Lex Fridman Podcast - #320 – Christopher Capozzola: World War I, Ideology, Propaganda, and Politics

Episode Date: September 14, 2022

Christopher Capozzola is a professor of history at MIT. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Wealthfront: https://wealthfront.com/lex to get $50 sign-up bonus - InsideTracker: h...ttps://insidetracker.com/lex to get 20% off - LMNT: https://drinkLMNT.com/lex to get free sample pack - SimpliSafe: https://simplisafe.com/lex EPISODE LINKS: Christopher's Instagram: https://instagram.com/boundbywarbook Christopher's Website: https://boundbywarbook.com Christopher's books: Bound by War: https://amzn.to/3QssboA Uncle Sam Wants You: https://amzn.to/3Bw5KdT PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (05:50) - How World War I started (20:27) - US and World War I (37:24) - US Military (43:43) - War in Ukraine (47:53) - American Civil War (53:31) - World War II (1:12:38) - Nationalism (1:23:27) - US elections (1:49:34) - Donald Trump (2:03:39) - Philippine–American War (2:10:02) - Greatest US president (2:14:36) - Advice for young people (2:16:53) - Meaning of life

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The following is a conversation with Christopher Gapazola, a historian at MIT specializing in the history of politics and war, in modern American history, especially about the role of World War I in defining the trajectory of the United States and our human civilization in the 20th and 21st centuries. And now a quick few second mentionary sponsor sponsor. Check them out in the description. It's the best way to support this podcast. We got a wealth front for financial help, inside tracker for biological insight, element for salty goodness, and simply save for home security. Choose wisely my friends.
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Starting point is 00:05:19 camera plus 20% off with interactive monitoring. This is the Lex Friedman podcast to support it. Please check out our sponsors in the description. And now, dear friends, here's Christopher Gapazola. Let's start with a big and difficult question. How did World War I start? On the one hand, World War I started because of a series of events in the summer of 1914 that brought the major powers of Europe into conflict with one another. But I actually think it's more useful to say that
Starting point is 00:06:09 Rollbar 1 started at least a generation earlier when rising powers, particularly Germany, started devoting more and more of their resources toward military affairs and naval affairs. This sets off an arms race in Europe. It sets off a rivalry over the colonial world and who will control the resources in Africa and Asia. And so by the time you get to the summer of 1914,
Starting point is 00:06:36 and in a lot of ways I say the war has already begun. And this is just the match that lights the flame. So the capacity for war was brewing within the leaders and within the populace. They started accepting sort of slowly through the culture propagated this idea that we can go to war. It's a good idea to go to war. It's a good idea to expand and dominate others, that kind of thing.
Starting point is 00:07:03 Maybe not put in those clear terms, but just the sense that military action is the way that nations operate at the global scale. Yes, yes, and, right. So yes, there's a sense that the military can be the solution to political conflict in Europe itself. And the end is that war and military conflict are already happening, right? That
Starting point is 00:07:25 there's war particularly in Africa, in North Africa, in the Middle East, you know, Balkans, conflict is already underway. And the European powers haven't faced off against each other. They've usually faced off against an asymmetrical conflict against much less powerful states. But in some ways that war is already underway. So do you think it was inevitable? Because World War I is barred up as a case study where it seems like a few accidental leaders and a few accidental events or one accidental event led to the war.
Starting point is 00:08:03 And if you change that one little thing, it could have avoided the war. Your sense is the drums of war have been beating for quite a while and it would have happened almost no matter what or very likely to have happened. Yes, historians never like to say things are inevitable. And certainly, you know, there were people who could have chosen a different path both both in the short-term and the long-term, but fundamentally, there were irreconcilable conflicts in the system of empires in the world in 1914. I can't see, it didn't have to be this war, but it probably had to be a war. So there was the German Empire, the Austro-Hungarian Empire, there was France and Great Britain,
Starting point is 00:08:47 the US, the USP called the Empire at that moment yet. What do you graduate to Empire status? Well certainly after 1898 with the acquisition of the former territories of the Spanish Empire, you know, the United States has formal colonial possessions, and it has sort of mindsets of rule and military acquisition that would define Empire in a kind of more informal sense. So you would say you would put the blame or the responsibility of starting World War One into the hands of the German Empire and Kaiser will on the second. You know, that's a really tough call to make and you know that deciding that is going to keep
Starting point is 00:09:30 historians and business for the next 200 years. I think there are people who would lay all of the blame on the Germans, right? And you know, who would point toward a generation of arms build up, you know, alliances that Germany made and promises that they made to their allies in the Balkans, to the Austro-Hungarians. And so, yes, there's an awful lot of responsibility there. There has been a trend lately to say, no, it's no one's fault. That all of the various powers literally were sleepwalking into the war. They backed into it inadvertently.
Starting point is 00:10:13 I think that lets everyone a little too much off the hook. I think in between is, I would put the blame on the system of empires itself on the system. But in that system, the actor that sort of carries the most responsibility is definitely imperial Germany. So the leader of the German Empire, guys at Wilhelm II pressured sort of started talking trash and boiling the water that ultimately resulted in the explosion, plus all the other players. So what can you describe the dynamics of how that enrolled?
Starting point is 00:11:12 Well, what's the role of US? What's the role of France? What's the role of Great Britain, Germany, and also Hungarian Empire? Yeah, over the course of about four weeks, right? Following the assassination of Archduke in Sarajevo. It sort of triggers a series of political conflicts and ultimately, ultimatums, sort of demanding, sort of that one or other power
Starting point is 00:11:38 sort of stand down in response to the demands of either Britain, France, or in turn, Germany or Russia. At the same time that those alliances trigger automatic responses from the other side. And so it escalates. And once that escalation is combined with the call-up of military troops, then none of those powers wants to be sort of the last one to kind of get ready for conflict. So even throughout it, they think they are getting ready in a defensive maneuver. And if they think if there is conflict, well, it might be a skirmish, it might be sort of a standoff.
Starting point is 00:12:19 It could be solved with diplomacy later because diplomacy is failing now. That turns out not to be the case. Diplomacy fails. It's not a skirmish. It becomes a massive war. And the Americans are watching all of this from the sidelines. They have very little influence over what happens that summer. How does it go from a skirmish between a few nations to a global war?
Starting point is 00:12:44 Is there a place where there's a face transition? Yeah, I think the face transition is over the course of the fall of 1914. When the Germans make an initial sort of bold move into France, in many ways, they're fighting the last war, the Franco-Pression War of 1870, and they really do sort of, you know, kind of want to have a quick sort of lightning strike in some ways against France to kind of bring the war to a speedy conclusion. France turns out to be able to fight back more effectively than the Germans expected. and then the battle lines sort of harden.
Starting point is 00:13:25 And then behind that, the French and the Germans, as well as the British on the side of the French, start digging in, literally. And digging trenches, trenches that at first are three feet deep to avoid shelling from artillery, then become six feet, 10 feet deep, two miles wide, that include telegraph wires, that include whole hospitals in the back. And then at that point, the front is locked in place.
Starting point is 00:13:58 And the only way to break that is basically dialing the war up to 11, right? So massive numbers of troops, massive efforts, none of which work, right? And so the war is stuck in this, but that's the, that's the phase transition right there. What were the machines of war? In that case, you mentioned trenches. What were the guns used? What was the size of guns?
Starting point is 00:14:23 What are we talking about? What, what, what did Germany start accum guns? What are we talking about? What did Germany start accumulating that led up to this war? One of the things that we see immediately is the industrial revolution of the previous 30 or 40 years brought to bear on warfare. And so you see sort of machine guns, you see artillery, these are the key weapons of war on both sides. The vast majority of battlefield casualties are from artillery shelling from one side to another, not rifle or even sort of machine gun kind of attacks. In some ways, the weapons of war are human beings, right? Tens of thousands of them hoarded over the top in these sort of waves to kind of try to break through
Starting point is 00:15:14 the enemy lines. And it would work for a little while, but holding the territory that had been gained often proved to be even more demanding than gaining it. And so often, you know, each side would retreat back into the trenches and wait for another day. And how did Russia, how did Britain, how did France get pulled into the war? I suppose the France won. Is the easy one. But what is the order of events here? It becomes a global war.
Starting point is 00:15:46 Yeah, so Britain, France, and Russia are at this time and they're in alliance. And so the conflicts in the summer of 1914 that lead to the declarations of war happened one after another, in late August of 1914. And all three powers essentially come in at the same time, because they have promised to do so through a series of alliances conducted secretly in the years before 1914 that committed them to defend one another. Germany, Austria, Hungary, and the Ottoman Empire have their own sort of set of secret agreements
Starting point is 00:16:26 that also commit them to defend one another. And what this does is it sort of brings them all into conflict at the exact same moment. There are also, for many of these countries, bringing not just their national armies, but also their empires into the conflict. So Britain and France, of course, have enormous global empires that begin mobilizing soldiers as well as raw materials. Germany has less of an overseas empire.
Starting point is 00:16:54 Russia and the Ottoman Empire, of course, have their own sort of hinterland within the empire. And very soon, all of the warring powers are bringing the entire world into the conflict. Did they have a sense of how deadly the war is? I mean, this is another scale of death and destruction. At the beginning, no, but very quickly, the scale of the devastation of these massive
Starting point is 00:17:20 over-the-top attacks on trenches is apparent to the military officers, and it very quickly becomes apparent even at home. There is of course censorship of the battlefield and specific details don't reach people, but for civilians and in any of the warring powers, they know fairly soon how destructive the war is. And to me, that's always been a real sort of puzzle, right? So that by the time the United States comes to decide whether to join the war in 1917,
Starting point is 00:17:53 they know what exactly what they're getting into, right? They're not backing into the war in the ways that the European powers did. You know, they've seen the devastation, they've seen photographs, they've seen injured soldiers, and they make that choice anyway. When you say they, doing the leaders of the people, did the death and destruction reach the minds of the American people by that time? Yes, absolutely. We don't, in 1917, have the mass media that we have now, but there are images and newspapers, there are newsreels that play at the movie theaters,
Starting point is 00:18:33 and of course, some of it is sanitized, but that combined with press accounts, often really quite descriptive press accounts, gory accounts, reached, you know, anyone who cared to read them, you know, certainly plenty of people didn't follow the news, felt it was far away. But most Americans who cared about the news knew how devastating this war was. Yeah, there's something that happens that I recently visited Ukraine for a few weeks. There's something that happens with the human mind as you get away from the actual front where the bullets are flying, like literally one kilometer away. You start to not feel the war. You'll hear an explosion, you'll see an explosion, you
Starting point is 00:19:20 start to like get it assimilated to it or you start to get used to it. And then we get as far away from like currently what is key of you start to you know the words going on. Everybody around you is fighting in that war, but it's still somehow distant. And I think with the United States, with the ocean between, even if you have the stories everywhere, it still is somehow distant, like the way a movie is. Maybe, yeah, like a movie or a video game, it's somewhere else, even if your loved ones are going, or you are going to fight. Yeah, that is absolutely the case. And in some ways, that's true, even for the home fronts in Europe, except for the areas where in Belgium and France where the war is right
Starting point is 00:20:06 there in your backyard. For other people, there's a distance. Soldiers, of course, feel this very strongly. When they, European soldiers, when they're able to go home on leave, often, deeply present what they see is the luxury that civilians are living entering the war. So how did U.S. enter the war? Who was the president? What was the dynamics involved? And could it have stayed out? To answer your last question first, yes, right, that the United States could have stayed out of the First World War as a military power. The United States could not have ignored the war completely, right?
Starting point is 00:20:52 It shaped everything, right? It shaped trade, it shaped goods and services, agriculture, you know, whether, you know, there was a crop coming, whether there were immigrants coming across the Atlantic to work in American factories. Right, so the US can't ignore the war, but the US makes a choice in 1917 to enter the war by declaring war, right, on Germany and Austria. And in that sense, this is a war of choice,
Starting point is 00:21:22 but it's kicked off by a series of events Right so President Woodrow Wilson has been president through the this entire period of time He has just run in the 1916 presidential election on a campaign to keep the United States out of war But then in early 1917 the Germans in some ways sort of twist the American's arms, right? The Germans sort of high command comes to understand that they're stuck, right? That they, you know, they're stuck in this trench warfare, they need a big breakthrough. Their one big chance is to kind of, is to sort of break the blockade, to push through that the British have imposed on them, to break through against France.
Starting point is 00:22:09 And so they do. And along with this, they start syncing ships on the Atlantic, including American ships. The Germans know full well. This will draw the United States into war. But the Germans look at the United States at this moment, a relatively small army, a relatively small navy, a country that, at least on papers, deeply divided about whether to join the war.
Starting point is 00:22:33 And so they say, let's do it. Right? They're not going to get any American soldiers there in time, right? You know, it was a gamble, but I think probably they're best chance. They took that gamble, they lost, right? In part because French resistance was strong, in part because Americans mobilized much faster and in much greater numbers than the Germans thought they would. So the American people were divided.
Starting point is 00:22:59 The American people were absolutely divided about whether to enter this war, right? From 1914 to 1917, there is a searing debate across the political spectrum. It doesn't break down easily on party lines about whether it was in the US interest to do this, whether American troops should be sent abroad, whether Americans would end up just being cannon fodder for the European empires. Americans would end up just being cannon fodder for the European empires. Eventually, as Americans ships are sunk, first in the Lusitania in 1915, then in much greater numbers in 1917, the tide starts to turn and Americans feel that our response is necessary.
Starting point is 00:23:40 The actual declaration of war in Congress is pretty lopsided, but it's not unanimous by any means. Lopsided it towards entering the war. Yeah. Well, that's really interesting, because there's echoes of that in later wars, where Congress seems to... nobody wants to be the guy that says no to war. For some reason, once you sense that in terms of sorry, in terms of politicians, because then you appear weak, but I will, I wonder if that was always the case. So you make the case that World War One is largely responsible for defining what it means to be an American citizen.
Starting point is 00:24:29 So in which way does it define the American citizen? When you think about citizenship, what it means is two things. First of all, what are your rights and obligations? What is sort of the legal citizenship that you have as a citizen of the United States or any other state? And the second is a more amorphous definition of like, what does it mean to belong, right,
Starting point is 00:24:47 to be part of America, right, to feel American, to, you know, to love it or hate it or be willing to die for it, right? And both of those things really are crystal clear in terms of their importance during the war, right? So both of those things are on the table, being a citizen who is a citizen, who isn't matters. So people would never carry passports
Starting point is 00:25:11 or anything before suddenly have to, but also what it means to be an American, to feel like it, to be part of this project is also kind of being defined and enforced during the global war. So, projects, you know, is a funny way to put a global war, right? So can you tell the story? Perhaps that's a good example of it. Of the James Montgomery flags, 1916 poster that reads, I want you. Right.
Starting point is 00:25:42 A lot of people know this poster. I think in its original form, it's meme-ified form, I don't A lot of people know this poster. I think, in its original form, it's meme-ified form, I don't know, but we know this poster and we don't know where it came from. Or most of America's, I think, me included didn't know where it came from. And it actually comes from 1916. Does this poster represent the birth of something new in America,
Starting point is 00:26:04 which is a commodification or I don't know that propaganda machine that says what it means to be an American is somebody that fights for their country. Yeah, so the image, and it's in fact, I think one of the most recognizable images, not only in the United States, but in the entire world. And you can bring it almost anywhere on Earth in 2022, and people will know what it refers to. And so this is an image that circulated first as a magazine cover later as a recruitment poster, where the figure is Uncle Sam, sort of pointing at the viewer with his finger, sort of pointing and saying, I want you, right?
Starting point is 00:26:48 And the I want you is a recruitment tool to join the U.S. Army. And this image really kind of starts as a kind of, like I said, a magazine cover in 1916 by the artist James Montgomery Flag. It initially appears under the heading, what are you doing for preparedness, meaning to prepare in case war comes to the United States. Right, at that point in 1916, we're still neutral. In 1917, it's turned into a US Army recruiting poster.
Starting point is 00:27:20 And then it reappears in World War II, reappears generations after, you know, like you said, it's now, it gets remixed, demified, it's all over the place. I think, for me, it's a turning point, it's a sort of window into American culture at a crucial moment in our history, where the federal government is now embarking on a war overseas that's going to make enormous demands on its citizens. And at the same time, where sort of technologies of mass production and mass media and what we would probably call propaganda are being sort of mobilized for the first time in this new kind of way. What some sense is a fair to say that the empire is born, the expanding empire is born from the known Chomsky perspective kind of empire that seeks to have military influence elsewhere in the world.
Starting point is 00:28:20 Yes, but I think as historians we need to be at least as interested in what happens to the people who are getting pointed to by Uncle Sam. Rather than just the one, you know, whether he's pointing at us. And, you know, so, so yeah, he's asking us to do that, but how do we respond? And the people responded. So the people are ultimately the, the machines of history. The mechanism of history is not the Uncle Sam. Uncle Sam can only do so much if the people aren't willing to step up. Absolutely. The American people responded for sure, but they didn't build what Uncle Sam asked
Starting point is 00:28:56 them to do in that poster. And I think that's kind of a crucial aspect. There never would have been sort of global US power without the response that begins in World War I. What was the Selective Service Act of 1917? So one of the very first things that Uncle Sam wants you to do is to register for selective service for the draft. And the law has passed very soon after the US enters the war. And the laws passed very soon after the US enters the war. It's sort of demanding that all men first between 21 and 30, then between 18 and 45 register for the draft.
Starting point is 00:29:33 And they'll be selected by a government agency, by volunteer organizations. Just the requirement to set up. It is a legal requirement to register. Not, of course, not everyone who registers is selected. But over the course of the war, 24 million man register, almost 4 million servants, some fashion. What was the response?
Starting point is 00:29:53 What was the feeling amongst American people to have to sign up to the Selective Service Act? Well, have to register. This is a bigger turning point than we might think. In some ways, this is a tougher demand of the American public than entering the war. It's one thing to declare war on Germany. It's another thing to go down to your local post office and fill out the forums that allow your own government to send you there to fight. this is especially important at a time when the federal government doesn't really have any other way to find you unless you actually go and register yourself.
Starting point is 00:30:33 And so ordinary people are participating in the building of this war machine, but at least a half a million of them don't, and simply never fill out the forums, move from one town to another. But you said don't 20 million did 20 something? Yeah, about 24 million register at least 500,000. Is it surprising to you that that many registered? Since the country was divided. It is.
Starting point is 00:30:58 And that's what I've, you know, sort of tried to dig in to figure out how did how did you get 24 million people to register for the draft? And it's certainly not coming from the top down, right? There may be a hundred agents in what's now called the FBI. It's certainly not being enforced from Washington. It's being enforced through the eyes of everyday neighbors, through community surveillance, all kinds of ways. Oh, so there was like a pressure.
Starting point is 00:31:28 There's a lot of pressure. Interesting. So there was not a significant like anti-war movement as you would see maybe later with Vietnam and things like this. There was a significant movement before 1917, but it becomes very hard to keep up an organized anti-war movement after that, particularly when the government starts shutting down protests.
Starting point is 00:31:51 So as the Selective Service Act of 1917 runs up against some of the freedoms, some of the rights that are defined in our founding documents. What was that clash like? What was sacrificed? What freedoms and rights were sacrificed in this process? I mean, I think on some of the fundamental right is liberty, right? That conscription sort of demands, you know,
Starting point is 00:32:22 sacrifice on the behalf of some for that were notionally on the behalf of some, for notionally, for the protection of all. So even if you're against the war, you're forced to fright. Yes. And there were small provisions for conscientious objectors, solely those who had religious objections to all war,
Starting point is 00:32:41 not political objections to this war. And so several thousand were able to take those provisions, but even then they faced social sanction, they faced ridicule, some of them faced intimidation. So those liberty interests, both individual freedom, religious freedom, you know, those are some of the first things to go. So what about freedom of speech? What's the silencing of the press, of the voices of the different people that were object? Yes, absolutely. Right. And so very soon after the Selective Service Act has passed, then you get the Espionage Act, which of course is back in the news in 2022.
Starting point is 00:33:21 What's the Espionage Act? The Espionage Act is sort of omnimus bill. It contains about 10 or different provisions, very few of which have to do with Espionage. But one key provision basically makes it illegal to say or do anything that would interfere with military recruitment. And that provision is used to shut down radical publications, to shut down German language publications.
Starting point is 00:33:46 And you know, this is really has a chilling impact on speech during the war. Could you put into words what it means to be an American citizen that is in part sparked by World War One? So what does that mean? Somebody that should be willing to sacrifice certain freedoms to fight for their country.
Starting point is 00:34:12 Somebody that's willing to fight the spread freedom elsewhere in the world, spread the American ideals. Does that begin to tell the story? What it means to be an American? I think what we see is a change, right? So citizenship during World War One now includes the obligation to defend the country, right, to serve and to if asked to die for it, right? And we certainly see that. And I think we see the close linkage of
Starting point is 00:34:48 military service and US citizenship coming out of this time period. But you know, when you start making lots of demands on people to fulfill obligations, in turn, they're going to start demanding rights. And we start to see not necessarily during the war, but after more demands for free speech protections, more demands for for equality for marginalized groups. And so you know obligations and rights are sort of developing in a dynamic relationship. Oh, it's almost like an overreach of power sparked a sense like oh crap, we can't trust centralized power a sense like, oh crap, we can't trust centralized power to abuse, like to drag us into a war we need to be able to, so there's the birth of that tension between the government and the people. It's a rebirth of it, you know, of course that, you know, that tension is always there, but,
Starting point is 00:35:37 but in its modern form, I think it comes from this re-intensification of it. So what about the, you said that World War One gave birth to the surveillance state in the US. Can you explain? Yeah. So the Espionage Act, you know, sort of empowers federal organizations to watch other Americans. They are particularly interested in anyone who is obstructing the draft, anyone who is trying to kind of organize labor or strikes or radical movements,
Starting point is 00:36:08 and anyone who might have sympathy for Germany, which basically means, you know, all German-Americans come under surveillance. Initially, this is a very small scale, but soon every government agency gets involved from the Treasury Department's Secret Service to the Post Office, which is sort of a breeding male, to the Justice Department, which mobilizes 200,000 volunteers. It's a really significant enterprise. Much of it goes away after the war, but of all the things that go away, this core of the surveillance state is the thing that persists most, most fully. Is this also a place where government, the size of government starts to grow in these different organizations, or maybe create some momentum for growth of government?
Starting point is 00:36:57 Oh, it's exponential growth, right, that over the course of the war by almost any metric you use, right, the size of the federal budget, the number of federal employees, the number of soldiers in the standing army, all of those things skyrocket during the war, they go down after the war, but they never go down to what they were before. And probably gave a momentum for growth over time. Yes, absolutely. Did World War I give birth to the military industrial complex in the United States? So war profiteering, expanding of the war machine in order to financially benefit a lot of
Starting point is 00:37:41 parties involved. So I guess I would maybe break that into two parts, right? That on the one hand, yes, there is war profiteering. There are investigations of it in the years after the war. There's a widespread concern that the profit motive had played too much of a park in the war. And that's definitely the case. But I think when you try to think of this term military industrial complex, it's best to think of it as, at what point does the one side lock in the other?
Starting point is 00:38:19 That military choices are shaped by industry, objectives, and vice versa. And I don't think that that was fully locked into place during World War I. I think that's really a cold war phenomenon when the United States is on this intense kind of footing for two generations in a row. So, the industrial is really important there. There are companies. So before then, weapons of war were created, were funded directly
Starting point is 00:38:48 by the government. Who was manufacturing the weapons of war? They were generally manufactured by private industry. There were of course, arsenals sort of 19th century iterations where the government would produce its own weapons, partly to make sure that they got what they wanted. But most of the weapons of war for all of the European powers and the United States are produced by private industry. So what do you say that they made a military industrial complex and start then? What was the important thing that happened in the Cold War? I think one way to think about it is that the Cold War is a point at which it switches from being a dial to a ratchet.
Starting point is 00:39:32 So during World War I, the relationship between the military and industry dials up fast and high and stays that way and it dials back down. Whereas during the Cold War, sort of the relationship between the two often looks more like a ratchet. It goes up. It comes unstoppable. It goes up again. In the way that you start, I think,
Starting point is 00:39:56 the way the military industrial complex is often involved, this gust is as a system that is unstoppable. Right. And like it expands, it almost, I mean, if you take a very cynical view, it creates war so that it can make money. It doesn't just find places where it can help through military conflict. It creates tensions that directly or indirectly lead to military conflict that it can then fuel and make money from. That is certainly one of the concerns of both people who are critical of the First World War and then also of Dwight Eisenhower when he's president and sort of in his
Starting point is 00:40:46 farewell address where he sort of introduces the term military industrial complex. And some of it is about the prophet motive, but some of it is a fear that Eisenhower had that no one had an interest in stopping this, right, and that no one had a voice in stopping it, and that the ordinary American could really do nothing to sort of, you know, to kind of to dial it to dial things down. Is it strange to you that we don't often hear that kind of speech today with like Eisenhower speaking about the military industrial complex. So for example, we'll have people criticizing the spending on the on war efforts, but they're not discussing the machinery of the military industrial complex, like the the basic way that human nature works, that would get ourselves trapped in this thing. They're saying like there's better things to spend money on versus describing a very seemingly natural process of when you build weapons of war that's
Starting point is 00:41:52 going to lead to more war. Like it pulls you in somehow. Yeah, I would say throughout the Cold War and even after the end of it, there has not been a sustained conversation in the United States about our defense establishment, what we really need, and what serves our interest, and to what extent other things like market forces, profit motives, you know, belong in that conversation. What's interesting is that in the generation after the First World War, that conversation was on the table, right, through a series of investigations in the U.S., the Nye Committee,
Starting point is 00:42:41 in Britain, a Royal Commission, journalistic exposés. You know, this would have been just talked about constantly in the years between about 1930 and 1936, as people were starting to worry, right, that storm clouds were gathering in Europe again. Yeah, but it always seems like those folks get pushed to the fringes, you're made an activist versus a thinking leader. Those discussions are often marginalized, framed as conspiracy theory, etc. And I think it's important to realize that in the generation after World War I, this was a serious civic conversation. It led to investigations of defense finance. It led to experiments in Britain and France and public finance of war material. I think those conversations need to be reconvened now in the 21st century.
Starting point is 00:43:43 Is there any parallels between World War I and the war in Ukraine? The reason I bring it up is because you mentioned sort of there was a hunger for war, a capacity for war that was already established, and the different parties were just boiling the tensions. So there's a case made that America had a role to play, NATO had a role to play in the current war in Ukraine. Is there some truth to that when you think about it in the context of World War I? Or is it purely about the specific parties involved, which is Russia and Ukraine? I think it's very easy to draw parallels
Starting point is 00:44:34 between World War I and the war in Ukraine, but I don't think they really work. That, you know, the First World War in some ways is generated by a fundamental conflict in the European system of empires, right in the global system of empires. So in many ways, if there's a parallel, the war in Ukraine is the parallel to some of the conflicts in the Mediterranean and the Balkans in 1911 to 1913, that then later there was a much greater conflict. And so I think if there's any lessons to be learned for how not to you know let World War
Starting point is 00:45:26 3 look like World War 1, it would be to make sure that you know that systems aren't locked into place, that escalate wars out of people's expectations. Well that's I suppose what I was implying that this is the early stages of World War III, that in the same way that several wolves are looking their chops or whatever the expression is, they're creating tension, they're creating military conflict with a kind of unstoppable imperative for global war. That's, I mean, many kind of people that are looking at this are really worried about that. Now, the stopping, the forcing function to stop this war is that there's several nuclear powers involved, which has at least for now worked to stop full on global war. But I'm not sure that's going to be the case. In fact,
Starting point is 00:46:26 what is one of the surprising things to me in Ukraine is that still in the 21st century, we can go to something that involves nuclear powers, not directly yet, but awfully close to directly not directly yet, but awfully close to directly go to a hot war. And so, do you worry about that, that there's a kind of descent into a World War I type of scenario? Yes, I mean, that keeps me up at night and I think it should keep, you know, the citizens of both the United States and Russia up at night. And I think, again, it gets back to what I was saying, citizens of both the United States and Russia up at night. And I think, again, it gets back to what I was saying that in the summer of 1914, even then, things that looked like a march toward war
Starting point is 00:47:20 could have been different, right? And so I think it's important for leaders to have both countries and of all of the sort of related country, you know, of Ukraine, of the various NATO powers, to really sort of imagine off ramps, and to imagine alternatives, and to make them possible, you know, whether it's through diplomacy,
Starting point is 00:47:43 whether it's through other formats. You know, I think that, you know, whether it's through diplomacy, whether it's through other formats, you know, I think that, you know, that that's the only way to prevent sort of greater escalation. What's the difference between World War I and the Civil War in terms of how they defined what it means to be an American, but also the American citizen's relationship with the war, what the leaders were doing, is there interesting differences in similarities? Besides the fact that everybody seems still forgot about World War I in the United States,
Starting point is 00:48:16 and everyone's still in the number of civil war. I mean, it's true. And the American Civil War defines American identity in some ways along with the revolution and the second rule war, more so than any other conflict. And, you know, it's a fundamentally different war, right? It's one because it is a Civil War, right? Because of the Confederacy. This is a conflict happening on the territory of the United States, between Americans.
Starting point is 00:48:52 The dynamics are really quite different. The leaders, particularly Lincoln, have a different relationship to the home front, to civilians, then Wilson Roosevelt have in World War I and II. Also the way you would tell the story of the Civil War, perhaps similar to the way we tell the story of World War II, there's like a reason to actually fight the war. The way we tell the stories we're fighting for this idea that all men are created equal, that the the the wars over slavery in part perhaps that's a radical drastic oversimplification with the wars actually about in the moment like how do you get pulled into an actual war versus a hot discussion. And the same with World War II people kind of framed the narrative that it was against evil. Hitler being evil. I think the key part of that is
Starting point is 00:49:53 probably the Holocaust. That's how you can formulate Hitler's being evil. If there's no Holocaust, perhaps there's a case to be made that we wouldn't see World War II as such quote-unquote, good war, that there's an atrocity that had to happen to make it really to be able to tell a clear narrative of why we get into this war. Perhaps such a narrative doesn't exist for World War I, and so they doesn't stay in the American mind. We tried to sweep it under the rug, given though overall 16 million people died. So, so GGU, the difference is in the fact that you're fighting for ideas and fighting on the homeland.
Starting point is 00:50:39 But in terms of people's participation, you know, fighting for your country. Was there similarities there? Yeah, I mean, I think, I mean, the civil war in both the North and the South troops are raised overwhelmingly through volunteer recruitment. There is a draft in both the North and the South, but it's not significant. Only 8% of Confederate soldiers came in through conscription. And so, in fact, the mobilization for volunteers often organized locally around individual communities or states creates multiple identities and levels
Starting point is 00:51:26 of loyalty where people both in the North and the South have loyalty both to their state regiments, to their sort of community militias and as well to the country. They are fighting over the country, right, over the United States and the Union and the Confederacy have conflicting and ultimately irreconcilable visions of that. But that sort of nationalism that comes out of the union after the victory in the war is a kind of crucial force shaping America ever since. So what was the neutrality period? What did the US stay out of the war for so long? The goal was going on in that interesting, like what made Woodrow Wilson change his mind. What, what was the interesting dynamic there?
Starting point is 00:52:16 I always say that the United States entered the war in April of 1917, but Americans entered it right away. Right? They entered it right away. They entered it. Some of them actually went and volunteered and fought almost exclusively on the side of Britain and France. At least 50,000 joined the Canadian Army or the British Army and serve. Millions volunteer, they sent humanitarian aid.
Starting point is 00:52:43 I think in many ways, modern war creates modern humanitarianism, and we can see that in the neutrality period. And even if they wanted the United States to stay out of the war, a lot of Americans get involved in it by thinking about it, caring about it, arguing about it. And at the same time, they're worried that British propaganda is shaping their new system. They are worried that German espionage is undermining them. They're worried that both Britain and Germany are trying to interfere in American elections and American news cycles. And at the same time, a revolution is breaking out in Mexico.
Starting point is 00:53:25 So there are sort of concerns about what's happening in the Western hemisphere as well as what's happening in Europe So World War one was supposed to be the war to end all wars and it didn't How did how did World War one Pave the way to World War two Every nation probably has their own story in this trajectory towards World War One paved the way to World War Two. Every nation probably has their own story in this trajectory towards World War Two. How do Europe allow World War Two to happen?
Starting point is 00:53:54 How do the Soviet Union, Russia allow World War Two to happen and how did America allow World War Two to happen? And Japan? Yeah, you're right. The answer is different for each country. In Germany, the culture of defeat, the experience of defeat at the end of World War I leads to a culture of resentment, recrimination, finger pointing, blame that makes German politics very ugly, as one person puts it, brutalizes German politics.
Starting point is 00:54:29 And it places resentment at the core of the populace and this politics. Yeah, and so in some ways that lays the groundwork for the kind of politics of resentment and hate that comes from the Nazis. For the United States, in some ways, the failure to win the peace, you know, sets up the possibility for the next war, right? That the United States, you know, through Wilson is sort of crafting a new international
Starting point is 00:54:58 order. In order that, this will be the word end all wars. But because the United States failed to join the League of Nations, you see the United States really sort of on the hook for another generation. In Asia, the story is more complicated, right? And I think it's worth bearing that in mind that World War 2 is a two front war. It starts in Asia for its own reasons. World War One is transformative for Japan, right? It is a time of massive economic expansion. A lot of that sort of economic wealth is poured into sort of greater industrialization and militarization. And so when the military wing in Japanese politics takes over
Starting point is 00:55:40 in the 1930s, there are in some ways flexing muscles that come out of the First World War. Can you talk about the Ender World War I, the Treaty of Versailles? What's interesting about that dynamics there? The parties involved of how could have been done differently to avoid the resentment? Is there or again is it inevitable? So the war ends and very soon even before the war is over that the United States in particular is trying to shape the peace, right? And the United States is the central actor at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919. Woodrow Wilson is there He's presiding and he knows that he calls the shots. So he was respected.
Starting point is 00:56:31 He was respected, but resentfully, in some ways, by the European powers, Britain and France and Italy, to a lesser extent, who felt that they had sacrificed to more. They had two goals, right? They wanted to shape the imperial system in order to make sure that their fundamental economic structures wouldn't change. They also wanted to weaken Germany as much as possible, so that Germany couldn't rise again. What this leads to is a peace treaty that, you know, maintain some of the fundamental
Starting point is 00:57:07 conflicts of the imperial system and makes bankruptcy Germany, stars Germany, and kind of feeds this politics of resentment that make it impossible for Germany to kind of participate in a European order. So people like historian, you know, Ferguson, for example, make the case that if Britain stayed out of World War I, we would have avoided this whole mess and we would potentially even avoid World War II. There's kind of counterfactual history. Do you think it's possible to make the case for that? That there was a moment, especially in that case, staying out of the war for Britain, that
Starting point is 00:57:52 escalation to a global war could have been avoided. And one that ultimately ends in a deep global resentment. So where Germany is resentful, not just of France or particular nations, but is resentful of the entire, I particular nations, but is resentful of the entire, I don't know how you define it, the West or something like this, the entire global world. I wish it were that easy. And, you know, I think it's useful to think in counterfactuals, you know, what if? And if you believe, as historians do, in causation, that one thing causes another, then you also have to believe in counterfactuals, right, that if something hadn't happened, then maybe that wouldn't, you know, that would have worked differently. But I think all the things that led to World War One are multi-cozal and nuance.
Starting point is 00:58:51 And this is what historians do. We make things more complicated. And so, there was no one thing that could have, that could have turned the tide of history. And, oh, if only Hitler had gotten into art school or if only Fidel Castro had gotten into the major leagues, you know, those are interesting thought experiments. But few events in history, I think are that contingent. Well, Hitler is an example of somebody who's a charismatic leader that seems to have a really disproportionate amount of influence
Starting point is 00:59:29 on the tide of history. So if you look at Stalin, you could imagine that many other people could have stepped into that role. And the same goes for many of the other presidents through, or even Mao. It seems that there's a singular nature to Hitler that you could play the common factual that if there was no Hitler, you may have not had World War II. He, better than many leaders in history, was able to channel the resentment of the populace into a very aggressive expansion
Starting point is 01:00:06 of the military. I would say skillful deceit of the entire world in terms of his plans and was able to effectively start the war. Is it possible that Hitler had been stopped? Could we have avoided But I mean, could Hitler have been stopped? Could we have avoided if he just got into art school? Right. Or again, do you feel like there's a current of events that was unstoppable? I mean, part of what you're talking about is Hitler, the individual, as a charismatic leader who's
Starting point is 01:00:39 able to mobilize the nation. And part of it is Hitlerism, right? His own sort of individual ability to play, for example, play off his subordinates against one another to set up a system of that nature, that in some ways escalates violence, including the violence that leads to the Holocaust. And some of it is also Hitlerism as a leader cult.
Starting point is 01:01:06 And we see this in many other things where a political movement surrounds one particular individual who may or may not be replaceable. So yes, the World War II we got would have been completely different if a different sort of faction had risen to power in Germany. But, you know, depression era Europe was so unstable and democracies collapsed throughout Western Europe over the course of the 1930s. You know, whether they had charismatic totalitarian leaders or not.
Starting point is 01:01:41 Have you actually read one book I just recently finished? I'd love to get your opinion From a historian perspective. There's a book called Blitzed Drugs in the Third Reich by Norman Oler it makes a case that drugs played a very large Math essentially played a very large role in World War Two. There's a lot of criticism of this book saying that it's kind of to what you're saying. It takes this one little variable, it makes it like this explains everything. So everything about Hitler, everything about the blitzkrieg, everything about the military, the way, the strategy, the decisions
Starting point is 01:02:26 could be explained through drugs, or at least implies that kind of thing. And the interesting thing about this book, because Hitler and Nazi Germany is one of the most sort of written about periods of human history, and this was not drugs were almost entirely not written about in this contact. So here along this semi-history, because I don't think he's even a historian. He's a lot of his work is fiction. I hope that I'm saying that correctly. So he tells a really, that's one of the criticisms. He tells a very compelling story that drugs were at the center of this period and also of the man of Hitler. What are
Starting point is 01:03:09 your sort of feelings and thoughts about, if you've gotten chance to read this book, when I'm sure there's books like it, that tell an interesting perspective, a singular perspective on a war. Yeah, I mean, I have read it and I also had this sort of eye-opening experience that a lot of historians did and they're like, why didn't we think about this? And I think whether he's, the author older is not a trained academic historian, but the joy of history is like, you don't have to be one to write good history. And I don't think anyone sort of criticizes him for that. I like the book as a window into the third rike.
Starting point is 01:03:53 You know, of course, drugs don't explain all of it. But it helps us see, it helps us see the people who supported Hitler, It helps us see the people who supported Hitler, the ways in which it was that mind altering and performance altering drugs were used to kind of keep soldiers on the battlefield, the ways in which I think that we don't fully understand the extent to which the Third Reich is held together with like duct tape from
Starting point is 01:04:26 a pretty early phase by like 1940 or 41 even. It's all smoke and mirrors. And I think that wartime propaganda, both Germans trying to say, we're winning everything and America trying to mobilize and the other allies, you know, to mobilize against Germany, described a more formidable enemy than it really was by 1941 and 1942. Yeah, I mean, I could see both cases. One is that duct tape doesn't make the man, but also as an engineer, I'm a huge fan of duct tape. Yeah, because it doesn't need to solve a lot of problems. I do worry that this perspective that the book presents about drugs is somehow to the mind really
Starting point is 01:05:12 compelling because it's almost like the mind or at least my my searches for an answer. How could this have happened? And it's nice to have a clean explanation. And drugs is one popular one when people talk about steroids in sports. The moment you introduce the topic of steroids, somehow the mind wants to explain all success in the context was because this person was on steroids, lands on strong. Well, it's like it's a very sticky idea certain ideas certain explanations are very sticky And I think that's really dangerous because then you lose the full context and also in the case of drugs It removes the responsibility from the person
Starting point is 01:05:55 both for the military genius and the evil Mm-hmm And I think you I mean, it's a very dangerous thing to do. Because something about the mind, maybe it's just mind, it's sticky to this, well, drugs explain it. If the drugs didn't happen, then it would be very different. It worries me how compelling it is of an explanation. Yeah. That's why it's maybe better to think of it as a window
Starting point is 01:06:21 into the third right, that an explanation of it. But it's also a nice exploration of Hitler the man. For some reason, discussing his habits, especially later in the war, his practices with drugs gives you a window into the person. It reminds you that this is a human being. Like a human being gets emotional in the morning, gets thoughtful in the morning, hopeful, sad, depressed, angry, like a story of emotions of the human being. Somehow we
Starting point is 01:06:55 construct a pretty dangerous thing to do, we construct an evil monster out of Hitler. When in reality he's a human being like all of us I think the lesson there is the soldier in the lesson which is all of us to some degree are capable of evil Or maybe if you want to make it less powerful a statement Many of our leaders are capable of evil that this Hitler is not truly singular in history that yeah that this Hitler is not truly singular in history. That, yeah, the resentment of the populist matches the right charismatic leader. It's easy to make the kind of not easy, but it's possible to frequently make the kind of initiation of military conflict that happened in World War II.
Starting point is 01:07:43 By the way, because you said not a trained historian, one of the most compelling and entertaining and fascinating exploration of World War I comes from Dan Carlin. I don't know if you've gotten a chance to listen to his sort of podcast form, telling of the blueprint for Armageddon, which is the telling old world war one. What do you think about Dan Carlin, you yourself as a historian who is study who's written the
Starting point is 01:08:12 ball world war one? Do you do you enjoy that kind of telling of history? Absolutely. And I think again, you know, you don't need a PhD in history to be a historian. The story historian agree with that. He gets quite a bit of criticism from Yeah, you don't need a PhD in history to be a historian. The story history, I agree with that. It gets quite a bit of criticism from historians. You know, I mean, we like to argue with each other and stick with each other, but the one thing I have no patience
Starting point is 01:08:36 for is when we like pull rank on each other. You know, I think we depend on, if you're a historian in a university with degrees and research materials, you know, you depend on the work of people in some local community, like recording oral history, saving documents. And history is a social science, but it's also a storytelling art. And you know, history books are the ones you find on the shelves and bookstores that people read for fun. And then you can appreciate both the knowledge production as well as the storytelling. And when you get a good oral storyteller like Dan Carlin, and there's a reason that thousands and hundreds of thousands of people tune in.
Starting point is 01:09:21 Yeah, but he definitely suffers from anxiety about getting things correct. And it's very, it's very difficult. Well, our first job is to get the facts correct and then to tell the story off of those. But the facts are so fuzzy. So it's, I mean, you have probably my favorite telling World War II is William Shire's Ryzenfall III Reich. telling what World War II is William Shire's rise and fall of the Third Reich and or at least
Starting point is 01:09:47 not telling of Nazi Germany. And that goes to primary sources a lot, which is like I suppose that's the honest way to do it, but it's tough. It's really tough to write that way, to really go to primary sources of always. And I think that one of the things that Dan tries to do, which is also really tough to do, perhaps easier in oral history, is try to make you feel what it was like to be there, which I think he does by trying to tell the story of like individual soldiers and do you find that telling like individual citizens? Do you find that kind of telling of history compelling? Yeah, I mean I think we need a historical imagination and I think imagination. And I think historical imagination teaches something very valuable, which is humility,
Starting point is 01:10:57 to realize that there are other people who've lived on this planet, and they organized their lives differently, and you know, they made it through just fine too. And you know, I think that that just fine too. And I think that that kind of meeting other people from the past can be actually a better useful skill for meeting people unlike you in the present. Unlike you, but also like you, I think both are humbling. One realizing that they did did a different space and time, but two realizing that if you live in a different space and time, but two realizing that if you were placed in that space and time, you might have done all the same things, whether it's the brave, good thing, or the evil thing. Yeah, absolutely. And you get also a sense of possibility. There's this famous line that those who do not learn history are condemned to
Starting point is 01:11:46 repeat it. But I think the other half is true as well, which is those who do not learn history don't get the chance to repeat it. We're not the first people on this planet to face any certain kinds of problems. Other people have lived through worlds like this one before. It's like when you fall in love with a teenager for the first time, there's, and then there's a break up. You think it, it's the greatest strategy, tragedy that has ever happened in the world. You're the first person, even though like Romeo and Juliet and so on had, had this issue, you're the first person that truly feels the catastrophic heartbreak of that experience. It's good to be reminded that no, the human condition is what it is.
Starting point is 01:12:33 We have lived through it at the individual and the societal scale. Let me ask about nationalism, which I think is at the core of I want you, poster. Is nationalism destructive or empowering to a nation? And we can use different words like patriotism, which is in many ways synonymous to nationalism, but in recent history, perhaps because of the Nazis has has slowly parted ways that somehow nationalism is when patriotism, patriotism gone bad or something like this. Yeah, they're different, right? Patriotism is in some ways
Starting point is 01:13:14 best thought of as an emotion, a feeling of love of country, literally. And in some ways, that's a necessary condition to participate in nationalism. You know, whether, to me, I think nationalism is crucial in a world organized around nation states. And you have to sort of believe that you are engaged in a common project together, right? And so, you know, in the contemporary United States, you know, in some ways that that question is actually on the table in ways that it hasn't been in the past. But you have to believe that you're engaged in a common project that you have something in common with the person with whom you share this
Starting point is 01:14:03 nation. And that you would sacrifice for them, whether it's by paying taxes for them or we're going to war to defend them. That's a vision of what we might call civic nationalism. That's the good version. The question is whether you can have that without having exclusionary nationalism, hating the other, fearing the other, saying, yeah, you're part of this nation against all others.
Starting point is 01:14:34 And I think there's a long tradition in America of a very inclusive nationalism that is open, inclusive, welcoming, and new people to this share project. That's something to be defended. Exclusionary nationalisms based on ethnic hatreds and others that we see throughout the world. Those are things to be afraid of. But there is a kind of narrative in the United States that a nationalism that includes the big umbrella of democratic nations, nations that strive for freedom.
Starting point is 01:15:13 And everybody else is against freedom and against human nature. And it just so happens that it's half and half split across the world. So that's imperialism. That feels like it beats the drum of war. Yeah, and I mean, I don't want to paint too rosy a picture. And certainly, you know, the United States as a nation has often found it easier to define ourselves against something than to clarify exactly what we're for. Yeah, yeah. The Cold War, China today. That's not only the United States, I suppose that's human nature.
Starting point is 01:15:57 It's we need a competitor. It's almost like maybe the success of human civilization requires figuring out how to construct competitors that don't result in global war? Yes, or figuring out how to turn enemies into rivals and competitors. There's a real difference. You compete with competitors. You fight with enemies.
Starting point is 01:16:29 Yeah, with competitors as a respect, it may be even a love under the lying, the competition. What lessons, what are the biggest lessons you take away from World War One? Maybe we talked about several, but, you know, you look back at the 20th century, what, as a historian, what do you learn about human nature, about human civilization, about history from looking at this war? I think the lesson I would want everyone to take from the story of the First World War is that
Starting point is 01:17:12 human life is not cheap, that all of the worrying powers thought, not just by throwing more men and more material at the front, they would solve their political problems with military force. And at the end of the day, in 1918, one side did win that, but it didn't actually solve any of those political problems. And in the end, the regular people paid the price with their lives. They did. And people who, people who had been told that their lives were cheap, remembered that. And it reshapes mass politics for the rest of the 20th century, both in Europe and around the world.
Starting point is 01:17:59 Yeah, the cost of a death of a single soldier is not just or a single civilian is not just the cost of that single life. It's the resentment that the anger, the hate that reverberates throughout. One of the things I saw in Ukraine is the birth of a scale of generational hate, not towards administrations or leaders, but towards entire peoples. I mean overnight that hate is created and it takes perhaps decades for that hate to dissipate. It takes decades and it takes collective effort to build institutions that divert that hate into other places. One of the biggest things I thought was not part of the calculus in when the United States
Starting point is 01:18:54 invaded Afghanistan and Iraq is the creation of hate. When you drop a bomb, even if it hits military targets, even if it kills soldiers, which in that case, it didn't. There's very large amount of civilians. What does that do to the, you know, like, what? How many years, minutes, hours, months and years of hate do you create with a single bomb you drop? And I calculate that, like literally,
Starting point is 01:19:30 and the Pentagon have a chart, how many people will hate us, how many people does it take, do some science here, how many people does it take, when you have a million people that hate you, how many of them will become terrorists, how many of them will become terrorists? How many of them will do something to the nation you love and care about, which is the United States, will do
Starting point is 01:19:53 something that will be very costly. I feel like there was not a plot in a chart. It was more about short-term effects. Yes, it's again, it's the idea of using military force to solve political problems. And I think there's a squandering of goodwill that people have around the world toward the United States. You know, that's a respect for, you know, for its economy, for its consumer products, and so forth. And I think that's been lost a lot of that.
Starting point is 01:20:24 Do you think leaders can stop war? I have, well, perhaps a romantic notion, perhaps because I do these podcasts and persons on that leaders that get in room together and can talk, they can stop war. I mean, that's the power of a leader, especially one with an authoritarian regime that they can, through camaraderie, alleviate some of the emotions associated with the ego. Yes, leaders can stop war if they get into the room when they understand from the masses
Starting point is 01:21:03 in their countries that war is something that they want to stop. So the people ultimately have a really big say. They do. That it was mass movements by people in the United States for the nuclear freeze in Russia pushing for openness that brought, for example, Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev to rakevict to sort of debate, you know, and eventually sort of put caps on nuclear weapons. You know, those two people did, you know, made choices in the room that made that possible, but they were both being pushed and knew they were being pushed by their people.
Starting point is 01:21:44 were both being pushed and knew they were being pushed by their people. Boy, that's a tall phone. It puts a lot of responsibility on the German people, for example, in both wars. We fans of history tend to conceive of history as a meeting of leaders. We think of Chamberlain, we think of Churchill and the importance of them in the Second World War. I think about Hitler and Stalin, and think that if certain conversations happen, the war could have been avoided. You tell the story of how many times Hitler and Nazi Germany's military might was not sufficient. They could have been easily stopped. And the pacifists, the people who believed Hitler or foolish enough to believe Hitler didn't act properly. And if the leaders just woke
Starting point is 01:22:33 up to that idea. In fact, Churchill was a kind of representation of that. But in your conception here as possible that Churchill was also a representation of the British people, even though seemingly unpopular, he, that force was, that gave birth to somebody like Churchill, who said, we'll never surrender, right? Yeah. She'll fight in the beaches. Yeah. And, you know, it's, I think, well, we're too Britain is a good example of that.
Starting point is 01:23:06 It is clearly a dynamic leader who has his pulse on what the people want and demand and are willing to do. And it's a dynamic art of leading that and shaping those wants at the same time as knowing that you're bound by them. Well, then if we can see a history in this way, let me ask you about our presidents, you are taking on the impossibly difficult task of teaching a course in a couple of years here or in one year called the history of American presidential elections. called the history of American presidential elections.
Starting point is 01:23:48 So if the people are in part responsible for leaders, how can we explain what is going on in America that we have the leaders that we do today? So the if we think about the elections of the past several cycles. I guess, let me ask, are we a divided nation? Are we more of a divided nation that were in the past? What do you understand about the American citizen in the beginning of this century from the leaders we have elected? Yes, obviously, we are a divided country
Starting point is 01:24:22 in our rhetoric in our day-to-day politics. But we are nowhere near as divided as we have been in other periods in our history. Right? The most obvious, of course, being in the American Civil War, right, 150 years ago. obvious, of course, being in the American Civil War 150 years ago. And the distinction is not just that we haven't come to blows, but that we are fundamentally one society, one economy, and sort of deeply integrated as a nation, both domestically and on the world stage in ways that look nothing like the United States in 1861. Will political rhetoric continue to be extreme? Of course, but we're not as divided as people think we are. Well, then if you actually look throughout human history, does it always get so outside the people to do the elections get as contentious as they've recently been? So there's a kind of
Starting point is 01:25:40 perception has been very close. And there's a lot of accusations and a lot of tensions. has been very close and there's a lot of accusations, a lot of tensions. It's very heated. It's almost fueling the machine of division. Has that often been the case? It has. It hasn't. It hasn't.
Starting point is 01:25:55 I mean, I do think right now is different. And there it's worth distinguishing, are there deep social or economic divisions, which I don't actually think that there are versus partisanship in particular, sort of the rivalry between the two parties. And it's very clear that we are in an era of what political scientists call hyperpartisanship, right? And that the two parties have taken
Starting point is 01:26:19 sort of fundamentally different positions and moved further apart from one another. And that is what I think people talk about when they say our country is divided. So the country may not be divided, even if our politics are highly partisan. That is a divergence from other time periods in our history. So I wonder if this kind of political partisanship is actually an illusion of division. I sometimes feel like we mostly all agree on some basic fundamentals. And the things that people allegedly disagree on are really blown out of proportion. And there's like a media machine and the politicians really want you to pick a blue side
Starting point is 01:27:12 and a red side. And because of that, somehow, I mean, families break up over things getting dinner about who they voted for. There's a really strong pressure to be the red or blue. And I wonder if that's a feature or a bug, whether this is just part of the mechanism of democracy that we want to, even if there's not a real thing to be divided over, we need to construct it such that you can always have attention of ideas in order to make progress, to figure out how to progress as a nation.
Starting point is 01:27:46 I think we're figuring that out in real time. On the one hand, it's easy to say that it's a feature of a political system that has two parties. The United States is in some ways unique in not being a parliamentary democracy. So in some ways, you would think that would be the feature that is causing partisanship and to reach these heights. That said, we can even see in parliamentary systems in all around the world that the same kinds of rhetoric of irreconcilable division,
Starting point is 01:28:25 a kind of politics of emotion, are proliferating around the world. Some of that, as you say, I think is not as real as it appears on television, on social media, and other formats. So, I don't know that other countries are, you know, that are experiencing sort of political conflict. I'm not sure that they're deeply divided either. So, I've had the fortune of being intellectually active through the George Bush versus
Starting point is 01:29:00 Al Gore election, then the Obama and just every election since. Right. And it seems like a large percentage of those elections, there has been a claim that the elections were rigged, that there is some conspiracy, corruption, malevolence on the other side. I distinctly remember when Donald Trump won in 2016, a lot of people I know said that election was rigged, and there's different explanations, including Russian influence. And then in 2020, I was just running in Austin along the river, and somebody said, like, oh, a huge fan of the podcast and they said, like, what do you
Starting point is 01:29:46 think of this? It's just not right. What's happening in this country that the 2020 election was obviously rigged from their perspective in electing Joe Biden versus Donald Trump. Do you think there's a case to be made for and against each claim in the full context of history of our elections being rigged? I think the American election system is fundamentally and reliable. And I think that the evidence is clear for that,
Starting point is 01:30:33 regardless of which election you're looking at. And sometimes whether you look at a presidential election or even a local county election for dog catcher or something, right? That the amount of time and resources and precision that go into voter registration, vote counting, certification processes are crucial to democratic institutions. I think when someone says rigged, regardless of which side of the political spectrum they're coming from, they're looking for an answer that, you know, they're looking for that one answer for what is in fact a complex system, right? Right? So, you know, on the left, when they say rigged, they may be pointing to a wide range
Starting point is 01:31:28 of ways in which they think that the system is tilted through, you know, gerrymandering, you know, sort of misrepresentation through the electoral college. On the right, when people say rigged, they may be concerned about voter security, about ways in which the mainstream media may control messages, and in both cases, the feeling is, it's articulated as my vote didn't get counted right. But the deeper concern is, my vote doesn't count. My voice isn't being heard. So no, I don't think the elections are rigged.
Starting point is 01:32:21 So let me sort of push back, right? There's a comfort to the story that they're not rigged. And a lot of us like to live in comfort. So people who articulate conspiracy theories say sure it's nice to be comfortable, but here's the reality. And the thing they articulate is there's incentives in close elections,
Starting point is 01:32:42 which we seem to have non-stop close elections. There's so many financial interests. There's so many powerful people. Surely you can construct not just with the media and all the ways you describe both on the left and the right, the elections can be rigged, but literally actually in a fully illegal way, manipulate the results of votes. Surely there's incentive to do that. And I don't think that's the totally ridiculous argument. Because it's like, all right, well, I mean, it actually lands to the question, which is a hard question for me to ask as an optimist, of how many malevolent people out there and how many malevolent people are required to rig an election. So how many, what is the face transition for a system to become from like corruption light to corruption to high level of corruption
Starting point is 01:33:47 such that you could do things like red elections, which is what happens quite a lot in many nations in the world even today. So yes, there is interference in elections and there has been in American history, right, and we can go all the way back into the, you know, into the 18th century. You don't have to go back to, you know, Texas in the 1960s, LBJ to find examples of direct interference in the outcome of elections. And there are incentives to do that. Those incentives will only feel more existential as hyperpartisanship makes people think that the outcome of the elections are a matter of black and white or life and death. You will see people organizing every way they can to shape elections.
Starting point is 01:34:45 We saw this in the 1850s, right? When settlers, pro and anti-slavery sort of flooded into Kansas to try to sort of determine the outcome of an election. We see this in the reconstruction period, right? When the Cluclex clan shows up to kind of, to block the doors for black voters in the south. You know, that this history is not new, it's there. I think what the reason why I think that the
Starting point is 01:35:16 system is sound is not, or the reason when I say I believe that the election system is fundamentally sound, And when I say I believe that the election system is fundamentally sound, it's not, I'm not trying to be reassuring or encouraged complacency, right? I'm saying like, you know, this is something that we need to do and to work on. So the current electoral mechanisms are sufficiently robust, even if there is corruption, and even if there is rigging the force that corrects itself corrects and ensures that nobody gets out of line is much stronger than the other incentives, which are the corrupting incentives. And that's the thing I talked about,
Starting point is 01:36:00 visiting a Ukraine, talking about corruption, where a lot of people talk about corruption as being a symptom. Not if the system allows crazy incentives for there to be corruption, humans will always go for corruption. That's just you have to assume that the power of the United States is that it constructed systems that prevent you from being corrupt at scale. At least, I mean, depends what you believe
Starting point is 01:36:25 with. Most of us, if you believe in this country, you have to, you believe in the self-correcting mechanism of corruption, that even if that desire is in the human heart, the system resist it, prevents it. That's your current belief. prevents it. That's your current belief. Yes, as of today. But I do think that those, that will require oversight by institutions, ideally, ones that are insulated as much as possible from partisan politics, which is very difficult right now. And it will require the demands of the American people, that they want these elections to be fair and secure. And that means to lose them, regardless of which party you're in favor of. So what do you think about the power of the media to create partisanship?
Starting point is 01:37:25 I'm really worried that there's a huge incentive, speaking of incentives, to divide the country. The media and the politicians are not sure where to originate, but it feels like it's the media. Maybe it's a very cynical perspective on journalism, but it seems like if we're angry and divided as evenly as possible, you're going to maximize the number of clicks. So it's almost like the media wants to like people that are going to be the most divisive maximizing. And the worry I have is they are not beyond
Starting point is 01:38:02 either feeding or if you want to be very cynical, manufacturing narratives that lead that division, like the narrative of an election being rigged. Because if you convinced half the populace that the election was completely rigged, that's a really good way to get a lot of clicks. And like And I the very cynical view is I don't know if the media machine will stop the destruction of our democracy in service of getting more clicks. It may destroy our entire democracy just to get more clicks just because the fire as the thing burns down will get clicks. Am I putting too much blame on the media here?
Starting point is 01:38:51 The machine of it. You're diagnosing the incentive structure, you're depicting that with 100% accuracy. But I think history teaches that you might be giving the media too much sort of causal power, that the American people are smarter than the media that they consume, right? And even today, we know that, there are people who consume, even people who consume just Fox or just MSNBC know what they're consuming.
Starting point is 01:39:27 And so I don't think that media will be the solution. And I certainly don't think that returning to a media structure of the mid-20th century with three news channels that all tell us one story is that's no golden age that we're trying to get back to, for sure. Well, there is a novel thing in human history, which is Twitter and social media and so on. So we're trying to find our footing as a nation to figure out how to think about politics,
Starting point is 01:40:01 how to maintain our basic freedoms, our sense of democracy of our interaction with government and so on, on this new media, where medium of social media. Do you think Twitter, how do you think Twitter changed things? Do you think Twitter is good for democracy? And do you think it has changed what it means to be an American citizen? Or is it just the same old media mechanism? It has not changed what it means to be an American citizen. It may have changed the day-to-day sound of being and the experience of it. It's got noisier, it's got louder, and it got more de-centered. I think Twitter is a, it's paradoxical. On the one hand, it is a fundamentally
Starting point is 01:41:01 democratic platform, right? In some ways and in some ways it democratizes institutions that had gatekeepers and authority figures for a very long time. But on the other hand, it's not a democratic institution at all. It's a for-profit corporation and it operates under those principles. And so, you know, that said,
Starting point is 01:41:24 it's an you know, is an institution of American and global life, and that the people of the United States have the authority to regulate or reshape as they see fit, both that and other major media players. So, one of the most dramatic decisions that illustrate both sides of what you're saying is when Twitter decided to ban, I think permanently, the president of the United States, Donald Trump off of Twitter. Can you make the case that that was a good idea and make the case that that was a bad idea?
Starting point is 01:42:01 Can you see both perspective on this? Yes, I think, I mean, the simple fact of the matter is, Twitter is a platform. It has rules of service. Twitter concluded that President Trump had violated the terms of service and blocked them, right? And if you have roles, you have to enforce them. Did it have consequences? It had direct and predictable consequences, that of creating a sense among millions of Americans that Twitter had taken aside in politics or confirming their belief that it had done so. Will it have unintended consequences? This is where the historian can come in and say,
Starting point is 01:42:53 yes, there's always unintended consequences. We don't know what it would mean for political figures to be excluded from various media platforms under these notions of that they had violated in terms of service, etc. So, I guess we'll see. Well, to me, so I'm generally against censorship, but to take Twitter's perspective, it's unclear to me in terms of unintended consequences, whether censoring a human being from being party or platform is going to decrease or increase the amount of hate in the world. So as a strong case to be made, that banning somebody like Donald Trump increases the amount of hate in the world. So as a strong case to be made that banning
Starting point is 01:43:46 somebody like Donald Trump increases the amount of resentment among people and that's a very large number of people that support him or even love him or even see him as a great president one of the greatest this country has had. And so if you completely suppress this voice, you're going to intensify the support that he has from just the regular support for another human being who were at the president to somebody that becomes an almost heroic figure for that. That's how people now the flip side is removing a person from a platform like Donald Trump might lessen the megaphone of that particular person, might actually level the democratic notion that everybody
Starting point is 01:44:37 has a voice. So, basically, removing the loud extremes is helpful for giving the center, the calm, the thoughtful voices, more power. So in that sense, that teaches a lesson that don't be crazy in any one direction. Don't go full, don't go linen, don't go Hitler, don't, like you have to stay in the middle. There's divisions in the middle, there's discussions in the middle, to stay in the middle. There's divisions in the middle, there's discussions in the middle, but stay in the middle. That's sort of the steel man in the case for for censoring. But I boy is censorship a slippery slope. And also boys wouldn't be coming a thing that's more than just a company. It seems like it's a medium of communication that we use for information, for knowledge,
Starting point is 01:45:32 for wisdom even. During the period of COVID, we used it to gain an understanding of what the hell's going on. What should we do? What's the state of the art science? Science fundamentally transformed during the time of COVID, because you have no time for the full review cycle that science usually goes through. And some of the best sources of information for me,
Starting point is 01:45:54 from the conspiracy theory to the best doctors was Twitter, the data, the stats, all that kind of stuff. And that feels like more than a company. And then Twitter and YouTube and different places took a really strong stance on COVID, which is the lazy stance in my opinion, which is we're going to listen to whatever CDC or the institutions have said. But the reality is, you're an institution of your own now. You're kind of the press. You're like there's a, it says a really difficult position. It's a really difficult position to take. But I wish they've stepped up and taken on the full responsibility and the pain of fighting for the freedom of speech. Yes, they need to do that. But I'm struck by some of the things that you said,
Starting point is 01:46:53 ways in which Twitter has the power to shape the conversation. And I don't think in a democratic society, democratic policies should seed that power to for-profit companies. Do you agree that it's possible that Twitter has that power currently? Do you sense that it has that power? Is that my sense as Twitter is the power to start wars,
Starting point is 01:47:20 like tweets of the power to start wars, to change the direction of elections. Maybe in the sense in the ways in which a wave has the power to wash away sand, it's still the medium. It's not in itself an actor. It's how actors use the platform. Which requires us to scrutinize the structure of the platform and access to it. Unfortunately, it's not maybe as similar to the wave. It's not just a medium. It's a medium plus. It's a medium that enables virality, that benefits from virality of engagement. And that means singular voices can have a disproportionate impact. Like not even voices, singular ideas, dramatic ideas can have a disproportionate impact.
Starting point is 01:48:15 And so that actually threatens, it's almost like, I don't know what the equivalent is in nature, but it's a wave that can grow exponentially because of the intensity of the initial intensity of the wave. I don't know how to describe this a dynamical system, but it feels like it feels like there is a responsibility there not to accelerate voices just because they get a lot of engagement. You have to have a proportional representation of that voice. But you're saying that a strong democracy should be robust to that. A strong democracy can and should and will be.
Starting point is 01:48:57 I think the other thing I historian will tell you about Twitter is that this too shall pass. Yes. Twitter is that this too shall pass, right? Yeah. But I do think, you know, the structures of the platform of the algorithm of this and other major players are eligible for scrutiny by democratic institutions? So in preparing to teach the course, the history of American presidential elections leading up to the 2024 elections. So one of the lessons of history is this too shall pass, so don't make everything about
Starting point is 01:49:33 this is going to either save or destroy our nation. That seems to be like the message of every single election, as I'm doing Trump hands. Do you think Donald Trump, what do you think about the 2024 election? Do you think Donald Trump runs? Do you think the tension will grow? Or was that a singular moment? Do you think he'll be like AOC versus Trump or whoever, whatever the most drama maximizing thing or will things stabilize?
Starting point is 01:50:08 I think I can, you know, historians don't like to predict the future, but I can predict this one that it will not be a calm and stabilized election. I think as of, you know, the time that we're talking in 2022, we don't, there are too many, you know, sort of open questions, particularly about whether Joe Biden will run for re-election. He says he will, but, you know, but the jury, I think is out on that. It, you know, I can't predict whether Donald Trump will run for election or not.
Starting point is 01:50:39 I think, you know, we do know that that President Trump doesn't like to start things he can't win. And if the polling data suggests that he's not a credible candidate, he might be reluctant to enter the race and might find more appealing the kind of sideline kind of kingmaker role that he's been crafting since he left the White House. I think there are plenty of people who are dreaming that there's some sort of centrist candidate, whether it's a conservative Democrat or a liberal Republican who will save us from all of this. Either within the party or in a third party run, I don't think that's likely.
Starting point is 01:51:31 Why aren't we getting them? Why don't you think it's likely? What's the explanation? This seems to be a general hunger for a person like this. You would, but the system sorts it out. The primary systems and the party candidate selection systems will favor more partisan views, more conservative Republicans, more liberal Democrats as the kind of central candidates. It seems like the system prefers mediocre, executor mediocre leaders, mediocre partisan leaders. If I take a cynical look, but maybe I'm romanticizing the leaders of the past. And maybe I'm just remembering
Starting point is 01:52:11 the great leader of the past. And yeah, I can assure you, there's plenty of mediocre partisans in the 19th century. Okay. And the 20th. Well, let me ask you about platforming. Do you think Donald, it's the Twitter question, but I was torn about whether to talk to Donald Trump on this podcast as a historian. What would you advise? I think, I mean, you know, this is a difficult question, right?
Starting point is 01:52:45 For historians who want, you know, sort of want to make sure that they know sort of what Americans are thinking and talking about, you know, four centuries later. So one of the things that, you know, at least my understanding is that when President Trump was banned from Twitter, his account was also deleted. And that is one of the most valuable sources that historians will use to understand
Starting point is 01:53:14 that the era and parts of it were sort of archived and reconstructed. But in that sense, I think that is also a real loss to the historical record. I mean, I think that your podcast shows you'll talk to you'll talk to anyone. So I'm here, right? Right. So, you know, I'm not in the business of saying, you know, don't talk, don't talk.
Starting point is 01:53:39 That's one of the difficult things when I think about Hitler. I think Hitler's stalling, I don't know if World War I quite has the same intensity of controversial leaders, but one of the sad things from a historian perspective is how few interviews Hitler has given or Stalin has given. And And that's such a difficult thing because it's obvious that talking to Donald Trump, that talking to Xi Jinping, talking to Putin is really valuable from a historical perspective to understand. But then you think about the momentary impact of such a conversation and you think, well, depending on how the conversation goes, you can steer or flame.
Starting point is 01:54:30 What is it? Feed the flame of war or conflict or abuses of power and things like this. And that's, I think, the tension between the journalist and the historian. Because when journalist interview dictators, for example, one of the things that strikes me is they're often very critical of the dictator. They're basically attacking them in front of their face as opposed to trying to understand. Because what I perceive they're doing is they're signaling to the other journalists that they're on the right side of history kind of thing. But that's not very productive. And it's also why the dictators and leaders often don't do those interviews.
Starting point is 01:55:19 It's not productive to understand who the human being is to understand you have to empathize. Because few people, I think, few leaders do something from a place of malevolence. I think they really do think they're doing good. And not even for themselves, not even for selfish reasons. I think they're doing great for the doing the right thing for their country or for whoever the group they're leading and to understand that you have to and And by the way a large percent of the country often supports them I bet if you pull legitimately pull people in North Korea
Starting point is 01:55:57 They will believe that their leader is doing the right thing for their country And so to understand that, you have to emphasize, so that's the tension of the journalists, I think, and the historian, because obviously the historian doesn't care. They really want to make the care, obviously, deeply. But they know the history requires deep understanding of the human being in the full context. Yeah, it's a tough decision to make. Well, I think it's both for journalists and historians, the challenge is not to be too close to your subject, right?
Starting point is 01:56:33 And not to be overly influenced and used by them, right? You know, when you're talking to a living subject, which historians do, you know, too, you know, it's a matter of making sure that you triangulate their story with the rest of the record, right? And that may paint a different picture of the person than, and we'll prevent you
Starting point is 01:57:00 as a journalist or a historian from kind of, you know, just telling someone else's story. And so, and historians also have the benefit of going back, you know, 30, 40 years and finding all the other stories and figuring out, you know, playing two truths and a lie, you know, like which parts are, you know, which parts are accurate, which are, which are not. And journalists do that work in a day-to-day basis. But historians, you know, we get a little more time to think about what we're doing. Well, I personally also think it's deeply disrespectful to the populace, to people, to censor and ignore a person that's supported by a very large number of people. Like that, you, oh, I personally feel like you
Starting point is 01:57:49 owe the citizens of this country a deep empathy and understanding of the leaders they support, even if you disagree with what they say. I mean, that's the, the, to me, I'm much more worried about the resentment of the censorship, that it's to having a good conversation with Donald Trump is ultimately valuable. Because he, I think, especially in this case, I agree with you that Donald Trump is not a singular person. He represents a set of feelings that a large number of people have. And whatever those feelings are, you can try to figure out by talking to people, but also talking to the man, and then seeing the interplay there, what is this really represent? In this period
Starting point is 01:58:38 in history, in this slice of the world, ultimately understanding, I think leads to compassion and love and unity, which is how this whole thing progresses. The tension between the different sides is useful to have a good conversation, but ultimately coming up with the right answer and progressing towards that answer is how you make progress. Do you think a pure democracy can work? So we have this representative democracy with these contentious elections and so on. When we start a civilization on Mars, which becomes more and more realistic technologically, we can have a more direct access to be able to vote on issues and vote for ideas. Do you think it can work?
Starting point is 01:59:26 I don't think we have to go to Mars to do it, right? I think the answer is not to flip a switch and turn on something called pure democracy when people are not ready for it, when their incentive structures are not structured for it. But you can experiment with more democratic forms of governance one after another, right? Whether it's experimenting with technology
Starting point is 01:59:58 to find new ways of getting greater rates of participation in democracy. I think that we see some experiments and sort of more complicated systems of voting. That in fact might actually be more reflective of people's choices than simply picking one candidate, right, sort of rank choice voting or run offs, other kinds of things.
Starting point is 02:00:24 You know, I think that we can think more creatively about something like participatory budgeting, in which we put all this money into the government, and then we should, as a people, there are more democratic ways of how we spend it. And I think the most urgent in some level is a more democratic form of foreign policy making, right? The foreign policy making, decision making, about the military, about foreign policy is very ways insulated from popular participation in modern American history. And I think, you know, there are not the going to solve this. You know, it's a combination of technology and human creativity, but I think, um, you know, I think we can start having that direction
Starting point is 02:01:13 Whether we get there before we get to Mars. I don't I don't know What interesting lessons and thoughts if you look at the fundamentals of the history of American elections Do you hope to reveal when you try to teach the class? And how will those fundamentals be met by the students that received that was them? So what do you think about this dance, especially such an interesting idea, and now I hope you do go through with this kind of idea is look at the history while the next one is happening. Yes. I think, you know, it's worth remembering, right, that the students who are typical American students who's in college right now, right, has lived their entire life after the election of 2000 and Bush
Starting point is 02:02:06 Fiecore, right? And after 9-11 probably. And yeah, absolutely. Yeah, after all of these things, right? And so on the one hand, they take partisanship and contentious elections for granted, they don't, I think, share some vision that things used to be different, right? They don't remember a world that had lots of moderate Democrats and liberal Republicans and sort of running around in it. But in some ways it's a way of looking back into the past to find other
Starting point is 02:02:48 ways of organizing our politics. It's also a way of reassuring students that we have been through contentious and even violent elections before in our history. And you know, that people have defended the right to vote. People have risked their lives to vote. I think they will understand that as well. And maybe knowledge of history here can help deescalate the emotions you
Starting point is 02:03:21 might feel about one candidate or another. And from a place of calmness you can more easily arrive at wisdom. That's my hope. Just as a brief aside, you brief aside, but nevertheless, you wrote the book bound by war that describes the century of war in the Pacific. So looking at this slice of geography and power, so most crucially through the partnership between the United States and the Philippines, can you tell some aspect of the story that is often perhaps not considered when you start to look more at the geopolitics of Europe and Soviet Union and the United States. How did the war in the Pacific define the 20th century?
Starting point is 02:04:15 Yeah, I came to this book bound by war from a sense that our stories were to lopsided toward Europe, right? That American history, when viewed from the Pacific, specifically in the 20th century, helps us understand American power in some new ways, right? Not only American projection of power into Asia, right? But also the ways in which American power affected people in Asia, right? But also the ways in which American power affected people in Asia, right?
Starting point is 02:04:47 Either as, you know, in places like the Philippines where the United States had a colony for almost 50 years, or Asian-Americans, people who had migrated over their descendants in the United States. And those linkages between the United States and Asia, particularly the US Philippine connection. I think we're something that needed to be traced across the 20th century, because it's a way, kind of a new way of seeing American power, from a different angle, you see it in that way. What is some aspect that define America from,
Starting point is 02:05:19 from when you take the perspective of the Pacific, what would military conflict and the asymmetry of power there? Right. So I start in 1898 with the US invasion of the Philippines. It's a conquest and annexation. And I think in many ways this is a defining conflict of the 20th century. That's often completely overlooked.
Starting point is 02:05:44 We're described, I think, incorrectly as merely a war with Spain, right? That the war in the Philippines is our first extended overseas conflict, our first conflict in what would come to be called the developing world or third world. It's a form of counterinsurgency. You know the US Army learning lessons that are then repeated again in the Second World War in Korea, Vietnam, and even after 9-11. Is the Philippines our friends or enemies in this history? Well, that's the interesting part, right, is that the book focuses in particular on Filipinos who fight with the Americans, who of in the US Army and Navy over
Starting point is 02:06:25 the course of the 20th century. And they are in a fundamentally ironic position, right? They are, they are from the Philippines and they're fighting for the United States, which is the colonial power occupying their country. And I think that irony persists, right? So if you look at sort of polling data where they ask people all around the world, you know, do you think positively or negatively about the United States that the highest responses are from the Philippines, right? Philippine has viewed the United States
Starting point is 02:06:56 more favorably than people from any other country in the world, including America, right? That they're more, I think, more favorably of Americans than Americans do. And so, you know, unpacking that irony is part of what I'm trying to get at in the book. What was the people-power revolution and what lessons can we learn from it? You kind of assign an important, a large value to it in terms of what we can learn for the American project. Yeah, so in 1986, the president of the Philippines, Ferdinand Marcos is overthrown by a popular revolution
Starting point is 02:07:33 known as people power. In the wake of a contested and probably almost certainly rigged election, that sort of confirms his rule. When that is overturned through mass movements in the Philippines, it's also sort of confirmed in many ways by the reluctance of the United States to intervene to prop up a Cold War ally
Starting point is 02:07:59 for Nen Marcus that supported American policy throughout his administration. The Reagan administration, Ronald Reagan, Reagan's president at the time, basically chooses not to support him. That's a personally wrenching decision for Reagan himself. But he's being shaped in many ways by the emerging voices of neo-conservative political, foreign policy voices, in particular, Paul Wolfowitz and the State Department and others,
Starting point is 02:08:26 who see movements for democracy and democratization that then take fire in the late 20th century, in Latin America, in South Korea, in Eastern Europe, and all around the world until it hits the Wallain and Tiananmen Square in June 1989. What's that wall? What's the what what do you mean by it hits the wall? So there are you know there are global movements for for democratization for for opening up you know throughout the world starting in the 1980s and you And obviously they continue in Eastern Europe with the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. I say it hits the wall in China in with the protests in Tiananmen Square
Starting point is 02:09:15 that are blocked and that are crushed. And I think represent a real sort of turning point in the history of democratic institutions on a global scale in the late 20th century. So there's some places where the fight for freedom will work and some places not. And that's the kind of lesson from the 20th to take forward to the 21st century. No, I think the lesson is maybe one that, you know, we talked about earlier that there's this dynamic dance
Starting point is 02:09:49 between leaders, whether totalitarian leaders or leaders of democratic movements and the people that they're leading. And sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't. Let me ask a big ridiculous question because we talked about sort of presidential elections. Now, this is objectively, definitively. You have to answer one person who is the greatest president in American history.
Starting point is 02:10:14 Oh, that's easy. Yeah. Abraham Lincoln. Is that easy? Not George Washington. You know, Washington had his, had the statesman qualities he understood his power as, as the first president. Also a relinquished power. He was willing to relinquish power. He, you know, but he, but Lincoln has the combination of personal leadership, a fundamental moral character,
Starting point is 02:10:46 and just the ability to fight the fight of politics, to play the game of it, to get where he's going, to play the short game and the long game, to work with his enemies, to block them when he had to. And he gets the United States through the Civil War, so you gotta get some credit for that. And it's pretty good at making speeches. Obviously it helps that he's a remarkable speaker
Starting point is 02:11:17 and able to convey those kinds of visions, but he is first and foremost a politician and probably the best one we have. Both a getting elected and a ruling. And some ways better at the doing than at the getting elected, right? You know that he, you know, the election of 1860 is a hot mess, you know, that could have worked out many different ways. And even the election of 1864, when we have a presidential election in the middle of a civil war, it was not a foregone conclusion that Lincoln would be reelected. So both times he's not a master campaigner by any means, but he was a master politician
Starting point is 02:12:04 as a governor. Do we have leaders like that today? Is it so one perspective is like leaders aren't, ain't what they used to be. And another perspective is, well, we always romanticize stuff that happens in the past. We forget the flaws and remember the great moments. Yeah, both of those things are true, right? On the one hand, you know, we don't, we are not surrounded by people of Lincoln's caliber right now.
Starting point is 02:12:36 That feels like the case. And I think that, I think we can say that with some certainty. But you know, I always like to point to President Harry Truman, who left office with some truly abysmal presidential ratings, was dismissed throughout his presidency as unqualified, as not knowing what he was doing, et cetera. And then turns out, with hindsight, we know that he was better at the job than anyone understood. Better at getting elected, right? And you remember that sign,
Starting point is 02:13:12 do he defeats Truman, right? He showed them, right? And better at holding power and better at sort of, kind of building the kind of institutions that long after he was gone demonstrated that he won the long game. And some of that is the victors do write the story. And I ask myself very much how will history remember Vladimir Zelensky?
Starting point is 02:13:40 It's not obvious. And how will history remember Putin? That too is not obvious. Because it depends on how the role, the geopolitics, how the history of these nations unravel, unfold rather. So it's very interesting to think about. And the same is true for Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Obama, George Bush, Bill Clinton, and so on. I think it's probably an unanswerable question of which of the presidents will be remembered as a great president from this time.
Starting point is 02:14:23 You can make all kinds of cases for all kinds of people and they do, but it's unclear. It's fascinating to think about when the robots finally take over which of the humans they will appreciate the most. Let me ask for advice. Do you have advice for young folks, because you mentioned the folks you're teaching, they don't even, they don't know what it's like to have waited on the internet for the thing to load up by every single web page that's suffering. They don't know what it's like to not have the internet and have a dial phone that goes
Starting point is 02:15:01 shh. And then the joy of getting angry at somebody and hanging up with a physical phone. They don't know any of that So for those young folks that look at the contention and lecture contentious elections They look at our contentious world our divided world. What advice would you give them of how to have a career? They can be proud of let's say they're in college or in high school and how to have a life that can be proud of Oh, man, that's a big question Yeah, I've never given a graduation speech. This is like warm up. Let's look for like raw materials before you write it If I did I
Starting point is 02:15:40 think I I think I would advise students that history teaches that you should be more optimistic than your current surroundings suggest, right? And I think it would be very easy as a young person today to think there's nothing I can do about this politics. There's nothing I can say to this politics. There's nothing I can say to this person on the other side of the aisle. There's nothing I can do about the planet, et cetera,
Starting point is 02:16:12 and just sort of give up. And I think history teaches that we don't know who the winners and losers are in the long run, but we know that the people who give up are always the losers. So don't give into cynicism or apathy. Yeah. Optimism paves the way. Yeah, because human beings are deeply resilient and creative, even under far more difficult circumstances than You know, then we face right now. Let me ask a question that you don't even need to that you wouldn't even dare covering your graduation
Starting point is 02:16:52 commencement speech What's the meaning of life? Why are we here? This whole project that history studies and analyzes as if as if there's a point to the whole thing what is the point? all the wars all the presidents, all the struggles to discover what it means to be human or reach for a higher ideal. Why? Why do you think we're here? I think this is where there is often a handoff from the historian to the clergy. But in the end, there's less distance between the two than you think. If you think about some of the kind of answers to that question, what is the meaning of life that are given from religious traditions?
Starting point is 02:17:51 Often they have a fundamentally historical core, right? It's about unifying the past and the present in some other non-earthly sort of dimension. And, you know, so I think there is that. I think even for people who don't have religious belief, there's a way in which history is about the shared human condition. And I think historians aspire to telling all of that story. Right? You know, we drill down on the miseries of war and depressions and so forth, but the story is not complete without blueberries and butterflies and all the rest that go with it. and all the rest that go with it. So, both the humbling and the inspiring aspect that you get by looking back at human history that we're in this together.
Starting point is 02:18:57 Christopher, this is a huge honest and amazing conversation. Thank you for taking us back to a war that not often discussed, but in many ways defined the 20th century and then the century we are in today, which is the First World War. The war that was supposed to end all wars, but instead defined the future wars and defines our struggle to try to avoid World War III. So, it's a huge honor you will talk with me today. This is amazing. Thank you so much. Thank you.
Starting point is 02:19:28 Thanks for listening to this conversation with Christopher Kupazola. To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description. And now, let me leave you some words from Woodrow Wilson in 1917 about World War I that haunted the rest of the 20th century. This is a war to end all wars.
Starting point is 02:19:50 George Santagna, a Spanish-American philosopher, responded to this quote in 1922 by saying, Thank you for listening. I hope to see you next time. you

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