous air quality that firms pollute is not fundamentally an indictment of the
capitalist system. It's an indictment of a government that doesn't protect people from
the excesses of the capitalist system. And we really do need robust policies that stop firms from overly polluting.
I think most appropriately is a straight-out pollution tax.
But if you can't implement that, then other Clean Air Act-type policies are necessary.
But if that many lives are going to be saved,
then we really need to redouble our efforts as a planet
to try and reduce the pollution that costs lives.
Let me ask you one more question about cities and pandemics. You've spoken about a number of
downsides. In fact, as someone who happens to live in New York City, they seem like a lot of
downsides. So thank you for emphasizing those. But what are the advantages to being in a city
even during a pandemic? So you have hospitals, you have
healthcare providers. I mean, one of the issues with Milan's hospitals right now is they're
currently filled with people who got sick in outlying areas and then had to move to Milan
to be taken care of. So the fact that cities have these sort of large pieces of health-related
infrastructure is clearly an asset. The fact that there are lots of smaller providers, so
nimble healthcare clinics that can take care of things quickly, providers for food or other forms of services.
So right now, suburban life looks relatively good relative to high density urban living during the height of the pandemic.
What if we now see a storm on top of it?
What if all of a sudden, you know, large numbers of eastern suburbs start losing their electricity?
It's one thing to be involved in lockdown if you actually can get all the electronics to work.
If all the electronics cease working, it becomes a much worse story.
Well, if that happens, I've got a spare cot somewhere for anybody that needs to migrate to New York who's willing to put up with all the downsides of the city.
And that goes for you and your family if you can squeeze in a cot.
So you're welcome here.
Thank you, Stephen.
Coming up after the break, the psychologist Angela Duckworth on how to best deal with the people you are shut in with.
So I'm not a great role model for this.
We'll be right back. More and more government and public health officials are calling for Americans to distance themselves from others,
to stay home, to limit any non-essential interactions.
This means a lot of us will be spending more time at home with families, partners, roommates, often in close quarters.
What will be the long-term results of all this indoor clustering?
There are already plenty of theories.
A baby boom, nine months hence.
A massive decrease in workplace sexual harassment,
since so many workplaces are closing.
Perhaps an increase in domestic violence.
Angela Duckworth is a psychology professor
and researcher at the University
of Pennsylvania. She also wrote the book Grit. Over the past few months, she and I have been
recording a series of Q&As for a new podcast we plan to launch soon. One topic that came up
recently struck me as particularly relevant in the era of COVID-19 lockdowns.
So here's my question.
Yeah.
Does familiarity breed contempt, as the old saying goes? And assuming the answer is at least sometimes it does,
which I'm guessing is probably a correct answer,
what can you do about it?
Because here's the thing.
It seems a real paradox that we become contemptuous of the people whom we have the most
familiarity with, which would tend to be family, friends, people we work with, because contempt is
something that I don't want in those relationships. So it's always struck me as a kind of flaw in
human relations, if that's indeed the case. You'd think it'd be better to have contempt for people you didn't know.
So if it's true, what are some coping mechanisms so that I can feel warmth and kindness and forgiveness, etc., toward the people that I am closest with?
Yeah, yeah. You want less contempt in your life.
Well, I'm happy to have contempt for people who are contemptible.
Okay, but not your loved ones, for example, or just close relations.
Well, presumably, my loved ones are people that I don't want to feel contempt for.
In fact, I've read literature that says the single biggest indicator of a failing marriage is a high level of contempt.
Contempt. It's John Gottman, right?
The very famous marriage psychologist calls it one of the four dark horsemen of divorce. There are three others, of course. One is criticism, another is defensiveness, and then finally stonewalling. But I think Gottman has said that contempt is actually the number one, as you pointed out, it really is the harbinger of the end of a relationship. I mean, first, let's start with what contempt is, right? So we all know it's a negative emotion, but it's different from anger. So when I'm in a fight with, you know,
my husband, I can feel angry toward him, right? I could also feel misunderstood. I can feel like
he hasn't been fair in our conversation. But contempt is different. Contempt is actually
very close to the emotion of disgust. You're looking down on someone, right?
So it's a judgment. It's not necessarily a moral judgment.
It could be an intellectual judgment.
Yeah, it could be, right.
I mean, it's got to be one of the most negative emotions
you can feel about another person.
So I do think that familiarity can breed contempt.
And there is some pretty respectable scientific research
by Mike Norton at Harvard and others
about circumstances under which
the more you get to know something or someone, the more contemptuous you feel.
Because you see the flaws?
Yeah, because, you know, when you first get to know someone or something, you know,
there's a lot of ambiguity. And so contempt really suggests a kind of
certainty that, like, I know who you are and I don't like it, right? And actually,
there's this opposing process that's very well established in social science, you know, the
familiarity effect. When you show people little graphic images, like little nonsense characters,
the more they see something, the more they like it. You know, it's just completely random,
but people like things that are familiar. So, familiarity doesn't always breed contempt. By the way, we should say familiarity breeds contempt. The idea
sort of originated with an Aesop fable, The Fox and the Lion, but it got reinterpreted
into the modern aphorism. But here's the thing, you can certainly feel contemptuous
toward people you don't know. But do you think that it ever reaches the level of contempt that you
might have with somebody you do know when things are really falling apart? I don't know, maybe.
Okay, so let me ask you this. How much of contempt do you think is reflective? In other words,
I'm ultimately disgusted or upset with something in myself. And the reason I project it onto this person is because I can feel them judging me.
Judging me.
Yeah.
I mean, I think there's some quote, I can't remember what it is, but something like, you
can only see the flaws in other people that you feel about yourself.
I think that the more useful question might be, because I think we all know what it feels
like to feel contempt.
And I think most of us don't like the feeling of contempt, especially when it comes to our
friendships, our family, our romantic relationships. If you're trying to not have this
dark horseman on your doorstep, what can you do? And, you know, I think so much of life is where
you pay attention. And the fact is that human attention is extraordinarily limited. In other words, we cannot pay attention to everything.
Sorry, what did you say? I was thinking about something else.
See, there you go.
That's true, though. Your mind can wander.
So, for example, when you're having a conversation with your spouse,
you can pay attention to those little peccadillos,
those little rough edges that you obsess about,
and like, well, there you go again.
And that bias of
attention can lead to more contempt. But if you do the opposite, if you deliberately try to pay
attention to the times where your spouse was funny or affectionate or understanding or, you know,
I like this exercise, the three blessings. You go to bed and you think of three good things.
You could do a version of that with your relationships where you think like,
what are three things I liked about our interactions today? And that biases you in the opposite direction.
That is really interesting and useful. I like that a lot. Can you imagine doing that exercise in the moment of an argument, I've actually tried to practice some of the psychological strategies that I study while I'm in the middle of a heated argument with my own husband, Jason.
And?
Yeah, not easy.
Not like, yeah, I think a lot of these things actually don't work when things have escalated to a certain point.
When you're in the middle of an argument and if someone said, hey, wait, I'm going to stop everything. Do you want to get less angry? Would you like to deescalate things?
You're like, no, let's go all the way. That's true for me. And I imagine it's true for other people.
So what would you say would be the most tangible advice for someone who's feeling contempt and
doesn't want to feel contempt because they value the familiarity.
Maybe it's a sibling, maybe it's a spouse, maybe it's your own kid. Let's say it's someone you
really admire at work. You think they're very smart, they're very devoted, but they have a-
Maybe you're going to vote different ways this fall, right? I think actually this is a
relevant question right now because I don't know if there's a contempt meter, but it's got to be
at all-time highs in this country because there's contempt on the left for the right and there's contempt
on the right for the left. So what's the recommendation there? You know, I think the
most important thing to do is to have humility. Humility is recognizing that you could be
incomplete or wrong. Very hard to do. And so trying to recognize that and trying to take
another person's perspective may be the most straightforward thing to do. And so trying to recognize that and trying to take another person's perspective,
maybe the most straightforward thing to do, in addition to, you know, paying attention to all
things you do like about this person who irritates you in other ways, is to actually just have a real
conversation. About the thing causing the contempt? Yeah, I mean, if you can, right? If you can do this
without things, you know, spiraling out of control, if you can have an argument or you can have a discussion.
Right.
So I could say that, you know, I have to tell you that when you talk about this issue in this way, it makes me feel contemptuous because I feel very differently.
Are you mocking my recommendation?
No, I'm really trying.
Yes, if you can do that earnestly and not ironically.
That was as earnest as I get.
Is that it?
Oh, wow.
I was maximizing my earnestness and you weren't buying.
But look, I'm not very good at this.
I actually had lunch with somebody recently.
Of whom you were deeply contemptuous?
Well, you know, we were friends and I use the past tense because, you know, talk got to politics and i left in the middle of the meal
and i haven't spoken to them since so i'm not a great role model for this did you really walk out
during the i did i'm not sure i'm proud of that i storm out i mean i paid the bill first does that
help i paid the bill and it's not about the money but it's about you consciously and deliberately
well you you it was obvious that you left.
I said out loud, like, I can't. I can't sit here with you.
I can't, like, yeah, I think maybe we're not supposed to, yeah, I don't think we're going to be friends anymore.
It's funny because that, I know that you.
Can I just say it's not admirable? I'm not proud of it.
Is it uncommon for you to do that kind of thing?
That was the only time, actually, I can remember in my life that I have like walked out.
It's just so paradoxical to me, though, that if you think about interpersonal relationships generally, the cliches are we kind of fear the stranger, right?
We fear the person we don't know.
We're contemptuous of the people we know the best.
So it seems like the answer is just to have a bunch of casual acquaintances to whom you can't really feel was very hard to feel the kind of contempt
and the distance when you've really broken bread. So, you know, maybe if we could all go out for a
kind of like all you can eat buffet. Yeah, but you're telling us that you stormed out of the meal right after you'd eaten.
That's true. It didn't really work for us. It didn't work for you. Maybe it doesn't work every time.
I'm an extreme case. You sure you're a psychologist?
I should probably make up. I don't know. I'm an extreme case. You sure you're a psychologist? I should probably make up. I don't
know. I'm thinking about it. All right. So let's say you're in a relationship with someone and
rather than being the contempt giver, you're the contempt receiver. You can feel, or maybe they've
even told you, your partner feels contemptuous toward you. So A, what do but b here's what i really want to know don't you want
to ask the other person what is it yeah causing you to feel this and can i do something about it
first of all i want to know if it's a legitimate you know is it is it misunderstanding yeah and
if it's not then maybe we could talk it out because one feature of contempt it strikes me
is that there's a little bit of a veil of secrecy.
Yeah, it's maybe not out in the open.
Right. Yeah. Well, I think you just answered your own question. Well done.
Because, you know, if you're on the receiving end of contempt, that is surely what you should do. Right.
Like why? Every behavior has a reason. Right.
And if you're on the receiving end of contempt, it doesn't mean that that person is exactly right.
But there has to be a reason why they have that contempt.
And I think the challenge, though, is, Stephen, if you were on the receiving end of a storm of contempt, would you say, well, what I hear you saying is that you think I'm an awful person.
Do I have that right?
Like, can you tell me more?
What is it that I've done?
And I'm really listening okay i know you should i know you're trying to make fun of that but that actually sounds to me better than the alternative which is usually is something wrong
is something bothering you did i do something to offend you it almost sounds better if we're
talking about a radical candor idea to say, I feel as if you feel
contemptuous toward me right now. Yeah. No, I don't mean it to be mocking. I think you're right.
Yeah. And it doesn't feel good to feel contempt toward me. Yeah. And I would really like to know
what's causing it and if I can do anything about it. Well, I don't mean to, you know,
say this sarcastic, like, yes, that is the right thing. But you know what? I'm just acknowledging that in the emotional grip of a relationship crisis like that, not
many of us are enlightened enough to do that.
And that is why I think there is therapy.
I think that is why people go to couples counseling because, you know, they could, in theory,
have these conversations on their own, but they need a professional third party to guide them
through what they probably know they ought to do. I've read that couples therapy is more successful
when practiced while the relationship is going well. But I'm skeptical of that finding because
I think it just means that there's a couple that's doing so well, they want to, you know,
proactively engage in couples therapy. And that just indicates that they have a good relationship. Do you learn in couples therapy is how to communicate, you know, especially under
stressful or like antagonistic circumstances. I recently had dinner with a newlywed couple.
Did you storm out on them too?
I decided to not only stay till the end of dinner, but to maintain our friendship.
And I was really happy when they told me that they were already in couples therapy. And I
kind of gently asked whether everything was going okay.
I was like, wow, the honeymoon is barely over.
And they had the idea, even when they were dating,
to start couples therapy because they didn't,
they were like, oh, it sounded to us
that what couples therapy is,
is that you learn a lot of skills
about how to have a relationship.
And that sounded good.
So we started and I was like, wow,
you're so much smarter than me.
Prophylactic couples therapy.
Prophylactic couples therapy. Prophylactic couples therapy.
It's a good bumper sticker.
Yeah, it's got a ring to it.
Before we finish up today, there's one more thing you might like to know about.
As COVID-19 forces more and more of us into lockdowns and quarantine, we need to think
about the people who just aren't set up to thrive in a locked down world, like
elderly people, especially those who live alone, or anyone limited by income or geography
or illness.
The good news is that most of us have the internet.
Can you imagine a pre-internet lockdown?
Can you imagine doing without all the communication and entertainment and deliveries that we currently
squeeze out of our phones.
But there are still plenty of gaps in what we can do online.
And as much reach as the Internet provides, it doesn't do all that well on the local level.
When I was a kid in rural upstate New York, when somebody was in trouble, they'd call their neighbor,
and their neighbor would call their neighbor.
And pretty soon, everybody within 10 miles knew you needed help. And before long, somebody would step
up and do their best to help you out. Doesn't that sound like something we could use right now?
A more modern version of that? We recently talked to someone who thinks they can help. She's the
CEO of a social networking service called Nextdoor. Yes, they are a social
networking service based in San Francisco with venture capital funding. The elevator pitch is
Facebook for neighborhoods, so you're allowed to be skeptical. But the CEO, Sarah Fryer,
makes Nextdoor sound better than that, especially now. There's really three things that we do.
The first is we connect neighbors who probably don't know each other. What I love about Nextdoor sound better than that, especially now. There's really three things that we do. The first is we connect neighbors who probably don't know each other.
What I love about Nextdoor is the power of proximity.
So it's not the power of like-minded people.
It's the power of the people who live around me.
And while neighborhoods kind of have their own homogeneity,
there's more heterogeneity than I would see commonly just in life.
So even thinking about my own community, right, I live amongst people who are from all different age groups,
from early 20s through I'm sure I have a neighbor in their 90s. I live amongst people that have
grown up and immigrated. And so they come with very different kind of cultural backgrounds,
people in different stages of life and with different beliefs.
Okay, that's the first thing.
The second thing we do is we help you stay informed so you know what's going on around you.
It can be little things like, why are they digging a hole in the road outside my house?
All the way to, if Hurricane Barry is coming, what do I need to do to prepare?
What do I need to do to survive?
And then when things are over, what can I do to recover?
And then, finally? And then it helps are over, what can I do to recover? And then finally? And then it
helps you to get things done. I'm a working mom, so it's really important that I can quickly find
the best plumber, the best babysitter, maybe find the lost pet. There's a lot of utility in our
platform, which makes it different from a lot of other social media. Before COVID-19, Nextdoor was
already catching on. So we started in the U.S., but we're now quite strong in Europe.
We're showing great momentum in Australia.
They were already operating in more than 250,000 neighborhoods.
And we work very closely with public agencies, so the local fire department, police department,
all the way up to folks like FEMA here in the U.S., in the U.K., folks like the
Home Office or the Metropolitan Police. And with COVID-19, there's been a huge spike in demand
for Nextdoor among users as well as public agencies. In California, Governor Gavin Newsom
issued a statewide stay-at-home order, and he instituted a campaign called Neighbor to Neighbor,
encouraging people to help their most vulnerable neighbors
to make sure they're getting food and medicine at the very least.
And Nextdoor.com, Newsom announced,
would be the online partner to help make that happen.
Let us know if you are a Nextdoor user or if you've become one.
We are at radio at freeconomics.com.
We're always happy to hear from you about anything.
Maybe you'll need some help this week.
Next week, maybe you'll be able to help someone else.
We'll be back next week.
In the meantime, take care of yourself and maybe someone else too.
Talk to you later.
Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Dubner Productions.
This episode was produced by Matt Hickey, Rebecca Lee Douglas, and Daphne Chen.
Allison Craiglow is our executive producer.
Our staff also includes Greg Rippin, Zach Lipinski, Harry Huggins, and Corinne Wallace.
Our intern is Isabel O'Brien. We had help this week from James Foster. Our theme song is Mr. Fortune by the Hitchhikers. All the other
music was composed by Luis Guerra. Remember, you can reach us at radio at Freakonomics.com.
You can find all our episodes at Freakonomics.com,
and we're on social media too. Thanks for listening. Thank you.