If Books Could Kill - Breaking News Re-Release: "Hillbilly Elegy"
Episode Date: July 16, 2024To celebrate ("celebrate") Donald Trump choosing JD Vance as his running mate we are re-releasing our "Hillbilly Elegy" episode. Enjoy!...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
How should we start?
Uh, I mean, we don't need to zing.
Michael, Peter, what do you know about the next vice president of the United States?
Uh, I'm proud of his advancement.
Terrible.
Terrible.
Oh my God.
It's ridiculous.
So we thought we would re-release our hillbilly elegy episode now that the author, JD Vance,
has been selected by Donald Trump as his running mate
for the presidential election.
We have also been a little bit late with episodes lately
because I got COVID and Peter got the Elden Ring DLC.
So we're doing this to hold you over
until we're back with Jonathan Hite's anxious generation.
So please stop emailing us asking us to do it
because we're already doing it.
That's right.
So I guess the only thing that I really have to say about this
Is that we did our episode and one of the underlying themes of the episode?
Was his cynicism the fact that this was this guy who was willing to
Traffic in this fake persona he created and write a book that was sort of built atop
He created and write a book that was sort of built atop
Caricatures and very nakedly meant to propel his political career forward Yeah, that cynicism is I think why he was selected by Donald Trump, right in 2016
he was saying he didn't like Trump Trump was a nightmare awful America's next Hitler and
By 2020 he was like Mike Pence should have done the right thing. You know, he's a man of pure, naked
ambition. And that's why Trump understands him and relates to him and likes him.
The book also fits very nicely into this pattern, because it was a book meant to capitalize on this, like, centrist kind of
unity wave that was going on of like, we need to understand the people in Appalachia which of course his book provides no actual insight into
and now all of that shit has basically been swept away I mean they're basically
just bragging about the fact that they want like a far-right theocracy yeah
when it comes to like his actual positions this is a man who is like 100%
against abortion all cases a guy who has like ties to venture capital and wants
to grease the wheels for business in favor of aggressive use of law enforcement in the
military against protesters.
I also found an interview this morning where he talks about how Democrats want to flood
America with illegal aliens and then use taxpayer dollars to fund gender
reassignment surgeries for those aliens.
So note to journalists, JD Vance wants privately funded immigrant gender reassignment surgeries.
He doesn't have a political platform per se.
He has a roadmap to JD Vance rising to the top.
Yeah, he's the mirror image of Amy Adams,
where he just keeps doing hit after hit.
The sequel to Hillbilly Elegy, the movie, is going to be really dark.
Yeah. Hillbilly Elegy 2, Civil War.
Yeah, so enjoy listening to us talk about JD Vance and Hillbilly Elegy
when we were blissfully
unaware of just how bad things were about to get.
Michael?
Peter?
What do you know about hillbilly elegy?
I know that the book made the argument that we have to understand rural whites so that
they can run for Senate and take our rights away. So this is sort of a weird episode for us, an unusual episode, because this is a memoir.
The subtitle of Hillbilly Elegy is a memoir of a family and culture in crisis.
Okay.
And it is, of course, written by Senator JD Vance.
God.
It is.
Jesus Christ.
Sorry, but I'll be saying Senator a lot, just for emphasis, throughout the episode.
We're already in the could kill part of the episode.
What makes this book pernicious, what makes it a good book for a podcast is that when
it came out in 2016, it was a sensation among mainstream liberals.
You have to sort of situate yourself in 2016 to understand it.
We're in the midst of the ascendance of Trump.
His success, I suppose, just leaves a lot of liberals
kind of stumped.
And the dominant media narrative that emerges is that Trump was kind of hoisted to victory
by the white working class.
The economically anxious among us.
That's right.
The coverage of this demographic was just breathless.
Yeah.
Like they had discovered a new species of white people and every piece of mainstream
political reporting for like six months was just a reporter wandering into a Waffle House.
Right.
And being like, today we're speaking to the complete buffoons who love Donald Trump.
Just like physically shoving aside all the minorities who live in the South.
She's like, no, I need the downtrodden whites.
So it's this moment that catapults JD Vance to some fame because Hillbilly Elegy came
out in 2016 before the election and it allowed him to position himself as like the white
working class whisperer.
The guy who understood these people and was here to explain them to the New Yorker set.
The blurbs in the book speak volumes because you have like the basic conservative, David
Brooks liked it, Rod Dreyer, but then also Mother Jones, Vox, Slate, The Daily Beast, The Atlantic, and Bill Gates.
Oh, yeah.
All with kind words to say about hillbilly elegy.
That's worth noting because this is a book that maligns poor people.
It's a book with very weird racial politics.
So I want to pull some of these themes out, but also just talk about how and why this
stuff gets laundered for mainstream consumption and why this was such a hit with liberals.
It's the weird self-flagellation industrial complex.
You know the old quote that a liberal is someone who's too fair-minded to take his own side
in an argument?
It's like something about the sort of I guess over analytical, centrist,
relatively well off liberals, that it's like we have to understand this. And like basically
keep digging until you find something sympathetic, which as a philosophical principle, I think is
really good, right? Being generous, being fair. But also when that is not matched by any similar impulse on the other side,
what you basically have is an entire media
where it's like the conservatives are bashing liberals
and liberals are bashing liberals.
Yeah, I think that's right.
And I also think that another component of that
is that when someone like Vance comes along
and offers a criticism of like his own people,
liberals eat that up because to them,
it seems like very thoughtful, like right,
almost like self critical.
And they're like, oh, this is fascinating.
This is a man who is reflecting on his own culture.
This is like when there's a like black conservative
who's like the left is making too big of a deal
about race these days.
And conservatives immediately elevate them
to like every talk show.
They should have put Candace Owens on the cover of this to give you the typology.
Memaw and my bootstraps.
So I will do my best to give you the basic narrative here and we're not going to spend
too much time talking about the narrative itself, but I want to go through it.
So his grandparents migrate from Appalachia into the Rust Belt town of Middletown, Ohio.
He's raised by a combination of his mother, grandparents, sister, and whatever man happens to be in his mother's life at the time.
There are times when the book is compelling, at least in the micro.
There are these stories about drug use, about alcoholism, casual violence, all in and around his family,
all throughout his life.
His mother suffers from addiction.
She is constantly cycling through relationships.
She frequently spirals into abusive behavior.
She attempts suicide at one point.
And because of all this, it's sort of his grandparents and sister who really do the
work of raising him.
His grandmother is the family matriarch
She's a firecracker very profane very protective of the family always giving him life lessons
He says that she has a sort of hillbilly morality and that means that she is kind-hearted
But also if someone like insults the family or threatens the family in some ways she will
Immediately go to violence.
She already sounds like Oscar Bate for some ambitious actress who wants to play this role.
So at one point his mother has a particularly bad downward spiral where she begs like 11-year-old
JD to give her a clean urine sample, after which he moves in with his grandmother. He's much happier, gets much
better grades, and he sort of credits that period of stability for him being able to
get out of there, basically. He goes straight to the military. He joins the Marines out
of high school. This is where the book gets incredibly dull and derivative because you're
no longer hearing fun anecdotes about growing up in Appalachia and the Rust Belt instead it's just like bootcamp
turned me into a man. Yeah the book just becomes the training montage from
GI Jane. Yeah. Doing one-arm push-ups in a tank top. He gets sent to Iraq and he
says that he escaped any real fighting. It turns out he was a public affairs
Marine which is a Marine who is essentially like embedded PR.
Tom Cruise in the first 10 minutes of Edge of Tomorrow.
Yes. Yes. I am so glad that we can talk about Edge of Tomorrow.
The Weasley Short Kids of Hollywood. Yes.
He goes to Ohio State after that. And from there he goes to Yale Law School.
And there are just countless tedious anecdotes about all the ways in which he's not accustomed to fancy things.
He's gawking at how clean the wine glasses are at cocktail receptions, how
much silverware there is at nice restaurants.
He spits out sparkling water because he didn't realize what it was
and had never heard of it.
Some of this feels fake. fake. We all saw Titanic. There's a whole fucking thing about the silverware in there.
That's like the poor kid who doesn't understand upper crust society like starter pack.
So by the end of the book, he's lost any remnants of his folksy charm because like he is an elite at the end of the book by every material metric, right?
Yeah. But he's still trying to do the same shtick. So it's like, I'm just a simple country
boy from Ohio. How would I know which senator to work for? And it's like, I don't know.
Am I supposed to relate to this somehow? These kinds of political memoirs always have to
kind of lie about their own level of ambition, right? Because if you end up going to Yale,
like you really wanted to go,
which there's nothing wrong with that.
But it's like in these books,
I feel like they usually have to present
these entrants to elite institutions
as like something that just happens to you.
Right, it's interesting because in the book,
he's writing himself as if he literally stumbles
into Yale Law. Right.
And it's sort of like, I don't know,
as someone who went through the law school
application process, you didn't stumble your way into Yale Law.
You worked insanely hard in college.
You tried very hard on the LSAT.
He sort of will mention as he's getting older, like, oh, I took a job for this state senator.
He's sort of like acting as if he's just like, you know, taking a job so we can get by.
But no, he's climbing up the political ladder so that he could build his way to this very moment when he's publishing this book trying to get popular so that he can eventually run for office.
Oh my god, it's like a Julia and Julia where the end of the movie is Amy Adams getting a call from Nora Ephron wanting to turn her book into a movie. So like, what you've just watched is the final chapter of her arc.
Yeah.
He's written a bestselling political memoir about becoming the kind of person who could write a bestselling political memoir.
That's right. So he meets his future wife at Yale, Usha. She would go on to clerk for Chief Justice John Roberts.
Oh! Yale, Usha, she would go on to clerk for Chief Justice John Roberts. Oh. Impressive that he manages to meet a conservative young lady at an institution like Yale Law
that is dominated by Marxists.
Yes, incredible that he was able to embark on a heterosexual relationship on a college
campus with a widespread protest.
One of the best cameos in the book is his mentorship by Professor Amy Chua, the Tiger
Mom.
Oh, the Tiger Mom, yeah.
Who has since gotten into trouble at Yale
for some inappropriate remarks while partying with students.
And whose husband was suspended
after various students made allegations
of sexual harassment.
So the real cameo here is cancel culture.
From a young boy roaming the hills of Appalachia
to a young man befriending
our nation's most powerful sex perverts.
It's the American dream, Mike.
Yeah, it's a real Cinderella story of a prestigious law school producing a social conservative.
Incredible.
I just want to read you a quote before we get to the socioeconomic analysis within the
book.
He says, I'm the kind of patriot whom people on the Acela corridor laugh at.
Oh my fucking God.
I choke up when I hear Lee Greenwood's cheesy anthem, Proud to Be an American.
When I was 16, I vowed that every time I met a veteran, I would go out of my way to shake
his or her hand, even if I had to awkwardly interject to do so.
Okay.
I'll say this, he's right about one thing.
As an Acela corridor guy, I do laugh at people like this.
When I was 16, I vowed to always immediately assault any veteran that I saw.
I keep a stack of small American flags with me at all times so I can burn them on the
Acela corridor in case I see anybody in uniform.
So the biggest issue with this book is the way that Vance talks about poverty.
One of the first things that he does is lay out his thesis about the people of Appalachia.
He says that many people believe that the problems in the region stem from the lack
of economic opportunity.
He says that's part of it, but it actually gets the real problem backwards.
The real problem is a decaying culture, which in turn creates or worsens poverty.
He tells the story of working in a warehouse where there is a worker who was chronically
late and would take multiple very long breaks every day.
When the guy is fired, he lashes out at the boss saying like, how could he do this to
me?
Vance says that this experience taught him that the problems with the region quote run far deeper than
Macroeconomic trends and policy and that there are quote too many young men immune to hard work
I thought there were all kinds of statistics about social mobility in the United States
But it turns out that a lazy guy got fired and was mad about it. So
Who's to say what's right? The prevailing theme of the book is that working-class whites would be able to lift themselves out
of poverty if only they believed it were possible. And it's their negativity, their learned helplessness
that keeps them down.
Einstein taught us that the universe evolved from thought and that time is an illusion.
This is the overlap between the secret and hillbilly elegy. It's true.
To believe this about America, you have to believe
that compared to other developed nations,
we just have higher rates of bad attitudes.
I'm like, that's why there's more poor people in America
than there are in Denmark.
Right, you're looking at an unemployment chart
and in your mind, it's just measuring laziness over time.
Right, exactly.
That's why he's always relying on anecdotes.
He's not a data guy.
There are 21 citations in the book total,
which is low in and of itself, but also especially weird
because he often makes factual claims without citation.
At one point, he says that you can't rely on surveys
about how much people are working
because working class people lie about how much they work
huge problem
And then later he refers to a
Groundbreaking study about upward mobility in America, but he doesn't cite either one and I don't think he's lying about them
I just think he's immune to the hard work of citing them
So let's get a little bit big picture here. I don't want to harp on his inability to cite things
properly. He talks about data that shows that people without degrees, without
college degrees, are working less than people with college degrees. There's
competing data on this, but I think that the best data shows that that's basically
true. They work fewer hours overall. But the primary reason that people without college degrees
work fewer hours is that there is less work
available to them.
There's tons of data about this.
I used a lot of data from the Georgetown Center
on Education and the Workforce.
Vance is publishing this in 2016.
In the 2008 recession, workers with a high school education
or less lost 5.6 million jobs.
In the recovery, they recovered 80,000 of those jobs.
Oh, wow.
They left the recession with 5.5 million fewer jobs
in 2016, right, than there were in 2007.
If you look at workers with bachelor's degrees,
they left that same period with a net gain of
8.5 million jobs. Right. This is like the fundamental problem with Vance's thesis, right?
He's claiming that the real issue in Appalachia and the Rust Belt is this cultural unwillingness to work.
But there is quite literally less work to do than there was before.
You could snap your fingers and give everyone in his town a great work ethic.
Unemployment would still be relatively high
because you still run into the wall
of fewer available jobs, right?
You're not gonna reopen the factories with good work ethic.
The funny thing is this has also ended up
screwing over people with bachelor's degrees
because a lot of those people graduated from college
during the recession and ended up taking entry-level jobs
for which they don't even really need a bachelor's degree.
The people without bachelor's degrees,
like they just can't claw their way
into any entry level position
because all those positions are taken up
by people with college degrees.
Right, and you know, the data bears all of this out.
Like 50 years ago, a considerable majority of jobs
were available to anyone without a college degree.
And now it's a small minority.
I think it's something like 30%.
It's super bizarre to individualize
this obviously structural problem.
It's also very funny because conservatives
never apply the same logic to the wealthy.
Oh, Americans make less money
than people in other developed countries.
Maybe we just have shittier rich people here, J.D.
Maybe our rich are just the fucking worst. Right? Like that
guy who was a bad worker and got fired and was mad about it like, okay, fine. I see you and raise you
Donald Sterling. Yeah, yeah. If, if we're building US policy around, like the cultural malignancy of
certain societal groups, I would like to start at like the country clubs
and work our way down.
All right, I'm going to send you a little excerpt.
This is a story from when JD Vance was a young man
working in a local grocery store.
That was my first job too.
Well, I bet you didn't work as hard as JD Vance, Michael.
That is fucking true. That is fucking true.
That is absolutely accurate.
I also learned how people gamed the welfare system.
They'd ring up their orders separately, buying food with food stamps and beer, wine, and
cigarettes with cash.
They'd regularly go through the checkout line speaking on their cell phones.
I could never understand why our lives felt like a struggle while those living off of
government largesse enjoyed trinkets that I only dreamed about."
Wow. American social welfare famously too generous.
Yep.
This is why we have such low rates of poverty and such high rates of hammock naps.
So, first of all, like, yeah, food stamp fraud happens and is real.
Fraud rates are very low, low though something like 1% of benefits
Yeah, also some of this is not even fraud right like buying food with food stamps and then beer with cash. That's not illegal
That's just how buying things works
They also do that with like they probably buy food with food stamps
And then they buy like diapers with cash because diapers aren't right covered by food stamps
Just because you're on food stamps doesn't mean you're not allowed to buy other things with cash.
I love how he starts out by saying, I saw poor people gaming the system,
and then it's just a description of people on the verge of having a nice time.
Also, he says that their life feels like a struggle,
while those living off of government largesse enjoyed trinkets that I had only dreamed about.
But later in the book, he admits that his family
did receive government benefits.
And in fact, it's a big part of how his grandmother
put food on the table.
It's just this like deserving and undeserving poor thing
that he does, right?
Like, of course my family should be receiving welfare.
We're some of the good ones.
We put it to good use.
It's like the debate online about like ghosting,
like whether it's okay to just stop calling
somebody that you met on like a dating app on the internet. And it's like ghosting is
exclusively something that is done to you, not something that you do to other people.
Like by definition, I've never ghosted on anyone. But it's like this behavior that it's like,
the government benefits that I get like that's not government largesse. That's just like
helping us out in a difficult time.
Right. But these people are difficult time. Right, right.
But these people are on their cell phones, Peter.
They're playing Angry Birds when they should be going to church and joining an NLM.
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah, so I've sent you something else.
Oh, okay, okay.
I just read the whole thing.
Okay.
I like where he's going with this.
All right.
He says, to many analysts, terms like welfare queen conjure unfair images of the lazy black mom
living on the dole.
Readers of this book will realize quickly that there is little relationship between
that specter and my argument.
I've known many welfare queens.
Some of them were my neighbors and all were white.
Love it.
So it's like, don't use the welfare queen stereotype
on black moms, use it on everybody.
You might think that I'm racist.
Wrong, I hate all poor people.
He basically says in so many words, racism is real.
I'm not saying it's not real,
but I wanna talk about a kind of poverty
that is experienced by white people, right? And if you look at
just the book, there's not much more than that. But if you look at some of his other
work, there are times when he trots out white poverty as sort of like a defense against
claims of discrimination, right? There are poor white people too, so the relative poverty of black people isn't proof of anything.
That's like my favorite response to police brutality accusations that it's like, look,
they shot this white guy.
Right?
Like, I'm not owned by this at all.
Vance does hedge quite a bit. He will say like look we can't discount
Systemic issues that cause poverty, right?
I think that he's basically doing that to maintain an appropriate level of deniability, right because he never
Dives into that meaningfully. It's always just sort of a disclaimer, right? But of course the primary
it's always just sort of a disclaimer. But of course, the primary thesis of the book, I mean, it's called a memoir of a family and culture in crisis, right? It's not called,
you know, memoir of a region that has been systematically separated from the wealth of
the rest of the country. It's also very funny because if you were looking at a foreign country
and you saw like there's a really poor region of like Peru or something
Mm-hmm
and someone told you that like there used to be all these mines where they employed a bunch of people and then all of those
Employers have like shut down and there's far fewer jobs. You'd be like, oh, well, yeah
That's probably why there's so much unemployment there, but he's like no no no no no
Right attitudes of the people changed. I mean, I think he has sort of like a combination of explanations.
One of them is a very bizarre ethnic explanation where he says that like the region is primarily
Scots-Irish heritage.
Oh my God.
Really?
He's going back to like 1800s racism where it's like, oh, there's too many swarthy Italians.
The other, the more sensible sort of explanation that he occasionally hints at is that you
have systemic poverty causing these cultural issues to some degree, but then the cultural
issues perpetuate, which I think is like sort of true in a vacuum, but it's also like the
whole story.
Like the systemic poverty needs to come first.
It must come first.
Right.
And the output is these cultural artifacts
that are associated with poverty, right?
So he's sort of like skipping over the fact
that he's getting it exactly backwards.
Right, and also even if you wanna argue
that it's like culture is the most important factor,
whatever, what can we do about it?
What would fixing a culture even mean?
I mean, that's just like lecturing people until they have different attitudes.
Well, I think what he's actually advocating for, although he doesn't say it super explicitly,
is fewer interventions by the government.
Right.
Well, that's always where it comes back to.
Yeah. Right, well that's always where it comes back to, yeah. Right, to punish them for their laziness,
rather than reward, quote unquote, their laziness, right?
That's what he sort of hints at.
You can see it in his other writings at the time,
like he wrote for National Review at the time
that he's publishing this book, and he's got pieces
about how he thinks welfare in Appalachia has failed
and is not productive.
So that is the end game here.
The irony is that the decline of Appalachia economically actually lines up really well
with cuts to welfare.
So yes, if cutting welfare worked, you would think you would have seen some improvement
in Appalachian poverty rates rather than what we've actually seen, which is a severe decline in the standards of living across the region.
Unfortunately, we have no choice but to keep cutting until I never see anyone at a grocery
store with a cell phone.
All right.
I'm going to send you another quote.
Okay.
He says, this was my world, a world of truly irrational behavior.
We spend our way into the poorhouse.
We buy giant TVs and iPads.
Our children wear nice clothes thanks to high-interest credit cards and payday loans.
We purchase homes we don't need, refinance them for more spending money, and declare bankruptcy,
often leaving them full of garbage in our wake.
Thrift is inimical to our being.
We spend to pretend that we're upper class.
And when the dust clears, when bankruptcy hits or a family member bails us out of our
stupidity, there's nothing left over.
Nothing for the kids, college tuition, no investment to grow our wealth, no rainy day
fund if someone loses her job.
We know we shouldn't spend like this.
Sometimes we beat ourselves up over it, but we do it anyway.
Ooh, love the we in here.
I was going to talk about the we because he's trying to create this impression that
he's like talking about himself too, right?
I'm empathetic.
But the book is literally full of tales of him making wise financial decisions and like
generally being responsible, directly contrasted with those around him.
It's like here I was working hard at the grocery store while the poor people, you know, strolled
by me with cell phones and beer.
It's gross.
And again, just like another demand that poor people lead like punishingly frugal lives
or else we can write them off as moral failures, right?
Like, oh, you say you're poor, but you have a TV.
Right.
I feel like conservatives always reach for TVs when they're
like look how nice the lives of the poor are but like TVs are unbelievably cheap now. Right.
I mean there's the famous Fox News clip being like did you know that 99 point something
percent of people below the poverty line have refrigerators? Right. It's very well established
that lower income people spend a higher share of their income
on core needs than higher income people.
There were a couple of economists from Duke and University of Texas Austin that analyzed
consumer expenditure data and found that lower income families, and that's families with
income under two times the poverty line, spend about 75% of their total income on food,
transportation, rent, utilities, and cell phone service.
The idea that there's this like big problem
with frivolous spending in poor communities,
it's just fiction.
It's just bootstrap bullshit.
They want you to write off their suffering
by imagining that it's the product of a series of terrible
decisions that you don't have to have any empathy for.
This whole thing is so weird to me because it's always blaming the people with the least
amount of power.
I think that some people probably did buy way too much house in the run up to the 2008
crash, but also that's because those people were being told systematically that that was
a good investment and the housing market couldn't crash
Right who's the villain in that scenario the person?
Who should have known better who was fucking lying to them or the people who like believed?
Someone who they thought had more expertise right and also frankly you shouldn't have to make a
Flawless series of financial decisions to get through life
I will also say on the cell phones thing, if you're a poor person, getting a smartphone
is probably one of the best investments you could possibly make.
How would you get a job without one?
Right.
You either need email or phone.
Right.
You need a phone.
You need a phone to function in our society these days.
The idea that it's a luxury is just false.
It's not.
It's objectively not correct.
So also note that he says, our children wear nice clothes thanks to high interest credit cards and payday loans
Particularly notable because later in the book. There's a weird digression where he defends payday lending
Which is great because it's like he's sort of hiding the fact that like at the time of writing this book
He's a creepy venture capital guy now. Yeah, and then it like payday it like payday loans are good. And you're like, oh, right.
I forgot that he's a Silicon Valley asshole.
Yeah, he's just defending whoever's in power.
I mean, this is just like the classic conservative thing
of like whatever hierarchy exists in the world
must be just and right.
So of course you defend the payday lender
and criticize the people who take out payday loans.
Right, so Vance tells a story about how a payday loan
once helped him avoid an overdraft fee.
And then he says that government officials who want to ban the practice are ignoring
stories like his.
What?
When I moved to Sydney when I was 19, I was all of a sudden like drinking age, which I
hadn't been before.
And I started going to gay bars and I didn't know how to hit on dudes.
So I would walk up to them.
This is when you could smoke in bars and restaurants.
I would walk up to people and bum a cigarette
because I didn't know how else to start conversations.
And so I basically ended up making out
with a bunch of chimney mouth dudes
because I didn't know what else.
And I could just imagine myself testifying
at a congressional hearing and being like,
when you regulate cigarettes,
you're taking that experience away.
You're preventing 19 year old me
from having regrettable sex, it's disgusting.
Oh man.
When this book first came out,
it was very interesting to see the spate of great reviews
and then a handful of people being like, this is gross
and it's gawking and pointing at poor people.
A lot of those reviewers were from Appalachia,
and they could immediately clock this.
Whereas I think a lot of mainstream sources
that review this book were relatively well-off journalists,
et cetera, who are happy to believe this stuff
if someone kind of gives them the right framing and the right sort of excuse.
But then did we skip over the part where like he's not even really from Appalachia?
So not only is he not really from Appalachia, but even his grandmother left when she was sort of young.
Right.
The book sort of bounces between the Rust Belt and Appalachia because he's
growing up in Middletown, Ohio, and he's often in Jackson, Kentucky. A big part of his narrative
is that people moved from the mountains into the Rust Belt, and so a lot of the culture
carries over.
I guess. You could say that about anywhere in America though. I mean...
Yeah, it felt a little bit squishy. And I will note that there have been people who
basically said he's not from there.
My dad is from Ohio. I wouldn't describe myself as like from the Midwest.
I didn't know I was talking to a real hillbilly, Michael.
But which fork do I use, Peter? Which one's in front of me?
There's just this weird sort of stolen valor thing that's over all of this.
Yeah, I mean, I think he would claim that he spent a lot of time there, et cetera, and
that he's basically familiar enough with the culture.
But I think it's safe to say that based on what we know about JD
Vance's opportunism and his relationship to the truth, it's more accurate to
look at him as just sort of part of the let's all go into a rural diner and
do some interviews style of journalism then it is to view him
as someone who is really from there telling you the story, right?
There are people from Appalachia who study Appalachia, who have all sorts of interesting
and nuanced things to say about the region.
There was more than one book that was written in response to this book
there was one called Appalachian reckoning, which is like a collection of essays and
It's a good reminder that like there are academics who study this stuff, right?
I think what JD Vance is is a guy who is really in his soul a
cosmopolitan type right right? This is someone who wanted to be in politics, who wanted to go to a snazzy law school, who
wanted to do venture capital.
Perhaps he exaggerated his association with Appalachia to allow himself to write this
book.
The funny thing is if you really want to understand Trump voters, it's not even clear to me that
you would be looking to like poor people in Appalachia.
Like you would be looking to well-off used car dealers in the Philadelphia excerpts.
Yeah.
That's probably a good segue into this book's relationship with race, which is very weird.
And it's certainly not the book's focus.
But again, you know, he starts off talking about how much of Appalachian ancestry is
Scott's Irish.
He is describing the distinct ethnography of the region.
And he's also consistently talking about the white working class.
So there's like this implied racial discussion happening throughout the book.
But whenever the question of race comes up directly, he is always downplaying it.
As soon as page eight of the book, he says that he hopes people avoid, quote, filtering
their views through a racial prism when they talk about poverty.
I'm going to send you a page of the book.
He is talking here about negative perceptions of Barack Obama.
Okay.
In the Rust Belt.
He says,
Many of my new friends blame racism for this perception of the president.
But the president feels like an alien to many Middletonians
for reasons that have nothing to do with skin color.
Recall that not a single one of my high school classmates
attended an Ivy League school.
Barack Obama attended two of them and excelled at both.
He is brilliant, wealthy,
and speaks like a constitutional law professor,
which of course he is.
Nothing about him bears any resemblance
to the people I admired growing up.
He made his life in Chicago a dense metropolis,
and he conducts himself with a confidence
that comes from knowing that the modern American meritocracy
was built for him.
Of course Obama overcame adversity in his own right, adversity familiar to many of us,
but that was long before any of us knew him. Barack Obama strikes at the heart of our deepest insecurities.
He is a good father while many of us aren't. He wears suits to his job while we wear
overalls if we're lucky enough to have a job at all. His wife tells us we shouldn't be feeding our children certain foods
and we hate her for it, not because we think she's wrong,
but because we know she's right."
What is this?
This one black dude did fine so racism doesn't exist or something?
I mean, he's trying to say that Obama is just sort of like an elite,
and that's why people in the Rust Belt don't really like him.
And it's like, okay, that's almost certainly part of it.
But he's like, look, he wears a suit to work.
And it's like, yeah, he's the president.
When's the last time you saw a president
who didn't consistently wear a suit?
It's just like this weird excuse making to avoid the idea that race is a part of why
People did not like Obama. It's also weird because his description of Obama here sounds like a description of him
Yes, and the fact that these like rural whites don't hate JD Vance to the same extent
Yeah does actually indicate that race might have something to do with it. Right, although they also kind't hate JD Vance to the same extent. Does actually indicate that race might have something
to do with it.
Although they also kind of hate JD Vance.
Well, that's different because he deserves it.
It's fine.
There's a couple other areas where he just like
downplays race in weird ways.
He describes the racial makeup of his hometown as quote,
lots of white and black people, but few others.
It's actually 85% white.
Okay. I don't get why he would imply that it wasn't overwhelmingly white.
Right. Except to like avoid a conversation about race, right? Right. Early in the book,
Vance lists a handful of academics who he thinks have done valuable work on
social mobility and one of them is Charles Murray, author of The Bell Curve.
Unfortunately the IQs are just too low. The IQs just aren't there for people to have jobs.
And it goes a little beyond that. In November of 2016, the American Enterprise Institute,
a big conservative libertarian think tank that employs Murray,
hosted an event where Murray interviewed JD Vance about the book.
At one point they joked about Vance having pretty clean Scots-Irish blood, quote unquote.
If there's one thing I love about this JD Vance guy, it's his skull shape and his brain
pan.
Now, there's almost no discussion of sexuality in this book at all.
There's one anecdote about homosexuality.
JD is eight or nine years old.
Okay.
And he thinks that he might be gay because he doesn't really like girls and his friends
are boys.
Okay.
He hears about gay people and he's like, that might be me.
That's what gay is.
And this is the anecdote that ensues.
He says, I broached this issue with mamaw, confessing that I was gay and worried that I would burn in hell. She said, don't be a fucking idiot. the anecdote that ensues. was flabbergasted. Why would someone want to do that? She repeated herself and I said, of course not. Then she said, you're not gay. And even if you did want to suck
dicks, that would be okay. God would still love you. All right, I'm into this book
now. It's fine. It is interesting that presumably the implication here is that
eight-year-old JD Vance did want to eat pussy. That's not my memory of being an
eight-year-old,
but to each his or her own.
Although, according to the Sopranos, that's also gay.
That's right.
That's right.
So, either way.
This is a good example of just like fairly open deception.
This is like a little aside thrown in
to reassure liberal readers that he's on the level.
Like even his firecracker grandmother
didn't really care if you're gay or not.
But spoiler alert, JD Vance is a senator now,
so we might have some insight into his views
about LGBT people that we didn't in 2016.
God, over the last 15, 20 years,
I've become so frustrated with the way
that like being cool with gay people has become a cover
for just a huge iceberg of evil reactionary beliefs
of people like Peter Thiel who are just straightforward,
far right, but then it's like, oh, but he's gay.
Oh, okay, well, that's complicated.
And it's like this sort of stuff too,
where it's like, just because you're okay with gay people
doesn't invalidate the other 99 beliefs that you're laying out.
And also now there's like an extra asterisk where it's like, well, other than the groomers.
So let's talk a bit about the liberal response to this book. Again, liberals and moderate mainstream media sources just loved
it. The New York Times called it a compassionate, discerning sociological analysis of the white
underclass. He spoke at the Brookings Institute, Vox gave him extensive coverage. There were only
a handful of negative reviews of the book. Sarah Jones, who I spoke with to prepare for this, she was writing for the New Republic
at the time and she wrote a critical piece.
Jacobin published a critical review also by someone who was from Appalachia.
And so I was sort of like, why?
What is causing all of these libs to embrace such an obviously reactionary message.
And when I asked people from Appalachia about this, their response first and foremost was
like, well, this is just how mainstream Americans, liberal or not, have always talked about us.
Poor people within Appalachia have always served as a bit of a punchline in American
culture.
And I do think that that helps explain why so many people are comfortable with it.
But I'm not sure that it explains, like, the media phenomenon of the book, right?
It doesn't explain it getting so much attention and J.D. Vance being elevated to the degree he was.
My best educated guess at what happened here was that at a time when liberals were so frustrated with the ascendance of Trump,
it was cathartic for them in that political moment to hear these people who they associated with Trump disparaged and blamed for their own predicament.
There's this sort of predisposition in American culture to disparaging the poor, right?
It's just part of our culture
that it's sort of their fault.
But the political moment allowed liberals
to sort of grab that with both hands
because in their minds,
this book was insulting to Trump voters.
And it was telling them
that what was really happening with Trump voters
was that they were like society's losers,
and they're lashing out at you, society's winners.
But then what's so weird is because, you know, I didn't read the book, but at the time, I always saw it framed as like sympathy for poor rural whites,
and almost like a distraction from the very obvious racism that drove Trump's victory in the election. There was this weird
Explosion after the election of looking for any explanation other than like the most obvious one
Yeah, someone appealed to the racism of white people
Yeah
And so it's weird that the actual book is like blaming rural whites
But the framing of the book by people who didn't read it or people like me who just read reviews was
Exonerating rural whites.
Yeah. I mean, I think that a lot of that is the output of him doing that, like, faux empathy
where he's, you know, we spend too much on TVs, right?
I think that that gave people just enough deniability, right? I mean, the New York Times
is calling it compassionate. It's not a compassionate view of these people. It's
a sharply critical view. One interesting thing about this is that as much as liberals read this and heard what they wanted to hear, conservatives did too. And when you read like national reviews,
review of the book, it is embracing these like really reactionary
aspects right they summarize the book by saying that it chronicles how white
Appalachians have quote followed the black underclass and Native Americans
not just into family disintegration addiction and other pathologies but also
perhaps into the most important self-sabotage
of all, the crippling delusion that they cannot improve their lot by their own effort."
Jesus Christ, that's dark.
It's fucking nasty.
A lot of what sort of slips under the radar to liberals is immediately clocked by conservatives
and sort of held up as the crux of the book, right?
National Review, as disgusting as that quote is, is correctly identifying the precise theme
of the book.
You know, if you're a conservative, you've been blaming the black poor and Native American
poor for their plight for decades.
And this is Vance doing the same exact thing to the white poor.
It's very funny that he was cast at the time as like the conservative who's pushing back
or like he's not like the other conservatives and then actual conservatives were like, no,
we like this guy.
It's liberals who are missing it.
It's incredible how many people heard what they wanted to hear when they were reading
this book.
Does that come through in the movie?
I haven't seen it.
It's hard to say that the movie has a message because it's just sort of like taking
the narrative portion of the story,
removing everything else and holding it up
and throwing Amy Adams and Glenn close at it
and asking for Oscars.
Wow.
I'm a big Amy Adams fan and a real enemy of her agent.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Hashtag save Amy.
Something happened after she did the arrival.
Yes.
She forgot to read her career backwards to herself
Yeah, the movie I mean it got it's bizarre it takes like the usual liberties with the story
Mm-hmm. I didn't need to talk about the most
Inexplicable addition which is a line about the movie Terminator 2 Judgment Day. What?
Yeah in the book mama is a fan of the Terminator
to Judgment Day. What?
Yeah, in the book,
Mamaw is a fan of the Terminator.
But in the movie, they add a line where she says,
everyone in this world is one of three kinds,
a good Terminator, a bad Terminator, and neutral.
What?
That doesn't even make sense
with the canon of the Terminator films.
That doesn't make any sense.
What is a neutral Terminator?
What's a neutral, what would its mission be?
Is that is that Andrew Yang is that who she's talking about oh shit?
neutral Terminator we my wife, and I paused it and we're like what
They went out of their way
They're like we need something more here Ron Howard's that like a table read and he's like is it really just two kinds good and bad and someone's like well? No, I think there might be neutral as well
Well now JD Vance is terminating welfare benefits for struggling families, so
Way to transition us back
Flawless segue let's talk about his Senate campaign.
It's so bleak.
Vance was like comparing Trump and Hitler, like really aggressive criticism.
And then he sort of like begins campaigning a couple of years later and things change.
He grows a beard to cover up what can only be described as a disturbingly boyish face.
Yeah.
He pivots hard right.
He starts buttering up Trump to get his endorsement.
And it's like the usual groveling where he's like, you know, I said some pretty mean things
about Mr. Trump, but he's actually the best president ever and the coolest guy ever met.
Yeah, it turns out he's a hero.
He gets Trump's endorsement with that.
He wins a messy primary fight. And then he goes on to win a tight race
for Senate in Ohio against Democrat Tim Ryan.
His public facing platform,
you could see the alignment with the book, right?
There's a heavy focus on economic issues,
but then these little cultural resentments are built in.
If you remember, sort of had that live and let live approach to gay rights during the
book.
During the campaign, he says that he opposes codifying the right to gay marriage, that
he opposes anti-discrimination protection for LGBT people.
He used the term groomers to describe anyone who wants to teach sexual orientation and
gender identity in the classroom.
Apparently, that does not apply to a grandmother who talks about sucking dicks to an eight-year-old
child, but you know.
Yeah, that's just me, ma, be, and folksy.
There's no folksy gays, unfortunately.
He talks about critical race theory and gender ideology indoctrinating children, right?
He's like really leaning in to right-wing culture war shit.
He just becomes a Republican.
Right. It's actually so bleak because the debate about people like this is always like,
are they faking it? Like, are they doing this cynically?
Yes.
Or do they really believe this shit? And like, I could not be less interested. I don't fucking
care.
Yes.
Whether he's faking it or he's become this way, it's like this is what it takes to run as
a Republican now. Right? If people are pretending to have authoritarian tendencies to win, that's
indistinguishable from actual authoritarianism. Right. I don't think that the purpose of those
pieces is entirely to actually explore what happened to JD Vance. I think a lot of it is to just give journalists an
escape hatch for the fact that they swallowed his bullshit in 2016.
They embraced a conservative opportunist who is now moving with the
winds of Republican politics, right? He wasn't doing weird culture war shit
about gender ideology in 2016 because the Republican base wasn't fixated on it, right?
The liberals who are saying like,
well, we think he changed,
they're letting themselves off the hook a bit, right?
Politics have changed,
but he's been a reactionary the whole time.
I feel like the sort of liberal establishment
keeps having this happen to them
where it's like they just keep stepping
on the same fucking rake.
It's like, oh, weird, another one turns out
to be like a far right grifter.
Huh.
It's because of that phenomenon that you identified earlier.
They love someone who sounds self-reflective.
That's something that the liberal set embraces because the idea of someone being willing
to like wag their finger at their own political set is very appealing to the liberal establishment media.
They love that shit.
Right, and then you look around five years later and you're like,
wait, were we instrumental in the country electing its first neutral terminator? Thanks for watching!