If Books Could Kill - The Worst Takes of 2023 [TEASER]
Episode Date: December 21, 2023To hear the rest of the episode, support us on Patreon:https://www.patreon.com/IfBooksPod...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Peter. Michael. What's your first nominee for the worst take of 2023? I think it's
vulture putting us as the number four podcast of the year and not number one.
So a few weeks ago, we put out a call on the Patreon for the worst takes of 2023, and we received a number of excellent nominations.
There was one that just said, if books could kill defending Hillary Clinton.
I know.
That was funny.
That was funny.
I liked it a lot.
You know what?
There was also one person who said something along the lines of like,
this is just going to be a rundown of Mike's Twitter beefs, LOL, which like,
first of all, how dare you, and secondly, that's correct.
My only real criticism, and it's not anyone's fault, is that the
recency bias is severe. Yeah, yeah, yeah. All of them were from like the last three weeks.
And I, I like knew that that was an issue,
but myself, I had no memory of anything that happened more than a month ago.
Yeah, it's insane. I know.
I don't know how we get out of this cycle,
but we're just inundated with too much news.
And I feel like as a society, we need to pick maybe like one every two weeks,
one new story that we talk about for two weeks, and then we all move on.
So as usual, I have over-prepared for this
and Peter has under-prepared for this.
I have three nominees and then an extremely obvious winner.
And then I have a bunch of honorable mentions
and then I have like the worst, just like discourse.
I also have some sort of primaries
and some honorable mentions here.
Okay.
Yeah, I think we're probably on the same page.
I am underplaying how much I read for this a little bit.
Okay, yeah, I would like to.
I've fried my brain reading the worst takes
for like three days straight.
My first nomination is this was a year
with a lot of talk about how marriage is good.
I feel like this is already the memory hold,
but there were all kinds of studies
and books that came out this year that were like,
well, the data is in, and marriage is really good for kids.
And one of my most worst takes is an Atlantic article
by Melissa Kerney who wrote this book called
The Two Parent Privilege, how Americans stopped getting married and started falling behind.
And I am going to send you the opening paragraphs.
Earlier this year, I was at a conference on fighting poverty, and a member of the audience asked a
question that made the experts visibly uncomfortable. What about family structure, he asked?
Single-parent families are more likely to be poor than two-parent ones.
Does family structure play a role in poverty?
The scholar to whom the question was directed looked annoyed and struggled to formulate
an answer.
The panelist shifted in their seats.
The moderator stepped in, quickly pointing out that poverty makes it harder for people
to form stable marriages.
She promptly called on someone else.
I side.
As an economist who studies inequality in families,
I have often found myself in the same position
as the questioner.
I have suggested in similar settings
that we need to consider how marriage
and household structure affect children's life outcomes
only to be met with annoyance and evasion.
You can't even talk about how two parents
are good for kids anymore.
I'm not like 100% sure that I believe this happened.
I know. Oh, oh, visibly uncomfortable.
Like the moderators like stammering like, oh, oh, the parents of kids.
They've revealed that conservatism is correct.
This is like a, this is a thing that I think conservatives actually believe
that like that liberal secretly know that conservatism is right. And so if you like ask them a prodding question,
they will just literally shake and cry.
The thing is I found this discourse
extremely obnoxious all year, both because like,
it just comes up like on kind of three year cycles.
It just like, well, we're doing it again.
Like when I was looking up takes on this,
there was like a wave of takes in like 2016 as well.
And like we've,
as we talked about in our success sequence episode, this thing of like, oh, you need to be married.
This just keeps happening. People, it's literally the same people saying literally the exact
same thing all the time. Right. I don't want to go over too much of what we said in that episode,
but it's like this entire thing seems to misunderstand correlation and causation, which the data itself cannot really untangle for you.
It's very obviously true that like,
kids raised with two parents are more likely
to graduate from high school, they earn more in life,
whatever, but like, that doesn't tell you
whether like marriage itself is doing.
It could be that when you're married,
you're more likely to be rich.
It could also be that when you're rich,
you're more likely to be married. Right. And as that when you're rich, you're more likely to be married. And as Kerni actually admits in a lot of her interviews,
what she's really talking about is cohabitation. When you live together, you're better at raising kids,
because obviously you're sharing resources, sharing childcare. Again, nobody really disagrees with this.
It's easier to raise kids with two people than with one person, duh. But how many people are
living together and raising kids is much more difficult to measure.
So it's like the data is kind of garbage to begin with and it doesn't really tell us anything.
She's talking about evasion.
What these pieces all actually evade is what is your prescription here exactly?
Some conservatives will admit that what they want is like no no fault divorce. And, yeah, yeah. And, you know, basically social pressure to marry and marry young.
But not a lot of people are willing to admit that.
And so it's sort of a situation where what they're actually doing is just sort of like
poop pooing other causes of poverty.
Right.
And being like, well, maybe, maybe the real problem is something that is sort of specific
to these individuals and
is not solved by, you know, welfare payments.
Exactly.
And that's, it actually, the thing that I kept thinking was what me and Aubrey keep saying
on maintenance phase about like fatness, that there's this entire debate of like, how
bad is it for you to be fat, blah, blah, blah, and like the data is more complicated.
We've done a million episodes about it, but we also kind of hate doing episodes about it
because the answer to that question is kind of irrelevant,
right, because even if it's straightforwardly true
that being fat is bad for you,
people cannot stop being fat.
People can't lose weight, right?
And so telling a 300 pound person,
hey, you'd be healthier if you lost weight,
is not useful because chances are
that person has tried losing weight a million times. And if they try losing weight again, they're gonna engage in a bunch of unhealthy behaviors
and two years later they're gonna be 350 pounds.
And it's the same thing with marriage, right?
That it's like, okay, we've proven that it's good for kids to get married,
like to have their parents be married.
Fine, whatever, even if that's true,
it's not like there's some reservoir of like well-earning, well-educated,
great dudes out there.
And single moms are like,
oh no, I don't wanna partner.
It's like, what are people supposed to do
with that information?
Mary in cells.
You'll eventually get there if you ask enough
concerning this what the solution.
Or like the weird sex robot thing
that they sometimes come back to.
Yeah, right.
We need the Jordan Peterson milking video
to be public policy, I don't know.
That was also a contender for one of the worst takes.
Yes, someone appears to have attached a machine to Jordan Peterson that is milking him for the worst imaginable takes.
But then like, she also mentioned in this op-ed that only 1% of the federal budget for welfare, whatever, goes to promoting marriage.
That sounds like too much of the welfare budget, frankly. Yeah, and the thing is, this is actually already
a large component of our poverty alleviation strategy,
because in 1996 they made welfare be like block grants
to states, states can decide how they spend it
and a lot of states, especially conservative states,
spend their welfare budgets on these fucking assenine,
promoting marriage, like this is why marriage is good classes,
which are one of the least effective
poverty alleviation strategies.
Well, what's a less effective
poverty alleviation strategy?
Did you know that it's good to settle down?
They're basically asking, they're using irrelevant data
to promote more of something we're already doing
and doesn't work.
Yeah.
And then another one, this is Reasonsy bias,
but then there was a couple of weeks ago,
this sort of, this discourse has kind of been around,
bouncing around all year,
and then this has now culminated
in this atrocious Washington Post editorial,
which I'm sure you saw.
This was my first one,
because this is like popular demand.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, walk us through it, Peter.
All right.
So, yeah, the Washington Post editorial board,
the headline is,
if attitudes don't shift, a political dating mismatch will threaten marriage. Threaten marriage. And I guess even though you read it as well, I will send you some of
the choice quotes. I wonder if we highlighted the same paragraphs. So I have three yellow,
yellow paragraphs. I only have two.
Oh, yeah, this is the one where they're calling for a vibe shift.
Okay.
Americans have increasingly sorted themselves
according to ideological orientation.
They are working, living, and socializing with people
who think the same things that they do,
particularly on college campuses.
A culture of seeking sameness has set up young Americans
for disappointment.
They expect people to share their own convictions and commitments.
A cultural shift might be necessary, one that views politics as part of people's identities,
but far from the most important part.
Americans' ability to live together quite literally might depend on it.
I love that they threw college students in here.
Like this broad sociological phenomenon.
Fuck these kids.
They can't resist.
Like, there's no like data or anything that like they mention
that links us directly to college campuses.
In reality, there is some data about younger people
drawing like harder lines about what political identities
they're willing to date.
But in my mind, the subtext here is like,
no one wants to date Republicans anymore.
Yeah, totally. Yeah, which is basically women because men are one wants to date Republicans anymore. Yeah, totally.
Yeah, which is basically women because men are much more likely to be conservatives.
Yeah. Right.
And I feel like this is unsettling in two ways.
First, in the micro, it's essentially like, look, ladies, you should be open to dating
people who believe that you should not have reproductive autonomy.
Yeah.
It's been your life with someone who just doesn't respect you at all.
That is, and that's like the sort of solution being offered here implicitly.
And then second, like in the macro, we have this broad problem of political polarization,
which has all of these complex systemic causes.
And this is sort of like putting the moral responsibility for that issue onto individuals
as this polarization would go away
if we all just pretended to like each other.
And reality, what's happening is as politics
polarize around you, you are forced to make choices like this,
no matter what you do.
Like as your median conservative
gravitates towards being a QAnon guy,
even a moderate woman on a college campus
is now forced to make a choice
that she didn't previously have to make,
do I want to date a QAnon guy or not?
Or do I wanna treat him as a fixer upper,
which always works?
Ladies, you can fix it.
Right, ladies.
That should have been the headline.
I also think that on a logistical note,
it's very funny to me that they bring up college campuses
because of course, college campuses are relatively ideologically
coherent.
Most people do subscribe to more left-wing beliefs.
But that's the breakdown of this entire article.
Is that we are sorting along ideological lines,
but a lot of that is geographical and institutional.
If you're a conservative and you live in a conservative state, you can date conservatives because they're all around you. If you're a conservative, and you live in a conservative state,
you can date conservatives because they're all around you.
And if you're a liberal and you live in a liberal city,
you can date other liberals because that's who's around you.
Yeah.
They're linking this to this kind of this thing
that threatens marriage.
Like, is this the end of marriage as we know it?
And as we discussed in our rules episode,
people have been fretting about this
since the literal 1700s.
We're not going to stop like coupling up
and like having babies anytime soon.
And the fact that people have different ideological beliefs
has nothing to do with falling marriage rates.
Marriage rates are falling
because people are waiting longer to get married basically.
And like the divorce rates are also falling
because like people might actually be in happier marriages
than they used to be in previous generations.
This is not the sort of underlying crisis.
It's not really a crisis.
They also, I don't know if you notice this,
but they're talking about the ideology gap
and like, when men are more likely to be liberal
and men are more likely to be conservative,
and they say the ideology gap is particularly pronounced
among Gen Z white people,
and they talk about white conservatives, whatever.
But Gen Z is only 50% white. Right like white conservatives, whatever. But Gen Z is only
50% white. Right. And so like it's it's weird to sort of I don't know how like explicitly or like
consciously they're doing this. But it's like white people kind of quote, quote, resorting to like
marrying minorities because they have the same ideological beliefs as them is not bad. There's also, there's just something fundamentally weird about this, like, broad implication that
you don't have to vote for Republicans, of course, right? This is a democracy, but you should be
willing to spend the rest of your life with one. That's a, that's a sacrifice that we all need to
think hard about for some reason. In the same paragraph that you sent me, they, they also say,
they're talking about these
like ideological divides and they say,
unfortunately Americans have not equipped themselves
to discuss, debate, and reason across these divides.
And like this is something that people just kind of say now.
I don't actually think that there's any evidence
that this is the case.
A lot of people are fine with like
their more conservative family members
and even having like more conservative friends.
I think most people are adults
and like if anything are like too reluctant
to draw lines in the sand about this.
Also one of my favorite things,
because you know I read these like reactionary centrist
substacks, like this whole kind of substack world.
I find darkly fascinating.
What's your substack budget?
Just for reading, substacks psychos.
I do not pay for any. For the record, I do not pay for any.
I'm imagining you writing off like $400 in like Barry White sub-stack subscription.
My Jesse single budget and for every month.
So need to the IRS. No, fuck no.
But one thing that these people are obsessed with is how leftists will sometimes be like,
it's not my job to educate you, right?
So like, sometimes you're kind of debating with somebody and you're like, what's your evidence for that claim?
And they're like, it's not my job to educate you.
But like, they often use this as evidence for like nobody wants to debate anymore.
But I think the key distinction is that people don't want to debate on social media with some fucking just asking questions
as whole.
I think that it's totally legitimate to have
like different standards for behavior, online,
and in person, like in person, I do actually have friends
that are like relatively conservative
and I'm perfectly happy to like walk people through data
on like, oh, actually like the trans right stuff,
like it's not really the case that kids are getting
surgeries without assessment, like let's talk about it. I'm actually totally happy
to do that online. I'm not, though, online, the fucking slightest hint of transphobia, you are
fucking blocked. That's not like, oh, ideologically, like, my can't handle debate or whatever. It's like,
that's not the experience that I want to have online. Right. When you're talking politics on social
media, you're sort of constantly debating. And so everyone hits their wall, right? And it's like, yeah, I don't want to fucking talk to this.
Yeah, fuck off. With some person who's probably not acting in good faith and who it wouldn't matter
if I change their mind anyway, right? Dude, I was, I think I already told you that's when we weren't
recording, but I was in an Uber the other day, talking with the weather. And then he's like, oh, my
my daughter like runs when it's sunny,
or something, he mentioned daughter or something, something.
And I was like, oh, how old's your daughter?
He's like, oh, she's 35 now.
Her mom's a narcissistic bitch.
Yeah.
I was like, oh, zero to 60.
And then he's like, ranting about like queer people
and stuff.
And it was just like, okay, I guess we're just like doing this.
But I was nice.
Good for you.
Not being immediately clocked as gay.
I don't even know how that's possible, but.
I was so proud.
That was all I could think.
Oh my god, do you think I'm straight?
Oh, it's like slipping my hair around.
I'm like the straightest.
But anyway, I didn't like have a meltdown.
Right, right, sorry I'm dying right. Sorry, I'm dying at this
guy. I'm dying at this guy who's like, see, see his little twink might, my cobs in his
back seat. And it's like, I'm going to, first I'm going to tell this guy how about, about
how my ex is a bitch. And then I'm going to rant about gays. Only a straight person would
refer to a 41 year old five-six man as a twink.
Very adorable.
You Peter, thank you.
I thought that twink was entirely about
being short and skinny.
Speaking of which, this is my next nominee,
which I don't think you would have clocked this.
Okay. So, we're reaching back through time.
This is from June.
There is a New York Times op-ed
by a person in Richard Morgan
who I've never heard of before.
And the op-ed is called,
as a gay man,
I'll never be normal.
And there's been this kind of wave this year
of basically straight media
plucking gay men out of obscurity
to be like,
wow, gay rights has really gone too far.
Right.
The entire piece is pushing back against like over representation.
So he actually like says this at one point.
And he starts out by saying, you know, there's all this discourse about like the percentage
of LGBT people is like growing.
And it's now 7% of the population identifies this LGBT.
And he's like, well, you know, it sounds like it's so big.
Like it sounds like we're kind of everywhere,
but actually, if you look into the numbers,
more than half are bisexuals.
And if you take the bisexuals out, it's only 3%.
I'm always controlling for bisexuals.
Yeah, why would you remove the bisexuals though?
They're in the fucking acronym.
And like the danger that he's warning against,
he has this absurd fucking thing
about how like the ACLU has tweeted out,
like, trans people belong everywhere,
which is like a nice little phrase.
And then he fact checks it.
He's like, actually, trans people
are only 1% of the population.
They'll never be everywhere.
I don't think that's what they mean.
That's not what they mean when they say trans people
belong everywhere.
They don't mean 100% of the population.
This is physically trans people could not be everywhere.
It was.
And keep that voice, Peter.
That's good.
Save it.
I can only do like a super nerd from like the sentence
basically for the Brooklyn tough guy.
That's it.
It's just like, shut the fuck up.
I love that he's not counting.
You know how sometimes a weirdly racist people will be like,
did you know that Obama's actually half white?
You know, these guys are half straight, keep in mind.
Like that's how they view bisexuality as just being half straight.
He says, the make-believe of overrepresentation
is a kind of reverse closet.
Instead of pushing queer Americans
to pretend to be heterosexual,
we ask the broader culture to costume
as more queer than it is.
I feel, I haven't talked about this on the podcast,
but I feel like it's us straight in the closet now.
Ha ha ha ha ha.
The whole piece, I was just like,
just say you hate yourself.
This is taking forever.
It's exhausting.
And this is the same year where we had David Sederis
being like, they want to call me queer.
And that's bad.
I'm gay.
And like, David, no one fucking cares what you call yourself.
Oh, right.
Just a fucking word, just.
And you know, fucking Andrew Sullivan
has been banging this drum forever.
He's like, he's like gatekeeping queerness.
He's like, oh, these aren't like real queers.
But it's like, this is actually the future that liberals want, right?
I think it's fucking great that more people are identifying as bisexual and like exploring that.
And like, it's so demeaning to say that like that doesn't count.
When like a lot of people, like I know people who are in sort of quote-unquote heterosexual relationships,
like opposite sex marriages and they're monogamous,
there's this weird move to be like,
oh, well, they're not really bisexual.
But why would you take that away from somebody?
That's actually fine for them to identify that way.
Even if for the rest of their lives,
they're monogamous with an opposite sex partner.
Doesn't mean they're not bisexual anymore.
I'm married to my wife,
but it doesn't mean that I'm no longer in,
like, quote unquote, interesting women.
Like I'm not, I'm still straight.
They're just because I've committed to one person, doesn't mean, doesn'm no longer in, like quote unquote interested in women. Like I'm not, I'm still straight. They're just because I've committed to one person
doesn't mean, doesn't like invalidate my sexuality
in some way.
And like the reason this feels like dog whistle transphobia
to me is because there's this panic
about like what if kids are identifying as trans?
And then it turns out they're not trans.
And like that's not a bad outcome.
That's actually fine.
If more people are open to like maybe thinking
they're bisexual and then they explore that
and then a couple of years later,
they're like, oh, it turns out I'm heterosexual.
That's fine.
That's like a future ally to me.
I think a world where people are able to explore
their sexuality is better than one that we've had
for most of human history where people just had to tamp
this shit down and never really know
that part of themselves.
Like it's so weird to me to see actual gay people
being like, aw, some of them aren't even bisexual.
Who fucking cares, man?
The greatest argument for LGBT rights
has always just been who gives a shit.
Yeah.
This is not your problem.
Just move on.
Go have sex with straight presenting gay dudes
or whatever you're doing.
I have a blast.
Do the Andrew Sullivan where you try to try your best to present straight and then have
an extremely dark online life.
By which you mean his writing career?
There's nothing else that you would be referring to here.
Okay, but then Peter, the entire reason we're talking about this is so that we can read,
this is not the worst take of the year, but this is the worst paragraph of the year.
So I'm going to send this to you.
Do it in a gay voice, Peter, do it.
No problem.
Do it.
I know you have one in your back pocket.
I don't even know what you mean.
I still don't fit in.
And not just in the straight world.
I don't watch...
Exhausting.
Exhausting.
I don't watch RuPaul's Drag Race.
I've never been to Fire Island.
My skincare routine is soap.
I wear old Navy and a raggedy bucket hat.
Queer folks ask me if I'm a top, a bottom, or a verse,
and I give the most unpopular answer.
Why wouldn't I want to love my partner every way I can?
Ha ha ha ha ha ha.
So verse.
Yeah, thank you.
The whole internet erupted when this fucking thing came out like verse, that's verse.
That's verse, buddy.
I'm sorry, but this is so fucking stupid.
First of all, use moisturizer.
Every straight guy I know for the past decade has been rocking at the very least a basic
Moisturization routine. It is very funny to be when gay people do this straight
fitting-in shit and then straight people are like, you're overdoing it.
You can wear skinny jeans, man. It's fine.
No, we're moisturizing. Every street guy has one bravo show. We're well-pastors.
This is just like, I'm culture-less and nobody likes me. And I'm
completely unwilling, like, as a matter of principle, to engage in anything that I associate
with modern gay culture. Yeah, I hate myself so much. I've invented a bizarre fourth category
that doesn't fall under top, bottom, or verse. Yeah. I'm tired of you asking me whether I'm left or right handed,
but wouldn't I want to hold a tennis racket
anyway that I can?
He's right that that is the most unpopular answer,
because it's the worst way to answer the question.
Yeah, exactly.
Just tedious.
Imagine hating yourself so much that you wear a bucket hats,
and that was just like an adult gay man.
Yeah.
Yeah. I also, I really do blame the Straits for this whole thing
more than I blame this individual person.
Because what he's expressing here is a very typical stage
of coming out of the closet.
I think that for gay people, if you're growing up gay,
there's certain kinds of representation that you see.
And when you go to gay nightclubs, you're seeing a certain kind of gay person.
And like it can make you a little bit uncomfortable because you're like,
I don't look like these people.
I don't really feel like I fit in with these people.
But there's this stage where you're like,
I don't want to put a label on it.
I'm not, I'm not like those other gays.
I'm into sports.
Like I don't watch, I don't watch RuPaul's Drag Race.
And honestly, like eventually you outgrow that.
It's like white people having a libertarian face.
Right.
You eventually realize that like, no one cares.
There's no pressure to watch RuPaul's Drag Race.
I don't watch RuPaul's Drag Race.
No one fucking cares.
It's not that interesting.
Right.
What he thinks he's doing is challenging
straight people's bigotry, right?
He's doing this like, look, not all of us.
Yeah.
Are these like effeminate, prancing queens, right? That's what he thinks he's doing this like, look, not all of us are these like effeminate, prancing
queens, right?
That's what he thinks he's doing.
What he's actually doing is reinforcing their bigotry.
He is giving them a license to when they see those prancing queens on the street or as a
barista or whatever to go, hey, why can't you be like this other gay guy?
Why can't you be like this guy in the New York Times?
He's not so effeminate.
I can't even really tell that he's gay.
He's like wearing fucking flannel
or whatever the fuck he's bragging about in this stupid op-ed.
Yeah.
He is throwing other gay people under the bus
in an effort to demonstrate his proximity to straightness.
Maybe, I mean, you probably have stronger opinions
about this than me, but there is, in my view,
sort of like a, like a young gay monoculture to a degree.
And now, that's not like unusual.
Like there's a, yeah, there's like a young straight guy
monoculture too.
It's just that we don't like wrestle with it
as part of our identity because we're all
quite comfortable sliding in and out of it.
Oh, don't say sliding in and out after we just talked about top-autumn inverse
beaters. What's the problem? What's the problem with loving whatever terminology?
Yeah, I think, I mean, this is something that like, I don't think any straight person would ever
describe what they're doing as like exploring my heterosexuality.
But that is something people do.
Right.
And you kind of figure out what kind of heterosexual you're going to be.
And for gay people, this process is oftentimes delayed because you're in the fucking closet.
Yeah.
And then there's also this weird second coming out of the closet where you're like, I have
to now be among gay people.
And like that can be really traumatic because we all see these fucking movies where it's
like, oh, we're just all going to be at night clubs all the time and having a great time.
And that's only like 20% of it.
Yeah, exactly.
And people just beat you in the street
if you're like, I don't want RuPaul's Drag Race.
There's the explosion of violence.
Leave this brunch right now.
Yeah.
But that is a real, like, it's something
that oftentimes like the broader culture
because that culture is filtered through straight people,
culture doesn't prepare you for as a gay person. Right. And so we all
figure out like what kind of gay person we're going to be. And that means like trying on different identities for a while. And for a lot of people
trying on this like, oh, I'm not, I'm not like the other guys. It's like part of that identity formation.
So it's like this person is arguing against
exactly the thing that could make him happier, right?
A future where they're, you know,
7% of the population identifies as LGBT
and like, ooh, half of them are bisexual.
Let's get that up.
Let's get those numbers up, right?
Because a world where there's more queer people
is also a world where there's more types of queerness.
And it's easier to explore the kind of queer person
that you wanna be, right?
This was published in the fucking month
that we had the target pride display meltdown
and the buttlight meltdown.
And it's like street editors are commissioning
these fucking pieces and being like,
well, it hasn't all gone a little too far.
Like kids are all identifying as bisexual now.
Let's get our worst-rest gay on the case.
Let's get our flakiest skinned gay to write a column about this.
That was the most heterophobic thing you've said
on the podcast in front of you.
You're a self-hating street person.
When I'm watching below deck,
I have to be looking at pictures of hot chicks
on my phone to balance it out.
Okay, what is your next one, Peter?
My next nomination is not a single take
as much as a series of takes by the same organization.
I'm really the same person.
And this is basically best summed up as the last month
and a half of the ADL under the helm of Jonathan Greenblatt.