Lex Fridman Podcast - #349 – Bhaskar Sunkara: The Case for Socialism
Episode Date: December 23, 2022Bhaskar Sunkara is a democratic socialist, political writer, founding editor of Jacobin, president of The Nation, and author of The Socialist Manifesto. Please support this podcast by checking out our... sponsors: - House of Macadamias: https://houseofmacadamias.com/lex and use code LEX to get 20% of your first order - Linode: https://linode.com/lex to get $100 free credit - Onnit: https://lexfridman.com/onnit to get up to 10% off - InsideTracker: https://insidetracker.com/lex to get 20% off - ExpressVPN: https://expressvpn.com/lexpod to get 3 months free EPISODE LINKS: Bhaskar's Twitter: https://twitter.com/sunraysunray Jacobin: https://jacobin.com Jacobin's Twitter: https://twitter.com/jacobin The Nation: https://thenation.com The Socialist Manifesto (book): https://amzn.to/3hKpt2p 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 (13:24) - Socialism (31:54) - Communism (58:31) - Class struggle (1:09:33) - Quality of life (1:17:29) - Unions (1:29:57) - Corruption (1:43:15) - Freedom of speech (1:51:38) - War (1:59:24) - Karl Marx (2:13:03) - Socialist vision (2:18:28) - AI and socialism (2:23:26) - Socialist policies (2:48:45) - Billionaires (2:54:43) - Bernie Sanders (3:05:10) - AOC (3:17:11) - 2024 presidential election (3:22:05) - China (3:31:06) - Jacobin (3:38:35) - The Socialist Manifesto (3:45:55) - Advice for young people (3:49:28) - Meaning of life
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following is a conversation with Bosch Graszenkarra.
He's a Democratic Socialist, a political writer,
founding editor of Jacobin, President of the Nation,
former Vice Chair of the Democratic Socialist of America,
and the author of the Socialist Manifesto,
the case for radical politics, and an era of extreme inequality.
As a side note, let me say that this conversation with Bosch Graszenkarra,
who's a brilliant socialist
writer and philosopher, represents what I hope to do with this podcast.
I hope to talk to the left and the right, to the far left and the far right, always with
the goal of presenting and understanding both the strongest interpretation of their ideas
and valuable thought-provoking arguments against those ideas.
Also, I hope to understand the human being behind the ideas.
I trust in your intelligence as the listener to use the ideas you hear,
to help you learn, to think, to empathize, and to make up your mind.
I will often fall short in pushing back too hard, or not pushing back enough of not bringing up topics I should
have of talking too much of interrupting too much or maybe sometimes in the rare cases
not enough of being too silly on a serious topic or being too serious on a silly topic.
I'm trying to do my best and I will keep working my ass off to improve.
In this way, I hope to talk to prominent figures
in the political space, even controversial ones,
on both the left and the right.
For example, I hope to talk to Donald Trump
and Alexandria Acacia Cortez
to Ron DeSantis and Barack Obama
and of course many others across the political spectrum.
I sometimes hear accusations about me being controlled in some way by a government or an intelligence agency,
like CIA, FSB, Mossad, or perhaps that I'm controlled in some way by the very human desire for money, fame, power, access.
All I have is my silly little words.
But let me give them to you.
I'm not and will never be controlled by anyone.
There's nothing in this world that can break me and force me to sacrifice my integrity.
People call me naive.
I'm not naive.
I'm optimistic.
And optimism isn't a passive state of being. It's a constant battle against
the world that wants to pull you into a downward spiral of cynicism. To me, optimism is freedom.
Freedom to think, to act, to build, to help, at times, in the face of impossible odds.
As I often do, please allow me to read a few lines from the poem If by Rajar Kipling.
If you can keep your head when all about you are losing theirs and blame it on you, if
you can trust yourself when all men doubt you but make allowance for their doubting too.
If you can wait and not be tired by waiting or being lied about don't deal in lies, or being hated, don't give way to hating,
and yet don't look too good, nor talk too wise.
Even this very poem is mocking my overrermanic ridiculousness as I read it, the matter irony
is not lost on me, my friends.
I'm a silly little kid trying to do a bit of good in this world.
Thank you for having me back through all of it. All of my mistakes. Thank you for the love.
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And now dear friends, here's Baskar Sankara.
Let's start with a big broad question. What is socialism?
How do you like to define it?
How do you like to think about it?
Well, there's so many socialists out there and we can't seem to agree about anything.
So my definition, I'm sure, is really just my definition, but I think at the minimum
socialism is about making sure that the core necessities of life,
food, housing, education, and so on are guaranteed to everyone just by virtue of being born so
that those people can reach their potential. And I think that's a minimum requirement of socialism.
Beyond that, I think socialism, especially democratic socialism, the type of socialism that I believe in, is about taking democracy from just the political democratic realm and extending
it into economic and social spheres as well.
So if we think the democracy is a good thing, why do we allow our workplaces to be run
and autocratic ways. So economic, political, social, in all those realms, the ideas, the philosophical
ideas apply. Like, what are, if you can put words to it, what are some philosophical ideas about
human beings that are at the core of this? I think at the core, it's the idea that we have intrinsic value.
We are individuals that have unequal talents, of course.
We're individuals that want different things, but this unique individualness can only truly
come to light in a society in which there are certain collective or social
guarantees. So we could think just like Stephen J. Gould, the scientist and
socialist used to say about how many thousands of potential Einstein's or Leonardo
Davinci's that died in sweat shops and on plantations and never got the chance to cultivate
what was unique and human about themselves
and also never got a chance to have families
and impart what was special and important to them
to future generations and to posterity.
My own grandmother was born in Trinidad, in DeBago.
She was a literate till her dying days.
She in the East Orange, New Jersey. She never had the chance to write down her memories of
her life in Trinidad as a young woman and what it meant. She of course had lots of
children. She was able to impart some stories to her children and grandchildren.
But I often think about what someone with her wit and intelligence could have done with
with a little bit more support.
But if all human beings have intrinsic value, you don't have to be an Einstein for the
application of some of the ideas that you're talking about.
Is there a tension or a trade-off between our human civilization or society helping the unlucky versus rewarding the skillful and the hardworking.
I think you do both. There's always a balance between the two. I think you'd reward people who make innovations and we would prove lives for everyone for their innovations by giving them, let's say, even more consumption, even that level of inequality
while still making sure that there's not people in poverty and suffering.
And while making sure that, hey, we're going to give these people who want to work that
extra 10 hours or 20 hours or want to apply their hard, some some extra benefits, but that these benefits would be
not the extreme disparities that you have today. So at the core of socialism and maybe democratic
socialism is a maybe a reallocation of wealth, reallocation of resources. I think it's wealth
and resources, yes, but it's also power. And I guess one way to think about this is
Some thinkers on the right like Hayek they would say in their most generous moments talking about socialists and socialism
They would say socialists want to trade some of your freedom for equality and
That's them trying to just accurately describe what socialism is trying to do.
The way that I would put it is a little bit different. Socialists are proposing a trade-off,
but it's really a trade-off between freedom and freedom. And by that I mean, let's say you set up
a successful business. And you set up a business right here in Austin, Texas, some sort of firm. It's
producing some widget or whatever and it's producing a good that people really want and
demand. But you have some competition. You decide to hire 20, 30 people to help you.
You enter into a free contract with these people who under capitalism, of course,
we're not living in feudalism have the option to join any other firm, but they like you and they
like this firm and they like your offer and you're paying them, let's say $20 an hour for
40 hours of work per week. Now, if the government comes along and says, okay, there's now a new minimum wage,
the minimum wage is $22 an hour, and also there's a maximum work week, 35 hour work week.
If you work someone over 35 hours, even if they agree, you have to pay them time and a half.
Now that, of course, is now an abridgment of your freedom as an entrepreneur, your freedom
to set certain terms of employment, to engage in a contract with free people.
But now, your workers and other workers in the sector, because if you did it unilaterally,
you'd just get undercut by your competition.
Now, these people now have a few extra hours a week they can do whatever they want with.
They could watch more NFL with it.
They could spend more time with their friends or family or whatever else.
And they're still getting paid the same if not better because the wages also went up.
So it's really a question often of trade offs between who's freedom and autonomy?
Are you going to prioritize the freedom and autonomy of the entrepreneur or the capitalists in this case or the freedom and autonomy of the entrepreneur or the capitalist in this case
or the freedom and autonomy of ordinary workers.
Now you could create a society that swings so far in the direction of prioritizing the
freedom of one group or one class or whatever else compared to another that you end up
in some sort of tyranny.
Now if the state said, you know, you lex, you're a capitalist
so you don't get the right to vote, or we're going to take away your private home
or your ability to do things we think are intrinsic human rights.
Now, this would be tyranny. This would be an abridgment of your rights,
but shaping your ability in the economic sphere to be an economic actor is,
I think, within the realm and scope of democratic politics.
Yeah, so those are the extremes you're referring to.
One perspective I like to take on socialism versus capitalism is under each system, the
extremes of each system and the moderate versions of each system,
how can people take advantage of it?
So it seems like no matter what part of the human nature is, whatever the rules, whatever
the framework, whatever the system, somebody is going to take advantage of it.
And that's the kind of pragmatic look at it, in practice what actually happens.
Also, the incentives and the human behavior, what actually happens in practice under these
systems.
So, if you have a higher and higher minimum wage and people watch more and more NFL, how does
that change their actual behavior as a productive member of society and actually at the individual level as
somebody, as somebody who could be an Einstein and she's just not too because NFL is so
awesome to watch.
So like, is both how do people, malicious people that want to take advantage?
Maybe not malicious, but people that like me are lazy and want to take advantage and people that
Also, I think like me like I tend to believe about myself that I have
potential and
If I let my laziness naturally take over which it often does I won't materialize the potential
so if you
If you make life too easy for me, I feel like I will never get anything done.
Me personally, of course, there's a giant set of circumstances of the unlucky and the
overburdened and so on.
Okay, so how can people take advantage of each system, socialism, capitalism?
So for one thing, people are going to take advantage of systems.
They're going to find loopholes.
They're going to find ways around.
They're going to find ways to, to, at times, dominate and course others,
even in systems meant to get rid of domination and coercion.
That's why we need to design our systems in such a way that, that it eliminates
as many of these things as possible.
And also, that's why we need democracy.
We need freedom.
So in a Soviet system, for instance, you have the rise of this authoritarian bureaucracy
that dominated, of course, others in the name of socialism.
Now, that system desperately could have used some political democracy and some checks
on what people were doing and some ability to reverse the power, right?
And as soon as, of course, little elements of democracy was brought
to that system, the system collapsed because there started to be outlets for
dissent and for dissatisfaction. So I think we can't design a
parrari a perfect system. We need to be committed to certain principles that
allow systems to be perfected.
And for me, that's the importance of democracy.
So even a few years ago, not to go on a tangent, but people are allowed in Chinese authoritarianism.
And they're saying, China is building this efficient system.
The state runs so well.
There's technocratic excellence.
Plus, there's just productivity and they're just working harder than Americans and whatever else.
But look at in practice what really happened with COVID, both the initial suppressing of information about what was happening in Wuhan and the outbreak where many ordinary Chinese workers and doctors and others were trying to get the word out. And they were suppressed by Communist Party officials
locally and moved on probably with inclusion,
and naturally, nationally.
And now with zero COVID policies and whatever else.
So I think that often we find that even though it seems
like these are weak systems and democracy
makes us less competent technocratically and otherwise. I think it's
kind of a necessity for systems to grow and evolve, to have that freedom in civil society.
But as for individuals, now, the first part of it is, yeah, I think people should be free to
make their own choices. You might have tremendous potential, but you might choose to spend it in
leisure. And leisure doesn't only mean doing
you know, sitting around at home, drinking a bunch of beers, kind of wasting your life
away that way. Leisure might mean spending more time with your friends and family, building
these sort of relationships that are going to maybe not change the world in some, some
medicines, but we'll change the lives of the people around you and we'll change your
community for the, for the better. I'm will change your community for the for the better.
I'm taking notes here because I for me, Leisure just meant playing a lot of Skyrim.
This whole family relationship then, I'm going to have to work on that.
I didn't realize that's also including Leisure because I'm going to have to reconsider
my whole life here anyway.
No, Leisure should mean survey activity too, right?
I mean, there's that famous book, the Robert Putnam one, Bowling Alone, which described it for now. I mean, I was worth mentioning it to nine. I like,
you know, video and computer games, you know. So I definitely do that type of leisure too,
but I found a lot more richness in my life when, in the last, you know, decade, a lot of
my leisure has returned to like going to the local bar for like the couple
drinks I have a week instead of doing it at home alone watching TV or something, you know,
because you get that random conversation, that sense of a place and and and belonging. But
I guess what's the undercurrent maybe of your question was, now if you have a system with lots of
carrots, but not the whip of, hey, you might be
destitute, you might be unemployed, you might not be able to support yourself unless you're
working a certain amount, would we still be as productive?
Would we still be able to generate enough value for society?
And I think that that's a question that is quite interesting.
I think that we're living in a society now with enough abundance
that we could afford more people deciding to opt out of the system,
out of production, and that the carrots of staying in, you know, more money for consumption, more
ability to do cool things, more just social rewards, it comes from being successful or from
providing would be enough. But that's another thing that would have to be balanced in a system.
So if we were seeing mass unemployment by choice in a democratic social system,
then you might need to reconfigure the incentives.
You might need to encourage people
to go back into production,
but that's something that again,
you could do through democracy and through good governance.
You don't have to set the perfect blueprint in motion.
You know, write up a treatise now in 50 years for now, you know, try to follow it
like it's scripture. So by the way, I do like how you said whip instead of stick in carrot and stick.
That's putting a weight on the scale of which is better. But yes,
but I would actually argue to push back that the wealthier we get as a society is as a world
that the more comfortable the socialness become.
So the less of a whip or a stick they become.
Because one of the negative consequences even if you're on welfare is like, well, life is not going to be that great.
But the wealthier we become, the better the social
programs become, the easier life becomes at the bottom. And so you might not have this
motivation financially to get out from the bottom. That said, the pushback and the pushback
is that there's something about human nature in general, money aside,
that strives for greatness, that strives to provide a great life, a great middle class life
for your family.
So that's the motivator to get off from the bottom.
Well, I think a lot of people who are stuck at the bottom of the labor market today,
one, these are people who are kind of are a true philanthropist
because a lot of them are the ones who are working two jobs
and are working 60 plus hours and are providing in this country
it's such a bargain for their labor because they're so underpaid.
So many of the things that the rest of us use to enjoy life
and consumption or whatever else.
Like I got here from downtown Austin and I think my lift, you know, I did tip,
but I think my lift was like eight bucks space or whatever else, you know, it's the,
I think that we are all indebted to people who are working. And we don't see it at various stages
of the production process from the workers in China,
and Taiwan producing technological things
that we're recording this on to growers
and workers in agriculture in the US.
So I think that one, worth in class people are already working.
But as far as getting out from under poverty
and desperation,
we're in a society that doesn't give people a lot of tools.
So if you don't have access to good public schools
from age five until 12, 13, it's going to be really hard to move from generations of your family
being involved in manual labor to doing other forms of labor.
You're going to be stuck at a certain part of our labor market as a result.
If you don't have access to decent healthcare throughout your life, you might be already
preordained to an early grave by the time that something kicks in, you really want to change
something in your life in the mid-20s.
Obviously, it's a combination of agency and all these other factors.
There's still something, I think, a natively human and natively striving that a lot of
people have, but we don't really give people in our current society the tools to really be full participants in our society.
We just take for granted, for example, and I'm from the Northeast, so I give like excessively Northeast example.
We take for granted that someone from, you know, Hartford Connecticut is going to have your average working class person, Hart, is going to have a very different life outcome than someone born on the same day,
the same hour at an in-granage Connecticut.
You know, we take for granted that accidents of birth are going to dictate outcomes.
So you mean like, depending on the conditions of where you grow up,
there's going to be fundamentally different experience
in terms of education,
in terms of the resources available to you,
to allow yourself to flourish.
Yes, if you do the...
A poor city in a rich city, and Connecticut is great.
It's highly, highly underrated.
Both New Yorkers and people from Boston
kind of have a colonial feeling about Connecticut,
where we make fun of it, and we try to carve it know, the West belongs to New York, the East of Boston, but you know, I'm here for,
you know, Connecticut nationalism. I think it's a great place. Okay. Can we actually step back a
little bit on definitions? Because you said that some of the ideas practically that you're playing
with is democratic socialism. We talked about the higher level, the higher kind of vision of socialism,
the ideals, the philosophical ideas.
But how does it all fit into the big picture historically of ideas of Marxism,
communism and socialism as it was defined and experienced and implemented in
the 20th century.
So what's your key differences? Maybe even just like socialism communism?
Yeah, well, I hate the no-true scots been sort of responsible this, which is,
oh, that socialism is bad. So it wasn't really socialism. And my socialism is good,
so it is socialism. But I think that socialism and communism share a common ancestor,
which is they both emerged out of the turmoil and development of late 19th century capitalism.
And the fact that there was all these workers parties that were organizing across the capitalist world.
organizing across the capitalist world. So in Europe, for instance, you had this mass party called
the German Social Democratic Party.
I mean, they became probably the most important,
the most vibrant party in Germany in the 1880s and 1890s,
but they were locked out of power because Germany at the time
was still mostly a target.
You know, it had a parliamentary democracy, but it was a very undemocratic democracy.
The Kaiser is still ruled.
These movements took root across the capitalist world, but including in Russia and in conditions
of illegality.
It was assumed for many, many years, and the workers moving across Europe and among socialists of Europe, they called themselves Social Democrats then, that the revolution would first probably happen in Germany, in this developed growing hub of industrial capitalism and not in semi-futal Russia.
So then Warfare 1 came, the workers movement was split between parties that decided to either keep their head down or to implicitly support the war.
And then, you know, support the war for now, keep your heads down, don't get banned, don't
get arrested, then we'll just take power after the war is over.
And those like Russia and also in the United States for that matter, that chose the path
of resistance to the war.
And it was the Bolshevik faction of the Russian movement,
but Lenin's Bolshevik party that took power in Russia after a period of turmoil
where it didn't seem what was going to go to the fascist right,
or was it going to go to the far left right or was it going to go to the far left
There was a period of flux in turmoil in Russia, but definitely old regime was not able to stand and
these Russian social Democrats these Bolsheviks
said
Social democracy has so betrayed the idea of
Internationalism and brotherhood and progress of the supposed to stand for, that we can't call ourselves social democrats anymore.
We're going to go back to this old term that Marx used.
We're going to call ourselves communists.
And that's where official kind of communism out of Russia emerged.
In all the reports of Europe, parties were actually able to take power,
some in the interwar period, but most in
the post-war period.
And they also came out of this old social democratic movement.
And these parties mostly just called themselves socialists.
And a lot of them still on paper wanted to go beyond capitalism, but in practice, they
just managed capitalism better in the interests of workers.
But they all had the same common ancestor.
And in practice, to me, social democracy means trying to insert doses of socialism within
capitalism, but maintaining capitalism. Communism met this attempt to build a socialism outside
of capitalism and often authoritarian ways in part
because of the ideology of these communists,
but in part because of the conditions in which they inherited.
They weren't heriting a democracy.
They were inheriting a country that had been ruled
by the Tsars for centuries.
And with very little condition,
like a very weak working class,
very poor and devastated by war and so on,
where authoritarianism kind of lended itself to those conditions.
Then there's me, then there's democratic socialists,
and the way I would define it is,
we like a lot of what the social Democrats accomplished,
but we still believe in going beyond capitalism,
and not just building socialism within capitalism
But we believe in this ultimate vision of a world after capitalism
What does that world look like and how's it different from communism?
Actually, maybe we can linger before we talk about your vision of democratic socialism
What was wrong with communism?
Stalinism implementation of communism in the Soviet Union.
Why did it go wrong?
And in what ways did it not go wrong?
And what ways did it succeed?
Let me start with the second part of that question.
And that's a very difficult one to answer in part because I morally and ethically am
opposed to any form of authoritarianism or dictatorship.
And often when you talk about the successes of a government or what it did developmentally
that might have been positive, we have to abstract ourselves from what we morally believe
and just kind of look at the record, right?
I would say that the Soviet experiment started off in Lenin's time as the attempt to kind
of just hold a holding action.
Hey, we don't really have the conditions to rule this country.
We have the support of the working class, or most of it, but the working class is only
3% of the population.
The peasantry is really against us. A lot of this 3%
of the population has died in war and half of them supported the Mensheviks and the more moderate
socialists anyway. But the alternative in their minds was going to be a far right reaction,
you know, some sort of general taking power in a coup or whatever else, or just them ending up
back in prison because a lot of them were in prison under the czar or just killed.
So they figured, all right, we're going to have a holding action where we maintain as
much of this territory of the old Russian Empire as possible.
We'll try to slowly implement changes, restabilize economy through something called
a new economic program, which was kind of a form of social democracy, if you will, because
it allowed market exchange for the peasants combined with state ownership of industries
in the cities. And for a while, it seemed to be working. The revolution never came that
they were expecting in Western Europe.
But in Russia itself, they were able to restabilize things by the middle or end of the 1920s.
And they were able to build more of a popular base for some of their policies because
people who had seen the chaos of World War I and Revolution and then Civil War kind
of just wanted stability.
And after a decade plus of war,
if you had a government that was able to give you enough
to eat and a job, you know, that was good enough for them,
then Stalin came into power and he wanted
to rapidly industrialize.
In his logic was, the revolution's not gonna come
in the West.
We need to build socialism in one country and we need to catch up with the West. We need to build socialism in one country,
and we need to catch up with the West.
We need to turn ourselves into an industrial powerhouse
as quickly as possible.
And that's where you got forced collectivization
to try to increase the productivity of Russian agriculture
through state ownership of previously fragmented
agricultural holdings, and through the implementation of mechanization,
so bringing in more machines to make agricultural more productive, all understate ownership,
plus more ambitious attempts to build heavy industry through five-year plans.
Now, I say this kind of cool, but we know in practice what that meant.
You know, forced collectivization was a disaster
I mean first of all, I think was built on the faulty premise that scale always equals more productivity
When in fact, especially in agriculture, but in any field, it's a little bit more complicated than that
And it led to millions of deaths, you know, led to famine it led to a host of other problems
industrialization
In the way that it happened under Stalin,
also kind of unbalanced the Soviet economy to lean to heavy towards heavy industry, not
enough for medium or light industry. But this did mean, especially the five year plan
industrialization, did manage to put Russia on a different developmental trajectory.
So by the time the post-war period came,
one, it might have gave them the ability to survive
the Nazi invasion to begin with,
that's a complicated question.
And then by the time the post-war period came,
Russia had kind of jumped
ahead of its developmental trajectory in a way that a lot of other countries didn't do. There
are a few examples. Like Japan is one, the managed to, if you kind of ran a scenario where Japan
would be in the 1870s, 1880s and ran it a hundred times, the Japan of the post-war period is kind
of one of the best outcomes, right? And I think that you could say that about Russian economic development,
its ability to catch up at a certain level to the West.
And then after that, of course, later on,
as economies got more complex, as they kind of moved beyond regular heavy industry
and as the main stable of the economy,
the Russian economy and its command system
was unable to adapt and cope
and ended up falling back behind the West again
by the 1970s.
So all this is a very long story to say
that a lot went wrong
and Russia, the economic picture,
is actually a little bit more complicated.
Politically, I think it's just a small party
without much pop of the support,
but with real pop of the support in a couple of cities,
and a lot of pop of the support, Empire,
Wide took power, and they felt like they couldn't get back power.
And they kept holding on to power,
and eventually among their ranks in these conditions.
One of history's great pyrrents took power and was able to justify what he was doing
in the context of the Russian nation and development, but also all the threats that came from abroad
to, you know, the Civil War wasn't just a Civil War, it was really an invasion by many
imperial powers all around the world as well.
So I think a lot of it was conditions and circumstance.
And I guess the question really is to what role ideology played.
Is there something within the socialist tradition that might have lended self to authoritarianism?
And that's something we should talk about.
And that's really complicated human question.
It does seem that the rhetoric, the populism of workers unite.
We've been fucked over for way too long.
Let's stand together. together, somehow that message allows flawed or evil people to take power. It seems like
the rhetoric, the idea is so good, maybe the utopian nature of the idea is so good that
allows a great speaker to take power. It's almost like if the mission, like come with me friends, beyond the horizon, a great
land is waiting for us, that encourages sort of, yeah, dictators, authoritarianists to
take power.
Is there something within the ideology that allows for that, for the sort of, for lying
to people essentially?
Well, I might surprise you with my answer because I would say, yes, maybe. sort of for lying to people essentially.
Well, I might surprise you with my answer
because I would say yes, maybe.
But I think that it's not just socialism.
Any sort of ideology that appeals to the collective
and appeals to our long-term destiny,
either as a species or as a nation or as a class or
whatever else, can lend itself to authoritarianism.
So you can see this in many of the nationalisms of the 20th century.
Now some of these nationalisms use incredibly lofty, collective rhetoric like in Sweden,
the rhetoric of we're going gonna create the people's home.
We're gonna make this a country with dignity
for all Swedes, we're gonna make this a country
that's more developed, more free, and so on.
And they managed to build a pretty excellent society
in my estimation from that.
You know, in countries like fascist Germany and Italy,
they managed to do horrendous things in Japan and horrendous
things with that.
In the US with national popular appeals, FDR was able to unite a nation, to elevate ordinary
working class people into a position where they felt like they had a real stake in the
country.
And I think did great things with the New Deal. In Russia, of course,
this language was used to trample upon individual rights
and to justify hardship
and abuses of ordinary individual people
in the name of a collective destiny.
A destiny, of course, it was just decided by
the party in power and during the 30s and 40s by just
all in himself, really.
Now, I think that that's really the case for making sure that we have a bedrock of civil
rights and democracy.
Then on top of that, we can debate.
We can debate different national destinies.
We can debate different appeals,
different visions of the world,
but as long as people have a say
in what sacrifices they're being asked to do,
and as long as those sacrifices
don't take away what's fundamentally ours,
which is our life, which is our basic rights.
our life, which is our basic rights. And voice, our voice.
So this complicated picture,
because help me understand,
you mentioned that social democracy
is trying to have social policies within a capitalist system in part, but your
vision, your hope for a social democracy is one that goes beyond that. How do you give
everybody a voice while not becoming the Soviet Union, while not becoming where basically
people are silenced either directly through violence or through
the implied threat of violence and therefore fear.
So, I think you need to limit the scope of where the state is and what the state can do
and how the state functions, first of all.
Now, for me, social democracy, I was like the equivalent of of I'll give a football analogy
It was the equivalent of you know getting to the red zone and then kicking a field goal
You know you'll take the three points, but you would have rather got a touchdown and for me socialism would be the touchdown
It's not a separate different playing field. Some people would say socialism will be an interception
It's sure no, and they would they would have the right to to again,
to say that and to say we shouldn't go go further.
And most coaches would take, you know, we take the safe route, right?
So you're going, you're you're going against the decision.
Anyway, they're not.
Yeah, yeah, we understand.
I understand.
So, so for you, the goal is full socialism.
But I'll take the three points. You know, it's it's a part of what I just want to march down the
field. I want to get get within scoring position. The reason why we should really move from this
analogy, but the reason why I call myself a socialist is looking through history and these examples
of social democracy. You saw that they were able to
give working class people lots of rights and income and power in their society, but at the end of
the day, capitalists still have the ultimate power, which is the ability to withhold investment.
So they could say in the late 1960s and early 70s, listen, I was fine with this arrangement
10 years ago.
But now I feel like I'm going to take my money and I'm going to go move to a different
country, or I'm just going to not invest because my workers are paid too much.
I'm still making money, but I feel like I could be making more.
I need more of an upper hand, right? So their economic power is then challenging the democratic mandate of Swedish workers
that were voting for the Social Democratic Party and were behind this, this advance.
So to me, what socialism is in part is taking the means of production, right?
Where this capitalist power is coming from, and making it socially
owned so that ordinary workers can control their workplaces, can make investment decisions,
and so on.
Now does that mean total state ownership of everything or a planned economy?
I don't think that makes any sense.
I think that we should live in a society in which markets are harnessed and regulated
and so on.
My main problem is capitalist ownership.
In part, on normative grounds, just because I think that it doesn't make sense that we
celebrate democracy in all these other spheres, but we have workplaces that are just
treated like tyrannies. And in part, because I think that ordinary workers would much prefer a system in which
over time they, you know, accrued shares in ownership where they got, in addition to
base kind of ways they got dividends from their firm being successful.
And that they figured out how to, you know, large firms, they're not going to be making day-to-day decisions by
Democratic vote, right? But maybe you would elect representatives of elected
management's
once every year or two depending on your operating agreement and so on. That's kind of my my vision of a socialist society and this sounds I hope
like
agree or disagree like it would not be a crazy leap into year zero,
right?
This could be maybe a way in which we could take a lot of what's existing in society, but
then just add this on top.
But what it would mean is a society without a capitalist class, this class hasn't been,
you know, individually, these people, you know, haven't been taking to re-education camps
or whatever else, but they're just no longer in this position.
And they're now part of the economy in other ways.
There'll probably be the first set of highly competent technocrats and managers and so
on.
They'll probably be very well compensated for their time and expertise and whatever else.
But to me, both the practical end of things, like taking away this ability to withhold
investment and increasing our ability to democratically and shape investment priorities and to continue
down the road of social democracy and on normative grounds by kind of egalitarian belief
that ordinary people should have more stake in their lives in the workplace,
leads me beyond social democracy to socialism.
So there is a tricky thing here. So in Ukraine especially, but in the Soviet Union, there's the Kulaks,
in Ukraine especially, but in the Soviet Union, there's the Kuwaitz. The possible trajectory of fighting for the beautiful message of respecting workers' rights
has this dynamic of making an enemy of the capitalist class, too easily making an enemy of the capitalist class, with a central leader,
populist leader that says, the rich and the powerful, they're taking advantage of
you. We need to remove them. We need to put them in camps, perhaps, not set explicitly
until it happens. It can happen overnight, but just putting a giant pressure on that capitalist
class. And again, the Stalin type figure takes hold. I'm trying to understand how the
mechanism can prevent that. And perhaps I'll sort of reveal my bias here. Is that been reading
a, I was going to say too much, maybe not enough, but a lot about books like Stalin's War
and Ukraine, and just I've been reading a lot about the 30s and the 40s for personal reasons
related to my travels in Ukraine and all that kind of stuff.
So I have a little bit of a focus on the historic implementations of communism currently
without kind of an updated view of all the possible future implementation.
So I just want to lay that out there. But I worry about the slippery slope into the authoritarian
figure that takes the sexy message, destroys everyone who's powerful in the name of the working
class, and then fucks the working class afterwards. So first of all, I think it's worth remembering that the social movement had different outcomes
across Western Europe and Eastern Europe.
And in some of these countries in Western Europe, there wasn't actually democracy before
the workers movement and for the social movement.
So the battle in Sweden, for instance, was about establishing political democracy, establishing
troop representation for workers, and that's how the parties became popular, same thing in Germany,
too. Then it was the social democrats who were able to build political democracy. Then on top of
that, add layers of economic democracy, social democracy. The Swedish social democrats ruled basically uninterrupted
from the early 1930s until 1976. It's kind of crazy to think about, but they were just
in government, they were the leading member of government that a few different coalition
partners would shift. Sometimes they were with their gradients, sometimes they were with
the communist briefly, but they ruled uninterrupted
and they lost an election in 1976 and they just left power and then they got back into
power in the 80s. So in other words, they created a democratic system, of course, with mass
import of working-class people. Then they truly honored the system because when they lost
power, they lost power. They left power.
There's plenty of cases like that across Europe and the world and in other countries like
Korea and elsewhere where the workers move in.
Some of the most militant, the most class and trick workers.
South Africa is the same way.
Created democratic systems.
Now, Russia, I think, a lot of what happened had to do with the fact that it was
never a democratic country. It was ruled by a party, and the party itself was very easy
to shift from a somewhat democratic party in London's day to an authoritarian one in Russia,
and there was no distinction then between the party and the state. So your authoritarian
party then became authoritarian total control over the entirety of the state. So your authoritarian party then became authoritarian total control over the
entirety of the state. Now, the fact that the Soviet system involved total state ownership
of production meant that the authoritarianism of the party state could go even deeper into
the lives of ordinary people compared to other horrific dictatorships, like Pinochet's,
Chile, and so on.
When maybe you could find some solace, like just at home or whatever else.
You didn't have the same sort of totalitarian, you know, like control of people's lives.
But I would say that socialism itself is yield different outcomes.
Now on the question of polarization, I guess that implies that this polarization, this distinction
is a distinction that isn't real in society and that is kind of being manufactured or generated.
You mean the capitalist class and working classes to clarify it?
So in certain populous distinctions, the division is basically arbitrary or made up.
The us first them polarization, depending who the us and who the them are.
You know, it's it's truly a, a, a, something that's manufactured, but capitalism itself
as a system, as a system based on class division, whether you're supporter or opposite,
I think we should acknowledge it's based on class division.
That is the thing creating that polarization.
Now, I think what a lot of what Socialists try to do
is we try to take bits of working class opposition
to capitalism, to their lives,
to the way they're treated at work, and so on.
And yes, we do try to organize on those bases to help workers take collective action,
to help them organize and political parties, and so on to represent their interest,
economic, and otherwise. But the contradiction exists to begin with.
And if anything, this system,
which I'm proposing, democratic socialism,
would be kind of a resolution of this conflict,
this dilemma, this thing that has always existed
since, you know, chiefed in and fall,
or in and so on.
We've had class divisions since the Neolithic Revolution.
You know, I think this is a democratic road,
road out of that tension and that division of humanity
and to people who own and people have nothing to give, but their ability to work.
So that idea is grounded and all going all the way back to marks that all of human history
can be told through the lens of class struggle.
Is there some sense, can you still man the case that this class difference is over exaggerated that
There's a difference
But it's not the difference of the abuser and the abused it's more of a difference of
People that were successful and people that were less successful
So I'll play devil's advocate, which is that maybe one could argue that in its
purest, earliest stage, capitalism is based on a stark difference.
But then since then, two things have happened.
One, a bunch of socialists and workers have organized to guarantee certain rights for
working class people, certain protections.
So then our system now, there are certain safety nets,
less than the US than in other countries,
but in a lot of countries are a pretty extensive safety nets.
Even like 40 hour work week, minimum wage,
safety regulations, all that kind of stuff.
And all those things are in my mind,
those of socialism within capitalism,
because what you're doing is you are taking the autonomy
of capitalism to do whatever they want
with people, contractor to them.
And the only thing stopping them is,
them potentially being able to go to another employer,
but even then it's kind of a potentially a race to the bottom.
If you can't get more than $2 an
hour from any employer in your market, you're going to have to live with it. So one factor is
we have built in those protections. So we've taken enough socialism into capitalism that you could
say that at a certain point maybe maybe it makes a qualitative difference,
not just a quantitative difference in people's lives.
The other thing is over time we've gotten wealthier and more productive as a society.
So maybe at some point, the quantitative difference of just more and more wealth
means that even if in the abstract, the division between a worker and a capitalist is real.
If that worker is earning a quarter million dollars a year and has a good life and only has to clock in 35 hours a week, 30 hours a week,
and has four weeks of vacation, then isn't it just an abstract or philosophical difference?
So I think you could level those two arguments. What I would say is that
one, a lot of these rights that we fought for are constantly being eroded and they're under
attacked. In part because the economic power the capitals have bleeds into our political democracy
as well. There's constant lobbying for all sorts of labor market deregulations and so on.
I fundamentally believe that if tomorrow all those regulations went away,
capitalists would fight to pay people as little as possible. We'd be back in 19th century
capitalism and not because they're bad people because if I'm running a firm and all of a sudden my
competition is paying is is able to find a labor pool and is paying people less than me. I'm going to
be undercut because I'll be able to take some of that extra savings and invest into new technology or
whatever else and they'll go all out my market share before or long. And then also beyond that, I do think there's a normative question here, which is,
now, do we believe that ordinary people have a capacity
to be able to make certain decisions about their work?
Do we believe they know more about their work than their bosses?
Now, I don't think that's not true at every level,
but I think there's no doubt that in workplaces,
workers know how to productively do their task
in ways that their manager might not know.
I think we've all been in workplaces
where we've had managers who kind of don't know
what you do or whatever else.
And I think that collectively, if incentivize,
we could have them one instead
of hoarding or that information, since they're getting a stake in production and so on,
they'd be able to more freely share it and be able to reshape how their day to day work
happens. And also with with elected managers, you kind of take that up the chain. I think you'd have perfectly efficient market based firms that could exist without capitalists.
So there's a, I mean, there's a lot of things to say. Maybe within just very, very low level
question of if the workers are running the show, there's a brutal
truth to the fact that some people are better and the workers know this.
So this Steve Jobs A-Players, you want to have all the A-Players in the room because
one B-Player can poison the pool because then everybody gets demotivated by the nature of that lack of excellence in competence.
This is just to take sort of a crude devil's advocate perspective.
Are the workers going to be able to remove the incompetent from the pool in the name,
in the goal of towards the mission of succeeding as a collective.
So I think that any successful model of socialism that involves the market, you need two things.
One is the micro level, you need the ability to fire people and for them to exit firms, which might be a slower process in cooperative based firms than it is in
a capitalist firm without a union, but it would probably akin to the process that would happen
in a capitalist firm, which there are many with unions. So you need that, and then at the macro
level, you need firm failure. You need to avoid a dilemma that happened in Soviet style economies, which was soft budget constraints. And firms
basically not being allowed to fail because the government was committed to full employment,
the firms employed people. So even inefficient firms were at the end of the day, they knew
they were going to be propped up by the government. And they would be given all the resources
they would need, no matter how inefficient efficiently they were using those resources to maintain employment. So I think you need both.
Do you worry about this idea of firing people? Man, I'm uncomfortable with the idea. I hate it,
but I also know it's extremely necessary. So is there something about a collective, a socialist system that makes firing?
You say it might be slower.
Might it become extremely slow?
Too much friction.
Isn't there a tension between respecting the rights of a human being and saying, like,
you need to step up, maybe sort of deposit the carrot.
Like, you really, like like to really encourage fellow workers
know when there's a person that's not pulling their side
of the doing as great of a job as it could be.
Like that, but it's in the person that's not doing
a great of a job, go to start to manipulate the system
that slows the firing in their self-interest.
Well, I think there would be certain,
so maybe another way to put it is, think about
like if you're a partner at a law firm, right?
I don't really know how law firms work, so I probably shouldn't use this analogy, but
correct me if I'm wrong.
But let's say you're a partner, you kind of have equity in your law firm, or something
beyond your billable hours.
And let's say you're going to be fired from your law firm, or they're laying off people
or whatever else.
They'll, they could just get rid of you, but they would also have to figure out how you're going to be fired from real off-irm or they're laying off people or whatever else.
They could just get rid of you,
but they would also have to figure out
how to kind of buy you out to after a certain point.
So I think that like in a cooperative firm,
you'd probably have a system where you,
after a certain point of working productively,
you'd probably have a period
where you get fired really quickly, no matter what, or once you have job security kicks in,
you would be able to, you know, it would be a process.
It would probably be like, you know,
a day or two process to figure it out,
or maybe they would have progressive discipline process,
which is first, you have to get a verbal feedback,
and then maybe a written performance review, then you
could be fired.
I mean, that's how it works in a lot of workplaces with either unions or with just basic job security.
Most countries, that's how it works, because there's not at will employment in most countries.
So I think that the real tension is if you fire someone, if you condemn them to destitution, then morally,
you'd really feel something there as you should, as a human being concerned about other people.
But in a social system, or even a basic social democratic system, there would be mechanisms
to take care of that person.
So one, if a firm is failing for any reason, they're getting out-compete or whatever else.
Those workers would then land in the hands just for a little bit of the state, right?
And there could be active labor market policies to retrain people to go into expanding sectors.
Or your sector is now obsolete, but here, you have these skills.
You're going to be trained and here are some resources to kind of help you along your training and then there's a bunch of firms hiring so go on your way.
And then also just with an expanded welfare state, being destitute in certain countries,
being unemployed in certain countries is easier than in other countries or situations.
So, you know, you still can fall back on that mechanism and also in my vision of market socialism,
a democratic socialism, there would be an expanded state sector.
Not anything you can imagine, but the way in which there's more of a state sector in
countries like Norway or Denmark than there is in the US.
So there would be various forms of state employment
and whatever else.
So I mean, I think that the real question is,
should being bad at your job or getting fired for any reason
or getting laid off, should that be a cause to have you
totally lose your shirt?
Or maybe should you just have to rebound?
Maybe you have less money for consumption or whatever else,
and you'll be on your way onto bigger and better things,
you know, in a few months.
So strong social net in many ways,
make it more efficient to fire people
who are not good at their job,
because then they won't be,
that won't actually significantly damage their quality of life,
and they have a chance to find a job at which they can flourish.
Sure. Right.
To step out into the macro, the, there's a tension here as well.
So you said that there's an equality between the classes, the capitalist class
and the working class.
And sort of there's a lot of ways you can maybe correct me on the numbers,
but you could say that
the top 1% of Americans have more wealth than the bottom 50%.
That's not talking about perhaps capitalist class and the working class, but it's a good
sort of estimate, right?
The flip side of that, if you just look at countries that have more economic freedom versus
less economic freedom, more freedom versus less economic freedom. More
capitalism versus less capitalism, their GDP seems to be significantly higher. And so at
the local level you might say that there's inequality, but if you look
historically over decades, it seems like the more capitalism there is,
the higher the GDP grows, and therefore the level of the quality of life and the basic
income, the basic wealth, the average, even including the working class goes up over
time.
Can you see both sides of this?
So, I could definitely accept some of that premise.
One, within capitalism, right, you want a bigger
pie. Then if you divide up that pie, you know, you'll eat even if the bottom 10% of the
working class share, let's say is less as a percentage, it's still more in raw terms.
So it's better for everyone. The part that I would dispute is more economic freedom
versus last economic freedom.
So there's obviously some countries
in which capitalism doesn't work
and maybe economic freedom plays a role.
Like if you're in a country like Egypt or India
with the highly or previously highly bureaucratic system.
So you need to get licenses to do anything and you need to run things for the state,
or you need to bribe someone to get an incorporation done or whatever else.
Like that's in case in which I would accept the premise of, okay, economic freedom to
to take entrepreneurs to start something new is limited.
There's all sorts of factors in which it's too,
you know, too difficult to start a firm
and it benefits no one really,
except for whatever bureaucracy might be,
might be, you know, taking their 15% cut.
But in general, I think in advanced economies,
it doesn't really work that way.
So think about it this way.
If you pretend like we're back, I'm sorry to go to Scandinavia again, but this is, you
know, a good example.
Let's see you're back in the 1970s in Scandinavia or whatever else.
You're in a country with extremely powerful unions.
So the unions have a lot of labor rights.
The state has certain high taxation, certain guarantees on you too.
But you're a capitalist there.
Now what would you do if your capitalist competitors in the US were able to pay workers $10 an hour and you have to pay them 20.
You would probably, and assuming you can't just flee your shutdown or whatever else,
you'd probably find ways to use labor-saving technology, right? That power of the high wages might encourage you to invest more in technology
and to utilize people's times better so they're more productive at work, so they're not
just like sitting around or whatever else. So this really happened in practice in the
Scandinavian countries in part because it was combined with a certain type of pattern-wage bargaining.
So, I'll explain this really simply, but let's pretend that you're in a sector with three
different companies. I'll say on automotive sector, and I'll just say 1 is GM, 1 is Ford, 1 is Chrysler.
Now, all these workers in your sector are all unionized.
They're all, you know, Swedish UAW, whatever the equivalent is, members.
And they're all paid the same.
And the union is setting through marketing, the union is setting the wages across the sector.
But the unions, and let's say GM is the most productive of these companies, forward is number two, Chrysler is number three. The unions would intentionally set the wages,
set their benchmark to Ford in the middle. So what that would do is say to Ford, okay,
Ford will stay in business because they'll be able to meet the wage demands.
Chrysler's probably might go out of business, but because, you know,
they won't be able to meet the demands or they'll have to really adapt really
quickly. They might have to lay off people. They might have to restructure.
So union knows this in advance and all the auto workers know this.
But the most efficient manufacturer GM now has excess profits because
if they were negotiating with just the GM workers, the GM workers might even have been
able to demand more. But instead, these workers are pegging their wage demands to Ford's
level and GM is in theory able to expand and employ more people and adopt new production techniques with their surplus.
Then those Chrysler workers would be absorbed
by the state by act-to-labor market policies
and then put back to work for GM
or for these expanding sectors.
So in other words, you're now in a situation
where the state has a pretty big role in your economy,
take a lot of your money in taxes.
The unions are really shaping your life as a capitalist far more
that would happen in a country like the United States.
And yet still, despite your more limited economic freedom,
you're still creating a more productive economy.
So it could work.
The system has to be designed right,
and I think social democracies were designed the right way.
I think any future democratic socialism
after social democracy would have to be designed
the right way.
Could you just linger on that a little more
of the pattern wage bargaining?
So GM is the most efficient, and Ford is the second most.
Can you explain to me how, can you explain to me again the wages setting the wages to the Ford level how
that is good for GM? So how that encourages more GM. This is just sectoral or
actually in this case centralized wage bargaining. So setting the wages at a level that forward can afford, but
a level that would probably be too expensive for Chrysler in the automotive sector would
benefit GM because they're drawing what we could call excess profits because GM, if the GM itself could potentially have to deal
with just the enterprise of GM workers bargaining for wages, and if they saw their profitability
was high, they would know their leverage.
They would say, pay us even more else.
We're going to go on strike.
But instead, they're accepting slightly lower wages and they would have otherwise had
in return for the company having excess profits that they're through both the state, they're
union and sometimes like there's worker councils or whatever else, they're playing a role
in saying, okay, we're going to make sure this excess profit is actually invested productively I'm in order to expand employment and just output.
Okay, can we talk about unions?
In general, then what are the pros and cons of unions?
So the interest of the union,
maybe you can correct me if I'm wrong,
I have a lot to learn both about the economics and the human experience of a union.
The union's interest is to protect worker rights and to maximize worker happiness, not
the success and the productivity and the efficiency of a company, right?
No, I would disagree. Um, so I think a union's interest is in what's collectively
bargaining on behalf of workers, because in certain cases, um, you know, I am, uh, right now,
a manager at, uh, the nation magazine, right? Uh, if I have a problem with my working conditions or
I need to raise or whatever else, I could with my skill set, my background, my role
in the company, I could go to my boss, the owner of the nation and say, okay, I need
to renegotiate my contract on these terms. I could bargain, right? Now, if I was
a ordinary worker at like a CVS or something,
if I didn't like my conditions and I went to my boss and said,
hey, I need a $2 raise and I need to be home by 830
because I have obligations at home.
The boss would probably say, I'm sorry, that's not possible.
Maybe try the right aid down the street
or the Walgreens down the street or whatever.
Now, if I went to the boss at a place like CVS
or even better, if all the pharmaceutical workers
at right aid CVS Walgreens went to our bosses
and said, listen, you listen, we collectively need to,
two dollars more and better hour, shorter shifts
or whatever else.
Then they would probably have no choice but to concede.
You have to bargain collectively at any level
if you're an ordinary worker. And there are some exceptions, but that's for certain
highly skilled workers, but even in those cases, of course, all workers are skilled. I mean,
just the technical definition. Even in those cases, a lot of those workers have to bargain
collectively as well in order to get more, more well, but they cannot make their demands so
excessive that their firm gets out of business. So the workers only are workers
as long as they're gainfully employed. So often unions will try to select
their wage demands at such a level that it ensures that their firm will stay in business.
Yeah, but the problem is the way firms go out of business isn't by explosion.
Like a way popcorn starts getting cooked like you at a certain moment it just is over.
You can it seems like the union can, through collective bargaining, keep increasing the wage, keep increasing
the interest of the worker until it suffocates the company that it doesn't die immediately,
but it dies in like five years.
So that might still serve the interest of the worker, but it doesn't serve the interest
of society as a whole that's creating cool stuff.
And increasing sort of a market that's operating and increasing cool stuff and
constantly innovating and so on and creating more and more cool stuff and
increasing the quality of life in general.
I disagree with the premise because I think even taking your example,
that would be better for society.
If a firm cannot pay its workers a living wage, but its competitors can, then that firm
will either figure out a way to innovate, develop new techniques, new markets, new ways
to be productive, or it should go out of business.
And it would be better for it to go out of business than to stay in business, or to be artificially
kept in business in any sort of way.
And yeah, so that's the Chrysler my old centralized bargain. Yeah, right. But but then there is, you know, innovation
cost money too. So the flip side of that. I think to play
devil's advocate is that it incentivized automotive industries
and probably a good example that it incentivizes automotive industries. It's probably a good example of that. It incentivizes cutting costs everywhere.
And sort of whatever that's been making you money
currently, figuring out how to do that really well,
without investing into the long term future of the company
for like all the different ways it can pivot,
all the different interesting things
it could do, terms of investing into R&&D whenever there's more and more and more pressure and paying
a living wage for the workers
It might not again, it might suffocate and die over the next five ten twenty years
Which might be a good destructive force from a capitalist perspective
But it might rob us of the Einstein of a company, right?
Of the flourishing that the company and the workers
within it can do over a period of five, 10, 20 years.
Well, this is just a problem with a lot of capitalism,
which is about short-termism, right?
Because the same thing could be said from,
you're starting a company, you have a plan for it
to make a lot of money, but your investors want dividends right away.
So you have to take away from your long-term R&D
or other plans and deliver short-term dividends.
That's often why a lot of, I think R&D
is often rooted in state institutions
and research and whatever else is being drawn on.
And also I think that that's a reason why,
the state has some sort of role in fostering firms
and either a, my version of a socialist economy
or a capitalist economy or whatever else
to help with these time horizon problems.
So I won't dispute that workers could play a role
or wage demands could play a role in time horizon problems
But more often than that it's coming from investors
It's coming from just a host of other market pressures that people might might have and I would say that in the real world a lot of
Investment funds don't come from just retained earnings
It comes from a lot of sources.
So I think this is a problem that could be solved
through public policy, but definitely exist today as well.
So you mentioned living wage.
Is there a tension between a living wage?
Maybe you could speak to what a living wage means.
And the workers owning all of the profit of the company.
Sort of this kind of spectrum.
No, I guess the spectrum is from like no minimum wage, the lowest possible thing you could
pay to a worker, then somewhere in that spectrum is a living wage, and then at the top is
like all of the profit from the companies owned by the workers.
So split to the workers.
I mean, I think that any society is going to have to make
distributional choices. You could have a margin of a variety of capitalists in which
workers are paid quite little, but there's extremely high
taxation and there's redistribution after the fact. You can imagine a system in which there's less taxation after the fact, but there's more guarantees and regulations on how much people are paid
before the fact. In my vision of a social society, there would be similar way that unions work, and in my example, the centralized bargaining
unions would work that bargain at the sectoral level and not just at the enterprise level,
like our unions do today.
There could be benchmarks set for different occupations or wages.
And the reason why you would want a benchmark at a worker controlled firm
is that you don't want workers self-exploring themselves in order to gobble up market share,
or because you don't want them collectively deciding, okay, we're going to invest in this longer term,
time horizon, and outcompete other people that way. So you might say, okay, if you do this sort of
clerical work, you have to be paid the equivalent of $15 an hour.
That's minimum, but on top of that, you get dividends from excess profits.
And I think we'd also have to be combined with public financing for expansions and for
development, which could be done in quite a competitive way.
So you could have a variety of banks, you know, my vision, you know, state-owned banks.
But how would they decide who to invest in and who to not invest in, who to give a loan
for expansion to and who not to?
Because you don't want it to be like, oh, I'm going to invest in my nephews firm and
not this other firm.
Or I'm going to invest in this guy's firm because he's a Italian, but not this guy's firm
because he's Albanian or whatever else.
Just make it rational at the level of their goal is just like any other investment person
at a bank today to maintain a certain risk profile and to have an interest
yield and decide to invest on on that basis. So there's a huge auto-motor firm that has been on
business for 50 years that needs a little operating cash. Like yeah, they could get their 50 million
dollars at 3% loan. If you have some crazy blue sky idea and you manage to get it to that that
point, like maybe you do your friends would get it get it at 12% or something closer to what a VC would offer today.
So I only kind of go into these details, not because to say that a system doesn't have to in advance
map out all the different possibilities, but I think it does have to be willing to accept
a lot of things that we know today. I can't give you a version of socialism that's
everything's going to be fine. We're going to live harmoniously and we won't have these
sort of tensions and you know, you could hunt in the evening and you know, fish in the, you know,
afternoon and write criticism, you know, whatever else. I do hope that there's horizons beyond this that we could aspire to.
I do have those visions, but for now, I think our task as socialists is to imagine a, you
know, five minutes after, you know, midnight, like, what can we do right away within our
lifetime vision? So that means
through some level of central planning,
reallocating resources to the workers.
So I think the primary mechanism in this private sector under socialism would be market mechanism,
firms competing against each other to expand,
connected to a system of public financing.
But even at that level, the individual bankers and public banks and so on would be operating based on their own rationality
and the state would certainly shape investment decisions, but maybe no more than they do
in a lot of capitalist systems. So the state might, already today,
and a lot of countries decide,
we wanna invest in green technology.
So it's gonna be favorable rates for people,
or tax credits for people investing in green technology.
So the state already shapes investment.
I think what should be centrally planned,
and this is where I'm proud to sound
like an old school socialist, is things like healthcare, things like transit,
things like our natural monopolies of lots of types, you know,
I think can be done very well through planning.
And we already have plenty of examples, but a lot of this
society, I think, would be the private sphere of worker-controlled cooperatives competing
against each other, weak firms failing, successful firms expanded.
And the banks you're saying publicly are privately owned.
Publicly owned.
Let's just put it all on the table that it's almost guaranteed that every system has corruption.
So I guess the bigger question is which system has more corruption.
This one was central planning and work with cooperatives versus unfettered capitalism or any
flavor of capitalism. I think any system has potential for corruption. I think it depends on
how good your civil service is, how much oversight do you have to resolve a problem
once it arises?
How does corruption happen in a social system?
So you have to, again, I apologize,
but the large scale examples of it,
so we can look at Soviet Union, China, and Sweden,
fundamentally different nations and histories
and peoples and economic systems and political systems, but all could be
called in part socialist. And so what?
You know, there is a ridiculous almost caricature of corruption in the Soviet system, the gigantic bureaucracy that's built
where somehow corruption seeps in through kind of dispersion
of responsibility that nobody's really responsible for the corruption.
I just had a conversation with Ed Calderon who fought the cartels in Mexico and there's
a huge amount of corruption in Mexico, but it's not like even seen this corruption.
You understand where the cop pulls you over, you give this much money, and so on.
And so that kind of seems to happen in certain systems.
And it seems to have happened in social systems more than in capital systems in the 20th century.
Or maybe I'm wrong in that.
No, I mean, I think in a lot of countries it's seen as the cost of doing business, right?
Now in particular countries built on a system of central planning or just state allocation
resources with the state, both producers and allocates and things run through bureaucracies,
then I think you're much more apt to have corruption than in a system with just a smaller
sphere for the state.
So, for example, if you're in a hypothetical version of the US, you might see a lot more corruption,
like the post office, but you know, you wouldn't have that corruption in your workplace,
so you kind of learn to go around that. For one thing, even in state sectors, you can have, and this often is the case in democratic
countries, you have a transparent civil service where people who are prosecuted by judges
where it's frowned upon and it just over time, it goes away.
So you go from having political machines that were tied to certain, you know, had friends
in certain police precincts and whatever else in the US in the 19th century and an early
20th century.
So now today that would be a huge scandal and unheard of, right?
So I think over time having a independent court system, having a truly meritocratic civil
service can be implemented anywhere.
I think though in the Soviet Union,
the extra little bit that happened was
you had a bureaucracy that just had so much power
because the bureaucracy was producing and distributing
everything and everyone was relying
on the bureaucracy with jobs.
The way to social advancement was through the bureaucracy.
So you end up with people like Krushchechev, you know, people going from peasants to, you know, supreme leaders of countries just through
getting hooked up in the bureaucracy and advancing within it. And, you know, not all these
were bad people. I don't think Khrushchev was that bad of a person or Gorbachev, you know,
they, they, they, they, but this is their mechanism to advancement in systems like this.
In the vision of democratic socialism that I propose,
the state doesn't have that overriding power to begin with.
But I think in either case, corruption has aroused
in many different systems and has been successfully dealt with.
I think on the developmental trajectory of even countries
today that we think of was being very corrupt, corruption will fade away as well.
But you definitely need a system in which individuals act, individuals are incentivized
to act rationally.
So if you're in a system in which cops who are corrupt
are prosecuted and investigated,
and there's internal controls, a civilian border view,
and kind of an internal investigators within police
departments or whatever else,
there will be less corruption over time if people are punished.
If you're in a system in which if you're running a firm
or you're the manager
of a firm and elected manager, and everyone of that firm is trying for more efficiency
and trying for more excess profits or whatever else at the end of the day, you know, dividends
at the end of the day, then if you try to hire your nephew and he's not good at your job,
you're not going to win reelection, right? So you shouldn't, I think no system should rely on a change in culture
that come naturally or some sort of individual altruism. I think the systems have to be constructed
in such a way that it's not rational to behave poorly. In sort of from a theoretical perspective,
either a socialist or a capitalist system can have system can have either culture.
But it seems like, if you prioritize meritocracy, if the people that are good, whatever the
good means, in terms of integrity, in terms of performance, in terms of competence, it
seems like that leads to a less corrupt system.
And it seems like capitalism,
there's all kinds of flavors of capitalism.
But capitalism, because it does prioritize meritocracy,
more often leads to less corruption.
So that's not a question of political or economic systems,
it's a question of what kind of stuff do you talk about
that leads to a culture of less corruption?
First of all, I think in theory,
maybe capitals and words, bear talkercy,
but I think in practice, anyone watching this,
or you and me would think of some of the people we know
that work the hardest and they're often,
you know, working class people,
working the food service industry,
or whatever else, right?
I think we don't have in practice, I don't
think we actually live in a society that rewards people for hard work. I think we reward
people for a combination of accidents of birth plus hard work.
So let me push back because yes, so I agree with you, but let me push back on a subtle point,
because I like to draw difference between hard work
and meritocracy, because as a person who works really hard,
like I work crazy hard,
but I've also worked with a lot of people,
they're just much better than me.
So hard work does not equal skill, good, productive.
So I just wanna kind to draw that distinction.
But I agree with you, I don't think our society rewards directly hard work or even high skill.
There's many examples that at least we can see that it does not do so.
So we have an unequal distribution of talent, of course.
So if we lived in society in which there was some level
of acceptable inequality, and it's a normative kind of the question of how much we would say it's
acceptable, right? And that inequality was based on this unequal distribution of talent,
then I think that would be fine with me, right? That would actually be a meritocracy. What I see in the US is often
Okay, so if you are a upper middle class or rich kid and you get a good education, you know, K through 12
um Out of those people there will be some that work extra card and go on to do incredible things or very successful and will be other people that
um
Do not right and and decide for whatever reason or go
down a different path.
And you could say maybe among that group of the Album Middle Class, you know, there is
meritocracy, right?
But they're actually given those opportunities to make their own decisions and to fail
whereas many, many other people, the vast majority of American society, I would say 60
plus percent, don't really get those opportunities to make those choices to begin with.
And I would aspire to the type of world, the least, as a first step, in which our only
inequalities are based on the are unequal innate kind of distribution of talent. I guess a lot of people worry that when you have a socialist
in any degree central planning,
or perhaps a collective of workers
that it won't result in that kind of meritocracy
that you're talking about,
but you're saying that no,
it's possible to have that kind of meritocracy.
Think about it this way.
The workers themselves are incentivized
and are shaped by market forces too, right?
They're trying to respond to consumer needs and preferences.
They're trying to expand market share.
They're trying to make money.
So it requires no kind of leap into these people are going to be more altruistic or whatever
else, even on purely bourgeois terms.
The same way you would maybe justify competitive capital firms.
I think you could justify this system as long as you think that people elected management
can perform just as well.
I think based on the experiences of cooperatives, we see that they can.
And then at the state level, state bureaucracies have their own sort of sets of incentives.
But in most systems that already have extensive state
bureaucracies, these people at high levels are appointed or elected. They're
held to certain standards. At the national level, a national government wants
to maintain, you know, the tax revenue that they need to pay for services. So we
already, I think, have incentive structures that you could say that some
people might just, I think, disagree with the normative thing of like, why would people
have to own their own means of production, control their workplaces or whatever else? Why
do we need this level of equality? Can't we just get by with our existing system, but
just like make things a little bit easier for capitalists to make money, then everyone will benefit whatever else. I mean, that's a normative question.
In my vision of socialism, there'll be plenty of, you know, multiple parties with different views
and perspectives trying to either push a steeper into more radical forms of socialism or on the
other hand to kind of roll back to, you know, more capitalist forms of government. So I think that again, you can't try to make up a perfect system and try to implement it.
You have to do it as a process democratically and so on.
So just philosophically in your gut, you're more concerned about the innate equal value
of human beings versus the efficiency of this wonderful mechanism
that we call human civilization
at producing cool stuff.
Just like a gut, if we were sitting in a bar,
that's where the gut feeling you come with.
Of course your mind is open,
but you want to protect the equal value of humans.
So I don't wanna fight the hypothetical. So I don't want to fight the hypothetical.
So I'll say equality.
I am concerned with equality, but I don't think the two are
necessarily always in tension.
But but also when you think about all the great things that
human beings have produced, often, I think people today just
look at the end outcome, like we go to the paramedics and we'll marvel at the paramedics and the human achievement
that it took to make it happen.
But we won't, you know, stop to think about all the suffering that went into the making
of that thing.
So I think we kind of lean in the opposite direction.
We'll be marvel at our achievements, but we don't often think about the suffering or exploitation that went into certain human achievements. I would
love a society in which we could marvel at things and not have to worry about the exploitation
that was involved, because there was no exploitation or oppression involved. There was just human
ingenuity and creativity and collaboration.
And to degree, which you made disagree to,
the degree there's attention between the two,
at least give equal way to the consideration of the suffering,
and don't just marvel at the beauty of the creations,
to the degree there's attention between them.
What Stalin did actually, too, it's not just capitalist,
but what Stalin did was he sacrificed whole generations
because he thought that he was building something
for the future, for future Russians to enjoy
and for future people of the world to enjoy.
And actually that analogy that I just gave by the pyramids
was written by Karl Katsky, the German socialist,
anti-Stylnus critic critic when he was complaining about US journalists and
others going to Russia in the 1930s and marveling at all the new industries.
You know, are these people blind to the suffering behind these things that they're marveling
about?
Speaking of which, I think you mentioned in the context of a social democracy that freedom
of speech and freedom of the press, or basically the freedom of people to have a voice as an important component, which I think is something that caught my ear a
little bit, because if you think about the Soviet Union in one of the ways that the authoritarian
regime was able to control, it's almost part of the central planning is you have to control the
message and you have to limit the freedom of the press. So there's a kind of notion,
especially in like ideas,
or maybe caricatures of the ideas of cultural Marxism,
sometimes caricatured even further as walkism,
that you want to be careful with speech,
you want the sense of speech
because some speech hurts people.
So in some sense, you want to respect the value,
the equality of human beings by being careful towards you say. So what is there attention
there for you? I think there's no tension. And part, I think that it is very condescending
or patronizing for to assume that people can't take debate, that people can't either as a society or individuals
visually be engaged in the exchange of ideas
without, or even very vigorous debate,
without being broken by it, just not the case.
I'm basically a free speech absolutist.
I mean, I would draw the line and obviously
direct incitements of violence or certain other speech like that, but in general, you think
a lot of people would be surprised to hear that? No, I mean, not not people who know my
work. I mean, more generally, I think a lot of people on the right, even in the center,
I think might have the idea that a lot of the far left wants
to censor them. I think some of the center left wants to censor them, but I think a lot
on the far left on the Marxist or Socialist left, I think that free speech is more or
less the norm.
Yeah. Where is the imperative the sense that coming from? Is this just some small subset
of the left on Twitter? Is there some philosophical idea behind certain groups that like if we're
to steal man the case and which group actually has the interest of humanity in mind in wanting
to censor speech.
I think we might need to just take it case by case,
for an example, by example, because honestly,
I would have to think about a particular case,
but let's just say generally that a lot of American liberalism
rightly sees the revolution around the civil rights
and later the extension of this rights revolution
for gay rights and so on as being a very positive achievement of the last half century and I completely
agree. Now for me, now that we've won those rights, a lot of our battle for change needs to go beyond the representational realm and needs to really reground itself in the material bread and butter struggles
of ordinary people trying to survive, the battle for good health care for all Americans
and so on.
These are right immediate demands.
I think there's a segment of American liberalism that doesn't want to go in that
confrontational economic direction
and wants to scare it away from battles
over things like universal healthcare and so on.
And really are just still caught at this battle
over rights and representation.
And it's devolved in such a way that they feel like
they need to make change the way they make change is only through interventions and culture.
Because they don't really have the same sense of class and class struggle that agree or disagree with it. It's a very material plane.
So instead, you know, they look at comedians who said the wrong thing or they look at all sorts of other ways to make change. It's not really
making a change. It's just making them look bad and making our culture worse. And I think
that's where a lot of it comes from. But I think that a lot of the left, even the left that's
much more into battles over, you know, race and lots of other stuff like real serious
anti-racist on the left. Of course, I'm an anti-racist, but a lot of my work is focused
on the primacy of class. But even these people are very concerned about material struggles
and issues, and they don't really care about these issues. They think are ephemeral kind
of issues.
So when you focus exclusively on language,
that somehow leads you astray,
like on being concerned about language
without like deeper economic inequalities and so on,
you just become an asshole.
That's on Twitter pointing out how everything,
how racist everyone one is.
So that anti-racism becomes a caricature of anti-racism.
Exactly.
Because anti-racism was really about the struggle of people for equal rights and voting.
It was about the struggle for people who were trapped into bad neighborhoods because they
couldn't get decent jobs and their neighborhoods were redlined or whatever else.
It was really like a struggle for survival.
And what was the main demands,
like the language of this one?
It was the march for jobs and freedom.
It was the slogan, I am a man,
you know, asserting the kind of universal dignity
of people, this is what the Civil Rights Movement was about.
And it wasn't surprised.
There was a lot of self-described socialists, people like Bayard Rustin, A-Filt Randolph, Martin
or the King Jr. I mean, these were people who were Ella Baker. They were socialists, you
know? And I think a lot of Americans agree with them with their immediate demands, even though they
weren't themselves socialists, but it was a very materialistic struggle.
And I think a lot of this has been co-opted into just some sort of vague and disconcerting
complaints about language or culture and so on.
Martin Luther King was a socialist.
Two or three degrees of the socialist. I would love to learn about that?
Martin Luther King, I think, broadly called himself at various points his life a Christian
socialist or a democratic socialist, especially after his speech against the Vietnam War
and the Riverside Church, I think that was 67.
Last years of his life, he became much more involved in struggles against war and
also struggles for workers' rights.
He was assassinated when he was at a rally at workers' rights.
So he thought the next battle was going to be an economic battle.
He had this famous line where he said, I don't just want to integrate the lunch counter if it
means that we can't afford to order a burger while we're there.
You know, that was the line along those lines.
And I think that got to his point with the civil rights struggle was part of a step
of building some sort of wider movement.
So he and these other civil rights leaders were very much interested in working with organized
labor, working with the left as a
was constructed then and building some sort of mass space for not just rights but
redistribution. It's fascinating. It's fascinating which figures self-identified
on one part, socialists. Albert Einstein was one. Albert Einstein
wrote an article for the first issue of this left-wing magazines,
actually still publishing today called Monthly Review, and I think 1949 and his article
is called by socialism. I don't think it's pay-walled, so people should check it out.
But yeah, Einstein was one.
So probably the central idea is the pacifist, the anti-war idea for him or no.
Honestly, it's been so many years since I read it.
I think it was more about, I think it was actually more economically focused, but I would
need to go back and...
But is war in general a part of the fundamental ideas that socialists are, again, democratic socialists
are against, like what's the relation between socialism and war?
So I think that traditionally in the socialist movement war was associated with capitalist
competition and international competition.
And you can look at more or one is very much a case where different nations were competing
with each other and developing quite violent
rovers that was in part based on competition and the periphery over access to markets and
colonies and whatever else. So it was very easy to draw direct correlation. I am opposed
to more, I'm opposed to imperialism, the domination of strong nations, you know, dominating
smaller nations.
I wouldn't call myself a pacifist.
I think most socialists wouldn't call themselves pacifists, because there are some struggles
that are worth fighting for.
You know, there's national liberation struggles and so on where if there's no democratic
avenue for change, you know, positive change has been made through arm revolts
around colonialism and whatnot.
But we're living in an age where hopefully, I know neither of us have children, but our
children or children children in the future won't have to live through war.
And that is one thing that as countries have gotten more developed, as the world has changed, we've actually seen
less and less war. Like, I won't dispute pinker on this. I think it's true. Obviously Putin's
invasion of Ukraine and the conflict in Ethiopia is like kind of an exception, but on the whole,
I think we're going in that direction. But I think it's always been a major organizing
plank of socialists against war and against just this sense of right-wing nationalism
and national identity that often leads to war. And obviously not everyone on the right
has embraced that. A lot of libertarians are consistently anti-war as well, but I think the right ideologically
has been associated with war, even if some advocates of capitalism have adopted.
Then there's the military industrial complex, which is the financial machine of the whole
thing.
I presume...
Well, since a lot of that is government, what's the relationship to socialism and the
military industrial complex?
Well, a lot of its government contracts, but it's privately produced, right?
My company's a Glocky market, Martin, and things like that.
You could draw a very crude materialist connection between any of these things and to kind of
prove an ideological point, but we could produce just as many arms and then just bury them or never fire them off or whatever, whatever else. Obviously, there are companies that
have a vested interest in heightening up tensions or saying that we need to buy a new weapon system
to be prepared for a conventional war with China, Russia. Meanwhile, I think we all know that if
there's going to be conventional war between these countries,
it's going to lead to something worst.
And no amount of advanced fighter jets
is going to make a difference.
But I try to avoid crude or collageal connections,
even though there are relationships.
It's kind of like the old slogan,
which was quite an effective slogan in the early 2000s.
And my first anti-war marches, when I was a teenager,
I definitely have shouted at the kind of no war for oil.
Like, both is correct in that it gets to what people sense
of like what's going on, how it's bad.
But also like, analytically, it's kind of wanting to explain what really happened
or why we ended up in the Middle East,
which is a much more complex geopolitical story.
Yeah, and it is a story of geopolitics.
It's perhaps less a story of capitalism or socialism.
It's a story, it's a geopolitical story that I think actually operates outside
of the economic system of the individual nations. It has to do more with honestly, in part
egos of leaders. And there's an international battle for resources, but surely there's
alternatives. Yeah, definitely.
And I think that part of what being a socialist is about dreaming in the long term, about
a different sort of world without, in my mind, needless divisions of people into nations
with standing armors, you know, I'm sure we'll still have pride about where we're from.
And there's still be distinctive cultural features and so on about where we're from.
We definitely would at least for the foreseeable future be divided into places as like administrative units, but the idea that there should be a Mexican army and an American army and a Russian army and a Ukrainian army is just on the face of it. I think the long run will be seen as ridiculous.
Just like we see it as ridiculous today looking back
at the idea that a Lord from London would be engaged
in civil strife with the Lord from Liverpool
and a bunch of peasants will die.
Would die, you know, just kind of on the face of it
just seems kind of ridiculous. These different places would have their own banners and lords and armies.
I think in the long run, you might have to zoom out a thousand years from the long run.
People will say the same about nation states and standing armies and
battles over, you know,
specks of dirt. That mean nothing in a cosmic sense.
you know, specks of dirt that mean nothing in a cosmic sense.
Yeah, no, for sure, aliens would laugh at us or humans that go far beyond earth and look at the history. Well, most of the history will be forgotten because if humans successfully expand
out into the universe, just the scale of civilization grows so fast that the the bickering of the first
few thousand years of human history will be seem insignificant.
There's a very Marxist idea that I both appreciate in one way, but on
the other hand, it's kind of scary, which is that, you know, human
history is only now beginning before we're in prehistory. But in
the future, like, will
be in kind of real history.
I think that a lot of really important history has already happened, and I think posterity
will remember.
And I think that it will be easier to sign certain people, the role of villains, certain people, the role of like villains, the people, you know, not to engage
in the contentious topic, off topic of Ukraine or whatever else, but the idea that, you
know, one government or a bad would launch a, you know, more to recover, you know, or to
take, you know, several hundred square miles of territory.
And tens of thousands of people die.
I think seems absurd to us.
Many people today, luckily,
but it would not have seemed to serve 56 years ago.
It would have just been a normal thing,
these kind of territorial disputes and so on.
And I think, you know, projecting the future,
I think within our lifetimes,
we'll live to see that kind of conflict be eradicated.
And in part, you could say that like, why? I think it's because of popular
pressure and organization. So you could say kind of the pro worker socialist organizing part
of it, making it less normal. If you're a capitalist, you could say, well, markets are more
intro linked. So war is even more rational. I don't really have a firm answer or whatever
it is. I think it's a good thing.
You mentioned Marx's view of history. It's kind of interesting to just briefly talk about.
What do you think of it? What do you think of this Marxist view of how the different systems
evolve from the perspective of class struggles we were talking about?
Well, I fundamentally, I'm a Marxist. I fundamentally believe in the broad contours
of historical materialism.
But I think we should be clear
of what Marxist theory tells us
and what it doesn't tell us.
You know, I think Marxist theory tells us
pertinent things about how societies evolve
about how the distributional resources work
in any given society who owns, who doesn't, how the conflict, distributional resources work in any given society, who owns, who doesn't, how the conflict,
distributional conflicts, and so on.
I think Marxism can tell us a lot.
–Causse surplus is distributed.
–Exactly.
What it can tell us is, as a friend put it,
the sex appeal of blue jeans or whatever else.
That's beyond what Marxism is meant to do.
What economic system can tell us about the sex appeal of blue jeans?
No economic system, but socialism in the Soviet sense,
when it was turned into the Soviet style,
dialectical, materialism was meant to tell us everything
from, you know, explain genetics and agriculture, whatever else, in a very disastrous way.
You know, so I definitely don't believe in the application of these ideas in an extremely wide
way. And also, I'm a Marxist because it's a framework that helps me understand pertinent facts about the world.
If at some point I no longer think the framework is doing that, I will not be a Marxist,
but I'm a socialist on normative grounds because I have certain beliefs about the equality
of people because I believe in it, we should have a society with liberty, with equality,
with fraternity.
And that I hope I'll always be a socialist until the day I die, but it's kind of a very
unscientific or unserious thing to say, this is my framework from beginning to end, you
know, the rest of my life.
But from a perspective of history, you should say that so Mark says that you go through societies
go through different stages. It could be crudely
summarizes primitive communism, imperialism, maybe slave society, feudalism, defined by
marketellism, then capitalism and socialism, and finally stateless communism, communism.
Am I there to miss something? And finally, stateless communism, communism.
Am I, damn, damn, miss something there?
I mean, I think that was close enough.
I mean, I think that's definitely true of Marxist theory,
that the contradictions of capitalism,
the fact that it has brought together all these workers,
all these materials, whatever else,
and it's now allowing us to socially create
wealth on a mass scale. But that wealth is that process is being privately directed. And
also the surplus is being privately kind of appropriated is a contradiction. And that
would lead to some sort of rebellion or revolution or change and will have and eventually
this contradiction would be a federal production to so we would have to move into socialist society.
But actually the back track so in terms of the contradiction so it starts when we're in a village
hunter-gatherers that's what you call primitive communism where everyone is kind of equal.
It's kind of a collective, right?
All right, maybe you could just just let me hold on a second.
And then inequality is form of different flavors.
So that's what imperialism is.
This one dude rises to the top and has some control
of different flavor.
That's what feudalism with when you have one dude at the top
and you have merchants doing some trading and so on.
And then at least the capital is when you have private ownership of companies
and they do some, they result in some kind of class inequality.
And eventually that results in a revolution that says no,
that's inequality is not okay, it's not natural,
it doesn't respect the value of human beings,
and therefore it goes to socialism where there is
under Marx's view, I guess, some role for the state is doing some redistribution and then the pure
communism at the end is when it's, you know, it's a collective where there's no state centralized power.
So is this what's part of that is wrong?
No, I think and broadly that the Marxist theory of history is about different types, different modes of production that existed various times based on material conditions. So in the early times in this theory, there was not much surplus
being generated, right? And there was generally egalitarian societies. Then as we became agricultural
as society developed, there was more surplus being produced. And then there was a group of people, the ruling
classes of their age that controlled and distributed that controlled that divisional labor and
appropriated more of that surplus for themselves. And they weren't involved in productive labor.
In early print of society, everybody's involved in productive labor. Later on, you had casts of priests who did nothing
but kind of pray and write and kind of lecture people
all day, right?
And you had kings and rulers and bureaucrats and traders
and so on.
You have a more complex division of labor
but also more inequity driving out of that.
Capitalism was a revolutionary system because it took away one it made us tremendously
more productive, right? It expanded production beyond our wildest imaginations, but it also no longer
bound workers to their Lord or manner or whatever else. They were now free to move, free to engage in contracts with employers and so on.
But even though workers are now producing
all this tremendous wealth,
and even though productive forces had been matured
in such a way,
they were ultimately taken away
from all the wealth they were created.
They got some of it back.
They were in wealthy societies,
but they were all there collectively together
producing this wealth.
And that was a potent force.
So Marx theorized that would lead to
a revolution or change in a socialist direction.
I think in fact, what we saw was that
yes, workers are dependent on,
capitalist are dependent on, on capitalist are dependent on workers,
but the dependency is obviously symmetrical in the sense that workers are also dependent on
capitalist, but in fact it's an asymmetrical dependency and that ordinary workers need
their jobs more than capitalist need the contribution of individual workers. So it became kind of a collective action problem
where you would need the massive workers to get together to decide to change things,
but also people would be afraid because they'd be dependent on their jobs for their livelihood
and so on. So revolution became a lot harder than people thought, especially in democratic countries
where workers had certain
outlets and certain powers and rights and responsibility.
You know, it's no surprise that where you did have socialist revolutions, they were in
places like the Third World Post-Colonial States trying to merge out of colonialism.
They were in places like China and Russia, autocratic countries countries and never in an advanced capitalist country.
Now, in Marxist theory of history, even as interpreted by a lot of smart Marxists like
G.A. Cohen and others, there is a certain inevitability to socialism after capitalism. The way that I would put it myself
is I kind of have a more, as you could say, like Kantian view of it, like I think socialism
is something that ought to happen, but it's not something that necessarily will happen.
And we'll need to organize and persuade, and also potentially, again,
the key part of any social system that's democratic
is you have to allow for the possibility
of a democratic revision to a different sort of system.
So I'd be more than happy in my vision of socialism
for there to be capitalist parties,
getting, you know, and hopefully three, four, five, of the vote, maybe a lot more. In the same way
that in the US or a public, we could right now have a monochist
party. No one's going to support a monochist party in the, in
the US and serious numbers. Although that's gaining popularity
in Europe or elsewhere. No, and isn't there in the anarchist
tradition? Isn't there, aren't they saying that one of the ways
you could have a leader in monarchy
because they're more directly responsible
to the citizens?
If you have a leader, it's healthier to have a monarch.
Anyway, I'm not familiar with it.
I've heard this stated a lot of times.
The left-wing anarchist traditions,
like anarchist enoclism or whatever or whatever else like that their slogan is kind of
no kings no gods no masters or whatever so no bosses
They they definitely would not agree with that, but I'm you know not familiar enough anarchism is runs a gamut from left to right and interesting
I'll have to ask about it. I'll have to ask about that.
But yeah, OK, so you're not, you don't believe Marx's theory
of history in the sense that everything,
every stage is a natural consequence of every other stage.
Of course, he would predict that somebody like you must
exist in order for those stages to go from one to the next,
because you have to believe ought in order for action stages to go from one to the next because you have to believe
ought in order for action to be taken to inspire the populace to take action.
So two things. One is I do rather believe in Marxist theory of history because it just explaining how
productive forces develop in the relations of production in any given system.
I guess there's a theory of transition from capitalism to socialism that Marx didn't
really spell out, but it was kind of implied that it would naturally happen.
And Marx was living in an era of tremendous upheaval.
Marx himself actually saw when he was living in London in the 1870s, the Paris Commune.
When workers took over for just a few months,
but they took over the producers of Paris,
took over the city, basically created their own government,
their own system, and so on.
So he was living through an era of people,
and angles, especially,
over a salon was the mentor to all these rising socialist parties.
So he was very closely collaborating
with socialist and places like Britain
and Germany when they were drafting their first programs
for the social democratic party.
So it felt like this was gonna happen
and felt like this rising working class would take power,
but I think the stability of the system was underestimated.
It's easy to see the contradictions in the system, but can you see its mechanisms of stability?
The way in which mass collective action or revolutions more the exception or the norm,
could you have imagined, if you're Marx, not only how much wealth the system would produce over time,
Could you have imagined, if you're a Marx, not only how much wealth the system would produce over time,
which I think you could have imagined,
but also developments like the welfare state
and mass democracy and universal suffrage,
which might have changed how workers relate to the system
or operate within it.
So I think it's just a transition part
that I think wasn't spelled out properly,
but I think in either case, as
socialists, we can assume that history is working in our favor. We just need to kind of
hold out and wait for the inevitable revolution. We have to convince people of both one, the struggle
for day-to-day reforms, and why it's important to be politically organized, why it's important to
be a member of a union, or to advocate for things like a universal health care or whatever else to try
to kind of build the cohesion and sense of self of the class, then ultimately for the
desirability once we accomplish it, once we build social democracy, we have going beyond
social democracy, which is of course the challenge.
Now, I don't think it requires leadership from the outside.
I think there are plenty of organic leaders
that have emerged from the working class
that have advocated for socialism
from the working class.
And if you look at the class composition
during the glory days of the European Socialist parties.
I mean, this was very much a working class parties and organizations.
It's only been the last like 30 years that it's been taken over by professionals and, you
know, not unquenchidentally, you know, they have accomplished very little in those 30
years.
So, that's the practical and the pragmatic. And we actually jumped to the, to the, at the horizon.
As you mentioned, as a social democrat, like you focus on the policies of today,
but you also have a vision and dream of a future.
And so marks it as well.
So the perfect communism at the end, can you, can you describe that world?
Also, is there almost that world that has elements of anarchism?
So again, like I said, there's Michael Malice next door.
So like anarcho communism, I don't even know if I'm using that term correctly, but basically
no central control.
Can you describe what that world looks like?
I think the traditional socialist vision of kind of, if you want to call it full communism
would be very similar to the anarchist vision of a world without coercion, mass abundance
and so on. I myself don't share that vision. I believe that we will always need to have a state in some form as a way to one even just
mediate difference.
I think traditionally a lot of Marxists have thought that after you remove the primary
contradiction of class, that the other political questions would be resolved.
And I think that's a lot behind a lot of the thinking of, we're going to have a full
communism after politics.
I don't think there will be an after politics.
I think for one thing, let's say, I'll give you another North East example.
Let's say, me and you are trying to, with different groups of people, we're trying to figure
out how to build a crossing of the Hudson River.
And for various reasons,
you and the people around you want to build a bridge,
meaning the people around me need to want to build a tunnel.
That's a question that you will probably need
a mediation for, right?
You'll need one, it's a big project,
so there'll be a very complex division labor
and so on, but even beyond that, just politically,
you will need the state to mediate the difference. You'll need to have a vote, have a vote that people trust, have institutions of people
trust, and so on to make a decision.
Society is never going to go beyond that decision-making.
You don't think it's possible outside of the state to create stable voting mechanisms
or as human nature can always
seep into that.
I just wonder why we would have to if the state is democratic and responsive.
The state isn't authoritarian.
So it might not be called a state, but it would function as a state, right?
But why not just call it a state?
But in other words, like if you don't have something like that, then don't you have a greater
risk of tyranny or tyrant emerging in the vacuum?
So I think people's fear of the state is what would happen if the state had too much power.
And I think that's legitimate fear.
That's why we have democratic checks on state power and certain guarantees and freedom
and so on.
But yeah, I guess I just wonder, I'm more afraid of the vacuum and not having a democratic
response of state and what the world would turn into.
And also, I'm just not a utopian thinker, that makes sense.
I like to think that I'm an egalitarian thinker.
I'm a socialist, but my mind just goes to like, you know, I can see a vision of the future
that I would like like 50, 60 years for now.
Maybe there's some sort of future of superabondons and automation and there's some sort of
techno-utopian future we don't want.
Some of those things that would exist in my
You know five minutes for now vision of socialism, but I just
Don't see it and in general I'm kind of weary of
visions of change that seem like they're not built off little thing pieces that we have now and not built up history and Experience and whatever else. Like, I don't want a year or zero.
I don't even like the term prehistory because I think there's a lot in history that I want,
you know, I want I want Shakespeare under socialism.
You know, I want I want a lot of things that that I think we should be grateful for.
Um, there's a part of tradition that I think that exists.
That's hierarchical and exploitative and whatever else, but there's another part of tradition that I think that exists, that's hierarchical and exploitative and whatever
else. But there's another part of tradition that's our sense of place and belonging and
our connection with the past and hopefully the future. And I want to keep that.
Yeah. So you're worried about revolution or otherwise the vacuum being created and you
worried about the things that might fill that vacuum. So the anarchists often worry about
the same mechanism of the state that controls voting or keeps voting robust and resilient
and stable. The same mechanism also having a monopoly on violence. That's the tension.
So they're very, they get very nervous about a central place having a monopoly on violence.
Whereas if there is gonna be a place
within a monopoly on violence,
let's just say we temporarily take that for granted,
should it not be a place with a skilled elected,
accountable, transparent civil service
with a democratic mandate and so on.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, well put. Speaking of AI, just to go into that
tangent, do you think it's possible to have a future world is the 50 years? 50
hundred years where AI, there's an AI sort of central planning.
There's an AI sort of central planning
sort of the We've removed some of the human elements that I think get us until a lot of trouble
Like you could you can take a perspective on the Soviet Union and then the flaws of the system there
Have less to do with the different ideologies more to do with the humans and the vacuums and how humans fill vacuums and the corrupting nature power and so on
If we have AI that it's data-driven and is not susceptible to the human
elements, is that possible to imagine such a world, almost like a pharmaceutical perspective?
Maybe in the future you can imagine certain calculation problems that rose during central
planning, solved through advanced computing. But I would say that there's another whole set of
problems with the system that were incentive problems. And I'm not sure how that advance
computing would solve the incentive problems of how do you get people to actually produce
things that other people want? Kind of that informational question, how do you communicate
without endless meetings or someone reading a brain? how do you communicate without endless meetings
or someone reading a brain?
What do you actually want?
So there's that kind of informational question, but then there's the incentive of, you know,
how do you get people to work efficiently at work and how do you get firms to use their
resources that they're getting more efficiently.
And I think solving the calculation problem
solves some of these questions, but not all of them.
But that's kind of a who knows.
But if you're a vision of the future,
requires some sort of leap into technological unknown
that's very hard to advocate for today.
It's exciting to consider the possibility of technology empowering a better reallocation
of resources.
If you care about of kind of the innate value of human beings and think of the mechanism
of reallocation resource, good way to empower that equality, that it's nice to remove the human element from that.
If you work really hard and you're really good at your job, it's nice to be really data-driven
in allocating more resources to you.
I think that the agency part requires human beings and conscious human activity. So I think if you have a sort of
planning system that works, and let's say the technology is there for it to work,
I would want it to be democratic planning in such a way. There's a human element, there's some
debate in the liberation society, and also even in my vision of socialism with the state sector and
state investments and so on,
I want there to be more public discussion and debate about certain things. So it's not just left to technocrats because
you don't want to live in society where you're you just find out the next day that there's some massive infrastructure project that you haven't,
you know, had a chance to think about or debate or feel like you're participating in you know and debate is not just facts and logic
That's that's why if the whole universe was about facts and logic computers could do a better job of that
There's something about humans debating each other they goes into the difficult gray areas of
What it means to be human or what it means to have a life that's worth living,
that requires humanity.
And I'm also worried about while I'm excited by the possibility of AI controlling everything
have joking.
But the reason I'm really terrified of that is because usually there's a possibility of
a human taking control of that system. You now
start to get the same kind of authoritarian thing. Well, I am a human, I'm smart
enough to be able to control this AI system, and I will do based on what this
AI system says, what's good for you. It's kind of like talking down to people,
and then use that AI system to now have the same kind of thing as hall and more in 1930s. And also our preferences might change. So an AI system might say the goal of
humanity is to just increase infinitely efficiency or increase output, whereas we might collectively
decide that, you know, we have enough and we want to have a trade off.
And I think that we need a system that allows
for people to make certain trade-offs.
And have more of this leisure that I've been learning about
from you.
This is a very interesting concept, leisure.
We're gonna have to hide you spell that.
All right, so if we can step into the practical,
we're talking about historical and philosophical, into the practical of today. What are some of the
exciting policies that represent democratic socialism today, modern socialism? I think you mentioned
some of them, you know, Medicare for all or universal health care.
Something you haven't mentioned is tuition free college, increasing minimum wage, maybe
stronger unions like we talked about.
What are some ideas here?
What are some ideas there's especially exciting to you?
Well, I think that our reduction has always been an important demand for socialists.
So I mean, it's been a reality in certain countries like France and recent decades, where
part of the logic is if you have a bunch of people working for 40 plus hours a week and
you also have some unemployed people who would like more employment. Then it's not as zero some game you could reduce hours to 35 hours and still maintain
the same output by employing more people to kind of fill the slack in hours.
So one I think it's a solid, eristic thing and working class movements being unemployed
and employed workers.
I also think that, yeah, it gives people more time.
So Marx was a big advocate in his day
of a 10-hour bill in the UK
that would have reduced the hours of working time
and reduced child or eliminated or reduced child labor
and other things as well.
And part of it was, this is a radical
demand because it's reducing the sphere as you saw out of exploitation. So it's putting limits on
on how much time the capitals can take from ordinary workers and how much freedom they would they
would have. With healthcare one, I just think it's a government healthcare system. You know, you could tell
me that you don't want it in the US, but you can't tell me it doesn't work because we've
seen it work in every other major industrial system in different forms.
So what does that usually involve? What does universal healthcare involve?
So there's different varieties in the UK, for instance, they have a national health
service in which medical personnel and hospitals
are run directly by the state.
It's almost like a mini-soviet system to be honest,
but just for healthcare.
And it works pretty well, just for healthcare.
And I think it's one example of the way
in which you could actually take the market.
So I give you a vision of socialism
that involves a lot of market,
but I think there's certain spheres where you could remove the market from and still have
an efficient system. And part because this is an area in which we people don't have
obviously for cosmetic procedures or whatever they have preferences. For most routine things that people do in healthcare, they just need to see a doctor.
They need to get diagnosed.
Some of these systems have had trouble with weightless for specialists or whatever.
That's more of an allocation problem of if you want more specialists, you pay specialists
more.
This is just problems that could be solved by like through the mechanisms of a planning and
government run healthcare. So that's that's kind of the most left wing that you could get is what
happened with the system the United Kingdom. Beyond that you have a system like Medicare for all,
where you say, all right, most of the doctors, besides for public hospitals that already exist,
are going to be privately employed by hospitals. The hospitals are going to be privately employed by hospitals.
The hospitals are going to be private. But instead of having all these different insurance
carriers, we're just going to have one national insurance carrier that we're all going to pay into.
That national insurance carrier is going to negotiate the price of healthcare with doctors, a price of drugs
with pharmaceutical companies and so on to hopefully reduce prices and to implement a different
little bit of planning into the system because if there's only one big national insurance
company, that company has a lot of weight and power, but you know,
you could still visit your same doctor.
And there's still some, it's not as radical of a shift in that direction.
And that's a dominant demand of Bernie Sanders and the left right now.
There's 30 plus million people in the US that would be insured that currently aren't insured.
We moved to this system. There's a lot of other people that are underinsured or worried
about how to pay co-pays or premiums involved.
I think it would be a net benefit for the vast majority of the US population, even if
it was offset by certain taxes, because we spend a lot of money out of pocket with health
insurance.
It's a demand also that's like widely popular. So for me,
it's almost like if you're trying to build support for something like socialism, we were talking this loft division of socialism after capitalism or what worker ownership the means of production
would look like in practice and so on. And by the way, you're one of the few
interviewers who ever asked me any of the details. So it's good that I had a, I've been thinking of a rough sketched my head for the last, you
know, whatever, 16 years I've been a socialist.
But, but we have to start in the hair now.
And if you can't convince people that the state could play a big role in their health insurance
and you can't convince Americans and all host of other sectors, that they should be living
in something closer to social democracy.
How are you going to convince those people that they should be work or ownership of the
means of production?
It's kind of a ridiculous leap.
If you don't have the credibility as the group of people organizing for universal healthcare,
organizing for a $15 bin of wage, enable to get the goods. And also in practice, as we fight for these reforms,
ordinary people will have a better sense,
at least my hope is, of what it means to be involved
with politics and what politics can do for their lives.
It's positive.
Because right now, when we talk about politics,
it often just seems that we're talking about
like a very glib cultural conflict
removed from the things that are important in our lives,
whereas in truth, I think politics can be a tool
for us to make our lives better.
Yeah, and there's like deep ideas here,
where in some sense universal healthcare
and work of collectives are not so radically different that there is just
There's philosophical ideas to explore and except and also from my perspective at least
Maybe I'm wrong on this, but it seems like with a lot of things
At the core of politics the right answer
From an alien perspective is not clear
the right answer from an alien perspective is not clear. Like everybody's very certain to what's the right answer.
Everyone's certain the universal healthcare is terrible or in the case of universal healthcare,
majority people think it's a good idea, but I don't think anyone knows.
Because I think that depends on cultural history, on the particular dynamics of a country
of a political system, on the dynamics of the
economic system in this country, of the changing world. The 21st century is definitely the
20th century. Maybe the failures of communism of the 20th century will not be repeated in
the 21st century, or the flip side of that may be capitalism that actually truly flourish
with the help of automation in the 21st century.
I don't think anyone knows.
So like people like you are basically saying,
like arguing for ideas and we have to explore
those ideas together.
Why do you think if universal healthcare is popular,
why don't we have universal healthcare in the United States?
Well, democracy is a great thing. Political democracy is wonderful.
It came from the struggles of ordinary people to expand suffrage and so on.
But the economic sphere, and trench power in the economic sphere,
bleeds into our political democracy.
So I think there's a lot of people with the best in interest and not having universal health care.
There's a large industries with the best in interest and not having universal
health care.
They pay for ads, pay lobbyists, they influence government and they have made it
very difficult.
So you can't get universal health care done without the bill, even if you pass
something and you're trying to make a change, like Obamacare was supposed to have
a public option.
Everybody's been running on a public option, the Democratic Party for 12, 13 years.
Why don't we have a public option?
People know that if people have the choice of bombing into government plan,
they might just keep, that might be the slow road to really having universal healthcare.
So I think a lot of it's opposition.
Do you like that idea, the public option?
So healthcare. So I think a lot of it's opposition.
Do you like that idea, the public option?
Maybe you can, like,
cause isn't there complexities,
like pre-existing conditions?
So isn't a public option?
I mean, you can not have any insurance
until you get to trouble.
And then you can,
if it covers pre-existing conditions,
just start paying for insurance then,
therefore young people don't pay for insurance.
Isn't it better to go fall in?
I don't support a public option in part because I think if we allow politicians to just say,
hey, a supportive public option, it's just kind of a way to signal your support for your
universal health care, but give us nothing.
And I think that's what we saw under Biden, a lot of other politicians that have supported public option. I think in practice, if a public option is defined in
such a way that it just means you, you, you know, by default can just opt in to a public
plan. And let's say hypothetically, you don't even have to pay for it. Then it's just a
backdoor to universal healthcare really quickly. Because I think the vast majority of people who aren't currently covered
and also a lot of employers to be honest would probably drop their private coverage that they knew their employees can just get a public option
and maybe it would only provide supplemental insurance or whatever else.
But I think the broad overarching point of all these demands is to say that
The broad overarching point of all these demands is to say that socialists need to be really connected
to the day-to-day struggles of people to just improve their lives. So if you're feeling like you're paying $400-500 on the Obamacare market for health insurance and that's hampering your ability to
do what you want to do in your life, then maybe you would support a candidate who's for universal healthcare. If you feel like you're
struggling to find work that you could afford to pay your rent with or whatever else, maybe you'll
support a candidate committed to all sorts of mechanisms to reduce housing prices or increase your
power as a tenant and whatever else. I think it's like these day-to-day concerns need to be connected to the more abstract and
lofty vision of change.
Otherwise our politics just becomes like this fantasy world thing that's nice ideas to
think about or debate, but really won't make much of a difference in people's lives.
What do you think about free college? Should college be free?
So I would say free college is not at the top of my list of priorities, but it definitely should be free in my vision of a just just society. What is the, just to clarify, is the
universal health care up there? Yeah, universal universal healthcare is probably more higher in my priorities than for college.
I think right now the way our system is built, when someone goes to college,
they're given credentials, they're given to crew, they carry with them for the rest of their life.
It gives them a chance to join kind of a privileged part of the labor market, right?
It's not a zero-sum game.
I don't want college-educated people to think that non-college educated people are their enemies and vice versa,
because a lot of them are just ordinary working the last people trying to survive.
And they're in different areas, they're in different sectors. You know, some of them are in
nursing sectors where they need a college degree and so on. But if you just make college tuition free,
what you don't also make trade skills and other things,
tuition free for someone to learn how to become a nutrition or a plumber or whatever else,
then to some degree you're privileging one sector of the labor market over another.
So I would advocate just if you're going to make something like that free, you just have
to make sure you're doing any egalitarian way.
And that one, the options and the routes to college are more equal.
So there's more investment in K through 12 education so that more kids in rough neighborhoods
have the chance to go to college and for those that choose the trade route from any
any part of the country that they're
given the skills and resources for vocational
You know trainings and that those are also free and it just feels like in terms of order of operation
I would just start with K through 12 education
improving it and and whatever else.
Then college after, but I'm not opposed to it.
So does that improving K through 12 education? Does that mean investing more into it?
Is it as simple as just increasing the amount of money that's invested in the
in public education? In general, when it comes to the public sector or any any sphere that you're
investing in, obviously it's not just as simple as throwing money at a problem. I do think we have a lot of schools
that are underfunded, but we have other schools that are adequately funded, but the conditions in
which those schools are, like the neighborhoods they're in and what's going on in society.
The problems are so deep that it's impossible for just education to solve everything.
And I think especially a lot of liberals think that education should be the panacea,
invest in education, you'll help people. If kids are living in poverty,
if they go into school hungry or whatever else, like,
education's not gonna give them everything they need to succeed. So sometimes we, I think, put too much weight on education.
And of course, you can define education more broadly, which is like the care of the
flourishing of the young mind, whatever that is.
And a lot of it starts early.
Yeah, a lot of it starts with.
So New York City, at least, we do have universal pre-K.
So from age three onward, you have the option for that.
I mean, it's important for kids socialization.
Their parents are now able to know that they could go to work
or do something else and have their kids taken care of.
There's a lot of measures like that
that we could do to equalize things. And again, for libert kids taking care of, there's a lot of measures like that that we could do to to equalize things.
And again, for libertarians in the audience, some of this stuff is scary because it's obviously more state involved state involvement pre K state.
So ready to be very involved in K through 12 more investment to state institutions like our state universities and in college. But for me, it's not a question of
state versus non-state. It's a question of, you know, good outcomes for people. And it just happens
to be that for working class people, having the collective power to elect representatives, that will build a broader safety net is in their interest.
For upper-middle class people, for others,
they get afford to pay for their own provisioning,
either directly or through like Obamacare-like schemes
where you just get a subsidy and you pay the rest yourself
and whatever.
This is for really the bottom 40% plus of the population.
They really don't have any options
so they prioritize other things.
And they end up with with some sort of injury or health problem or whatever else.
And it's bad for everyone in society, but it's especially bad for the people at the bottom
of the labor market.
So that's not very estimates for socialist programs like Social Security expansion,
free college, Medicare for all will cost upwards of $40 trillion over 10 years for zero.
Okay, they give you argue with those numbers and so on.
But so there's a cost.
There's a taxpayer cost.
What are given the weight of that cost?
Can you still make the case with these programs?
And then can you try to make the case against them
that the cost is too high?
So I will not argue with you on the numbers,
because you just read random numbers.
I do think universal healthcare,
if done right, can be basically cost neutral.
I think it's an exception,
because we spend a tremendous amount of money
on healthcare, a huge percentage or a GDP.
So I think it could be done in a way
that's close to cost neutral. So I think it could be done in a way this close to cost-neutral.
So actually, can you argue on the numbers without arguing on the numbers? So you're saying,
just your gut says that there's a lot of depending on how these programs are done,
there's a lot of variance in how much it will actually cost.
There's a lot of bureaucracy in billing right now in our healthcare sector. For example,
there would be eliminated.
There's a lot of costs that are spiraling upward up provider costs from both doctors, hospitals,
but also pharmaceuticals to drug costs
that insurance companies shoulder
because their market share is too fragmented
to really negotiate hard.
Medicare can sometimes negotiate better rates
but a Medicare for all would negotiate even better rates.
So I think there's a cost viral
that we could adjust with more government involvement.
And there's a reason why we spend
a bigger share of GDP on healthcare than other places.
But let me just accept the broad premise
that social programs cost money.
Now, I think that one for ordinary people, most of them, that trade off even hypothetically
if taxes on lower middle class and working on last people in certain cases go up, that
trade off would still be in their benefit because they're the ones who currently would be consuming more of those goods
and also our tax system and what not is progressive. So the rich will pay more. The majority will consume
more of them. Also, I think a lot of these programs are the bedrock of a healthy society.
So one reason, for example, that we have so much crime
and violence in the US, there's lots of, you know,
cultural and other causes with our level of gun ownership,
American history and so on.
But one, one really important factor is just the level
of poverty and inequality in the US
compared to other countries that combined with guns and other factors
mean. So we live in more violent unequal societies. A European would be shocked by the fact that
in even some of our nicest areas and cities and elsewhere, there's not a world violence too.
It's just normal to have gun violence. It's normal to have Drug-related violence, you know, though we have
What like four or five hundred people some years and like Baltimore a guy city of under a million getting getting killed
These are all recipes for a society in which
One the public sphere is is drunk like crazy because you're not going to go wander out for an evening
stroll in a park if you live in a dangerous area or whatever else like the the rot goes very deep
and a welfare state is one way to to live in a better society for everyone. There's been plenty of
of studies. There's one book called the spirit level on on inequality that was quite popular. The just notes that inequality is really terrible for the psyches of the rich too, not just
for the poor.
So I think spending some more money living in a more just society is doable.
There's different ways to address certain costs spirals.
One reason why our welfare states are getting more and more expensive is in part
just because our population is aging. But many of the same people who say we can't afford
more in our welfare states because we're already spending so much on social security and
all these other entitlements are the same people. Also for, closing borders. So immigrants can come in to to help build the
economy and to fill gaps in the economy. And also who aren't for things that'll make
it easier to have kids, you know, I'm 33 years old. I have a lot of friends who have been
putting them off having kids until they say up X amount of dollars, even though they have someone they could raise children with.
Because they can't afford the cost of childcare,
they can't, they can't,
their job probably won't get them
more than four, six weeks of family leave
or whatever else.
Like this is not the case in other countries.
So I think there's all sorts of benefits
from having a bigger welfare state.
But yes, there are costs and there are going to be certain trade-offs. It's not a magical
thing where you could just have everything with that trade-offs.
So in a progressive tech system, is there to push back on the costs here. Is there a point at which taxing the rich
is counterproductive in the long term?
So in the short term, there might be a net benefit
of increasing taxes
because the programs, the middle class, the lower middle class
gets is more beneficial.
Is there a negative side to tax in the rich?
In theory, yes, of course.
So one would be if you tax a rich so much,
the A change their consumption patterns
and that has negative impacts on the economy as a whole,
like you would have to kind of really model it out,
but there would be a certain point
in which the consumption changes
might have net detrimental effects.
I think that's more unlikely, and the more likely scenario is you tax corporations and
other wealthy people in society to the point that they have potentially less money for
productive investment, because you're in a capital society
so you're relying on capitalists to invest.
So you kind of don't want to be in the worst of both worlds where you've gone too far for
capitalism but not far enough for socialism.
In my vision, of course, of socialism, that's one reason why we'd have to take the investment
function away from capitalists.
There has to be, if you're going to make it so hard for them, they can't invest, or they can't employ labor the way they're employing now,
you have to create another mechanism for supply to be created.
And that's why that's a transition point.
What about longer term de-incentivizing young people that are dreaming of becoming entrepreneurs
and realizing that there's a huge tax on being wealthy.
So if you take these big risks, which is what's required to be an entrepreneur, and you
are lucky enough to succeed and good enough to succeed, that the government will take
most of your money away.
I think realistically, that's not a distance
incentive for most people.
First of all, we already have progressive taxation system.
The government does take a bunch of the money away
and people are still striving to become rich.
A lot of what people want when they dream of success
is they want accolades, they want respect
and of course they want some more wealth.
Well, they consume blood sugar goods with or whatever else. But at a certain point, it becomes
better for the state to tax and either redistribute directly or through social programs, or redirect that money through tax credits
and another ways to shape investment
towards productive investment.
We don't want a society in which a bunch of rich people
fly around in helicopters going from club to club
while the productive economy kind of does nothing.
At that point, I think a lot of ordinary rich people
might prefer the
government to come in to tax them and to try to spur investment in certain productive
sectors. So it really just just depends. But I honestly believe that that most people don't
necessarily want to be rich for the sake of being rich. They want to be successful. And there's many different dynamics to that. And accolades and social respect is an important one of them.
It's also why people who just become filthy, rich often, the first thing they do is start
out philanthropic trusts and try to give away their money because they want the social respect
and accolades. And whatever else, they don't want just their money.
They want the social respect and accolades and whatever else, they don't want just their money.
On that topic, so a little bit of a tangent, there's a lot of folks in the left community,
far left community, socialist community that I think are at the source of a kind of derision
towards the B-word, the billionaires.
Does it bother you? Or do you think that's in part justified,
a kind of using the word billionaires a dirty word?
I think it's perfectly justified in that it's a populous shorthand, right? So obviously,
when I talk about inequality, I often talk about power dynamics between workers and bosses and so on.
right between workers and bosses and so on. Billionaires is just the 99% version of it.
It's just a popular shorthand to just explain the fact that there's a lot of people who have accumulated obscene wealth. These people aren't in my mind parasites, you know, in the kind of very, very old school
socialist rhetoric, in that of course, Capilus provide employment, take entrepreneurs, come
up with new ideas sometimes themselves, sometimes directly manage work and whatever, whatever else.
But they exert so much power over the lives of not just their workers with society as
a whole, taking away some of their wealth and power is a way to just empower others.
And again, these things have policy trade-offs. If you just snap your fingers and say,
Elon Musk, you're now, all your wealth is gone, you're now on food stamps or whatever else,
in that kind of arbitrary way, you'd be a total, totally disincentivized people from trusting
the rules of the game as they've been set up in a capital society. And I think that would have negative consequences for workers.
But saying that, hey, this person has too much power and too much wealth
and has too much ability to dictate things about the lives of others,
I think it's just simply a fact.
And I think it's true in the cases of people who are good people
and have risen to this position. And it's true in the cases of people who are good people and have risen to this
position.
And it's true in the cases of people who are maybe not so good people and who have risen
to these positions.
So I agree with you in part, but I have to push back here.
So one of the problems I see is using billionaires as a shorthand to talk about power inequality
and wealth inequality, often dismisses the fact that some of these folks
are some of the best members of our society.
So outside of the, however, the system has created
inequalities, a young person today
should dream to build cool stuff, not for the wealth,
not for the power of the fame, but to be part of
building cool stuff. Now, there's a lot of examples of billionaires that have gotten there in shady
ways and so on, and you can point that out. But in the same way, we celebrate great artists and
great athletes and great literary icons and writers and poets and musicians and
engineers and scientists. We should sort of separate the human creator from the wealth that
the system has given them. That's what I worry about is like in our system some of the greatest humans are the ones that have become rich and so we sometimes mix up
that if you want to criticize the wealth
We sometimes criticize the human and the creator while that should actually be the person we aspire to be
So you know, I would agree with that.
LeBron James, if he's not already,
in his lifetime will be a billionaire.
And he got his money largely through
just being an incredible athlete,
excelling in his field more than anyone,
you know, Sassford, Michael Jordan,
I think he's my number two.
He might be my number one.
Let's see.
Oh, yeah, I'm willing to keep keeping
open mind about the LeBron versus Jordan conversation. But, you know, he got that through
his merit and he's been rewarded. And apart, he's getting rewarded because he's created
vast amounts of wealth beyond what he's getting. This is just this share, you know, it's
the salary cap league. Whenever he's doing an endorsement, obviously that company is is thinking that he's worth more than
what they're paying him for that endorsement and so on. And to the extent
with Elon Musk, people see innovation and they see someone who will put
himself out there with sometimes crazy ideas because he's trying to think
about the future and trying to just push things
forward instead of just sitting on whatever money he has now and just investing it, earning
you know, 6% return for the rest of his life.
You know, I think that that's a positive thing, but I think it doesn't get to the broader
policy question.
When people in bulk billionaires, they're invoking the specter of inequality and power. It's not normally the rhetoric that I use
because I propose and I use more traditional socialist rhetoric and terms, but I
think it gets at something real. So often with these sorts of shorthands we use
in politics, there are, you know, they're imperfect, but they speak to a real thing.
Yeah, and they feed a little bit of fun that folks like AOC and EEL and have with each other
creates. It feeds, it inspires, it serves as a catalyst for productive discourse. Okay,
speaking of which, you said you're a fan of Bernie Sanders.
Would you classify yourself as a Bernie bro? What's the technical definition of a Bernie
bro? Is that a, is a subset? No, no, no, I'm sorry, you're a sophisticated philosopher,
writer, economic and political thinker. Of course, you would not call yourself a Bernie bro.
I'm Bob McComb, I saw Bernie grow up.
That's it was made up by liberal journalists,
to smear Bernie and his supporters during the 2016 campaign,
even though disproportionately his supporters were like
young women in their 20s, you know,
Adam, but whatever.
I think I arrived for Bernie.
There's worse things in the world than being called a bro.
So that's fine. What do you like about Bernie Sanderson?
To what degree does he represent ideas of socialism?
To what degree does he represent the more traditional sort of liberal ideas?
I love Bernie. Most of all, I like his clarity. He's by far the best communicator we have on the left.
Most of all, like his clarity, he's by far the best communicator we have on the left.
He speaks with a moral force.
He's relatable.
And he's taken a lot of socialist rhetoric from academia and brought it down to its core
in a way that's comprehensible for ordinary people and speaks to their daily lives.
So when Bernie does a speech, people can finish his lines because they know what he's going to say.
You know, they know what points he's going to hit because socialism in my mind should not be a complicated thing.
Now when we get to more abstract discussions about what a future system would look like,
when we get to the policy trade-offs today, I think we need to put on a different hat.
We shouldn't brace all sorts of nuance and contradiction and
complication. When it comes to the core moral and ethical appeal I think Bernie
grasped that and how to communicate it. Now Bernie Sanders was politicized a
very long time ago. I actually once told him I've only met him few times but one
time I joked that in his book, he mentioned
that one politicizing moment in his life was when the Brooklyn Dodgers left town, and
he was devastated because he was a Dodgers fan, you know, from Brooklyn. And I said, this
is like 2020 campaign, this may be 2019. I said, Bernie, you're writing for President.
You do not need to keep reminding people of your age. Yeah. But, you know, he was politicized through the young people
socials leak, which was an old offshoot
of the normed Thomas socials party of America.
I said, very old school socials tradition,
then he was engaged in labor struggles and the 60s.
He was engaged in the civil rights movement.
So he came from this old left generation
that I think just had a more plain spoken,
more rooted way of understanding change and socialism.
It wasn't in my mind polluted by academia
and by some of the turned towards issues of culture
and I access to focus on representation or whatever else.
It was really rooted in something economic in a way.
Then obviously he had all his ideas and he was also a product to the left and that he
went to Vermont.
He kind of did the back to the land thing.
He was basically not quite a hippie and an affect, but he was out there trying to farm
or whatever and you know, cold as hell, northern Vermont.
And then he decided to do politics, do electoral politics.
And he failed for a long time.
He did third party politics.
He kept losing races.
Eventually he became by savvy and luck
and things he learned, the mayor of Burlington, Vermont.
And he just kept with the same message.
And my book I talk about, I quote, I think a Bernie speech
from the 1970s, one of his early campaigns.
And I compared it to a Bernie speech during his 2016 campaign.
It was virtually identical.
Millionaires was swapped with millionaires
and billionaires, speaking of billionaires.
Which is beautiful you know it's it's I think there's there's something you
know great to what he offered American politics and also all around the world
there's a socialist pole in politics whether you agree with it or not and and all
these countries in Europe and any any rich country Japan and so on and the US
really didn't have that the fur further select you could go was like,
Chris Hayes and MSNBC or whatever.
I'm very glad that there's a social spool
and I think we have Bernie to thank for it.
To the extent that a lot of self-describe socialists
don't think Bernie is a real socialist.
It's in part because he stays grounded
in people's day-to-day lives and struggles.
I don't think he thinks often the way that I do and other people more disconnected or step-on-move
day-to-day politics think about the future contours of a social society and so on, but I think he's
morally committed to a egalitarian, different sort of future.
And I don't think he, at least I haven't heard him talk about sort of this big broad history
and future, so the Marxist ideology and so on.
Not that he's afraid of or something, it's just not how he thinks about it.
Yeah, I think he's a practical thinker and also, yeah, he is running, even if he should
be afraid of it too, because he is a, you
know, he is a major politician running for president. I think what people want is they
want, they want the left wing of the possible, and at least the segment of the party that
was voting for him, the Democratic party was voting for him. They wanted something that
was a step or two removed from what they had now and was visionary,
but not so far removed that it seemed like a scary leap.
And I think we lost the last chance in 2016 to like someone that I think would have beaten
Trump or the very least would have been close.
Do you think the Democrats screwed him over?
Yes, not in the way of the
Liberator direct vote working, but they put their thumb in the scale, for sure. I mean,
there's not even conspiracy theory. There's all this stuff and the debates about Clinton,
you know, being, Clinton's people being fed questions and whatever else. And just the tone
of the media, the media was extremely dismissive and hostile to him.
I love that Bernie still does a Fox News town hall
with his, they're just him speaking to the people.
And he's not afraid of going on,
you know, any sort of outlet and making his case.
But I think a lot of the liberal media in particular,
always had it out for Bernie Sanders.
What was that, because I was really annoying. That was really annoying.
How dismissive they were. I've seen that in some other candidates.
They were dismissive towards Andrew Yang in that same way. So,
forget the ideology. Why are they so smug sometimes towards certain candidates?
What is that? Because I think that's actually at the core to a degree if Democrats or any party fails, that it's that smugness. Because people see through that.
I think a lot of these people are friends, even if they don't know each other, they're friends
because they went to the same schools. They know the same people. They have the same broad
just ideology and worldview. So they had a sense of what the Democratic party should be
and who should be running and who is gonna win
and also what was serious and on serious.
So Bernie would say some things about the world
that objectively tell a lot of people seem correct
or at least pretty close to correct.
And a journalist would just look at him
like he's from outer space.
To some extent this also happens to people on the right.
People on the right often say things that I find repulsive or just run, but there's parts
of the media that would describe their certain views as illegitimate or outside the boundaries
of acceptable conversation.
I think there should be a few things outside the boundary of acceptable conversation. I think there should be a few things outside
the boundary of acceptable conversation,
you know, hate speech and so on.
But like there's this attempt to say their views
are illegitimate and therefore anyone who votes for them
for any reason is illegitimate too.
And that's one reason why I think it's
fueled a lot of resentment.
And ultimately end up feeling the extremes of American politics that people feel like,
you know, they're not being listened to.
And some of it is also style of speaking and personality,
or if you're not willing to sort of play kind of a game of civility,
or there's like a proper way of speaking if you're a Democrat,
if you're not doing that kind of proper way of speaking if you're a Democrat, if you're not doing that kind of
proper way of speaking and people dismiss you, I think in certain sense, whatever you feel about him,
people dismissed Donald Trump for the same reason, where it's the style of speaking,
the personality of the person that he's not playing by the rules of polite society, of polite politician society and so on.
And that's really, that troubles me because it feels like solutions, the great leaders
will not be polite in the way they're not going to behave and the way they're supposed to behave.
And I just wish the media was at least open-minded to that. Like, which
I guess gives me hope about the new media, which is like more distributed citizen media,
right, that they're more open-minded to the revolutionary, to the outsiders, right? I actually
first, I really like Bernie Sanders. I first heard him on in conversation with Tom Hartman.
He had these like weekly conversations and just the authenticity from the guy. I didn't even
know any context. I didn't even know honestly he was a democratic socialist or anything.
The authenticity of the human being was really refreshing. And when I guess decided to run for president, that was really strange. I was like, surely this kind of,
this person has no chance. Just like, he seemed too authentic. He seemed to like, he's
not going to be effective of playing the game of politics. So it was very inspiring to
me to see that you don't necessarily need to be good at playing the game of politics. You can actually have a chance of winning.
Yeah, that was really inspiring to see.
What about some of the other popular candidates?
What do you think about AOC?
I don't know if she self-identifies as a socialist or not.
She does self-identifies as a democratic socialist. I think she was a very inspiring figure for a lot of
people. She was kind of out of this Bernie wave, the first set of Bernie candidates in 2018 that
identified with him instead of the Democratic Party establishment. I think that she's still developing
as a politician. It's very difficult when you're in a deep blue district.
And when you don't often have to worry about re-election or talk to,
but modulate your rhetoric to win over swing voters in your district,
but then you're immediately a national and cultural figure.
So, AOC basically goes from her views, which are compelling in
my mind. A lot of her programmatic views are compelling. Wins her district, and then has
her on rhetoric, which to me compared to Bernie owes itself more to the academic left
in the way that a lot of the left has learned to talk. I don't mean academic in sense that she's like a Marxist or whatever else, but academic in the way that
she may be using at times like confusing language to convey basic points when
she gets into like the like language of intersectionality and whatever else.
Especially in the context of cultural issues and stuff like.
Exactly. Instead of just the plain spoken Bernie like Bernie, like, yeah, discrimination is wrong.
If you ask him about a cultural issue,
I'll come down to the same side as AOC,
I'm sure, you know, nine plus tens out of,
times out of 10, but I'll try to root it into just basic,
like, yeah, treat people with respect, you know,
and they'll treat you with respect
and that's the way we should govern our civic sphere.
You know, and we don't need to talk about intersectionality to,
to I think get that.
But so there's that rhetoric.
But she's not just regular congressperson and a deep blue district.
She's also a national and international cultural and political figure.
So she's now a spokesperson because of large like a media event
of her surprising upset election and her being,
you know, young and like being really connected to this post-burning moment. And I think amid these
constant one attacks on her from the right and also this media tension and this notoriety,
she hasn't really modulated or adjusted her audience, her rhetoric, and how
do you win over someone who really hates a lot of your ideas, but might actually believe
in some of your policies?
And I think she's been ineffective, quite frankly, in the last year, making that transition.
Whereas I think other politicians who are not so far left,
who don't identify as socialists,
but let's say a John Federman has managed
to become more effective.
And I don't think it's a question of character
or whatever else, and I like AOC.
So I don't wanna put it so harshly,
but I think a lot of it has to do with her being a congress
person in a deep
blue district and federal man being running for statewide office in a, you know, quote unquote,
purple state.
But at her best, at her best, she does it, but it's like glimmers.
It's kind of like, I know, what's, what's border you biggest fan of?
I'll give you a sports analogy.
Like the end of, I mean, NFL is up there, soccer is up there, but probably UFC.
Okay, well, I can't give you good analogy for any of those, but it's like a raw prospect.
Like you know, someone who shows glimmers of hope, so they were drafted really high, and
they balanced from team to team, and you're like, I'm clinging on to my AOC stock, but
I think that that she needs to be self-critical enough I think that she needs to be self-critical enough and
our team is self-critical enough to know that the goal is not merely to be a national
cultural figure and win a reelection near a deeply district.
The goal has to be to become truly a national political figure, which will require changes.
A unifier and inspiring figure about the ideas that she represents.
Definitely, and she has other things against her. Like, obviously, class focused, but there's no
denying, I think, that some of the hostility to her is like sexism. I've rooted in, I think people
wanting to see her fail or whatever else, but that's only some of it. I think some of it,
otherwise, is her struggling to relate to people who don't have a lot of
her starting points as far as moral and ethical beliefs.
Yeah, but she's actually great at flourishing in all the attacks she's getting.
She's doing a good job of that.
And a lot of those attacks will break me if I'm being honest.
Yes, that's the amount of fire she's under.
But you don't want that to become a drug to where you just get good at being a national
figure that's constantly in the fights and are using that for attention.
So on, you still want to be the unifier.
And that's the tricky, tricky switch.
Do you think there's a chance there's a world in which she's able to modulate it enough
to be a unifier and run for president?
And when?
I think she's very far away from being able to do that.
I think that even other politicians that are also polarizing within the squad in terms
of what they say, their ideas, whatever else, are very effective communicators
like Elhan and Mar and others.
I think AOC, I mean, that's my hope, right?
My hope is that someone like AOC could,
the last year plus have not, has not been
extremely promising in my mind,
in part because she's become,
or she's continued to
position herself as a lighting rod, cultural figure. Whereas I think a national political figure
needs to pick their spots and also pick their moment for changing their rhetoric and adjusting
to their audience. And I think she does it in certain environments, but that needs to be your national message when you're out there. You need to be speaking towards
the not already converted. And I think Bernie does that. Bernie strips his politics down to the
basics. So I agree with you spiritually, but I also, we also have an example of Donald Trump winning the
presidency isn't some, isn't some of the game of politics that's separate from
the policy. Being able to engage in rhetoric that's that leads to outrage and
then walking through that fire with grace. First of all, I think Trump is kind of a unique personality
in American history.
So it's hard to compare anyone to Trump.
But don't you think AOC is comparable
in terms of the uniqueness in the political system we're in?
Oh no.
I think Trump is much more of a fire brand
anti-establishment force in that, and I mean this negatively for what is worth, I can Trump is much more of a firebrand anti establishment force.
In that, and I mean this negatively for what is worth because I disagree with Trump,
but he was willing to set fire to the Republican establishment, right?
He was able to self fund your largest campaign and he already was a media figure without them.
AOC has been much more cautious with the Democratic Party establishment, and part because she's not trying to run a national political campaign right now for the outside, like a 5% chance
to be president, let me set fire to everything.
She's trying to help people and help her constituents through the game of getting committee
appointments and getting wins in the margins.
I think that's understandable
for what is worth. But in the process, I think what's the difference between AOC and a progressive
Democrat? During 2016, it used to be pretty easy to say the difference between the Bernie
Crats and a progressive Democrat, right? Because we were establishing our own outside third-force
and American politics.
Where, you know, you could knock on the door
of a lot of people who would end up voting for Trump
and they would say, oh, I have a lot of respect
for Bernie or whatever.
They were still gonna not vote for him,
but he wasn't considered part of the Democratic Party,
milieu.
I think now with AOC, there's a much closer association
of AOC in our policies with ordinary
Democrats, where she needs to draw stronger distinctions.
She doesn't need to do it like Trump did with just Maniford God, all of them.
I found some of them amusing in the moment, like all his nicknames about a lion Ted Cruz
and then the rest, you know.
But I do feel like she needs to, yeah, differentiate herself a bit more, but also just keep her language
simple.
Trump was more complex than Bernie, I mean, his literal language.
But he was repetitive and there was kind of a rhythm and a cadence to a Trump speech. I think AOC needs to like Bernie,
reduce her rhetoric down to a couple key lines and signatures and focus her politics not on
20 issues but on three or four most important issues and have that message just one.
Bernie will do an interview with you and he'll write down, hope you do interview Bernie.
But he'll write down like five things,
and I'm only gonna talk about these five things.
As we're about this, okay, I'm talking about these five things.
So that's a message discipline that Bernie has been
exemplary on, yeah, sure.
But I think that's learned, that could be developed.
I think she could develop it.
Listen, I hope, I'm answering your question,
I think not the way I should answer it,
being someone broadcasting to people on the left
and elsewhere.
I hope AOC goes in that direction.
I just think that she is a lot going against her just because she's already a national figure
and she's in a deeper blue district.
But we need to root our politics then
in working class people and a lot of districts
that, I don't know, the type of kitchen table conversations
are, I hate that cliche, but I just used it,
but a lot of these conversations are just different
in their tone and cadence.
And it's not just a question of,
I, you know, feathermen or Tim Ryan and Ohio
and kind of just white working class voters.
I mean, working class voters of any race.
There's their day to day needs
and the day to day things they wanna talk about
is just at a different plane than, you know,
a MetGala cultural statement.
Yeah, I mean, it's clear that your respect and love
are in and would like to see different ways.
I mean, she's young.
So the different trajectories that she could develop
that would ultimately make her a good candidate.
I'm just looking at odds here and I disagree with them.
I'm buying AOC stock here, given these odds.
So in terms of democratic,
who's going to win the 2024 election? So that includes running and winning. On the
Democrat side is 18% chance for Biden, 7% chance for Kamala Harris, Gavin Newsom at 6%
Michelle Obama at 3% Hillary Clinton at 2% and AOC at 1.5% and then Bernie at 1%.
So I would not buy AOC at that mark.
I would buy Biden like crazy though.
I'm not a gambling man, but I would totally toss a G at Biden at that amount.
AOC at 1.5% chance?
I think it's, I don't think she runs.
You don't think she runs, yeah.
Okay.
I don't think Bernie will primary Biden either.
I mean, if Biden doesn't run, then obviously it's an open field, but I just feel like.
Do you think Biden runs?
Yes, I think Biden probably runs.
Oh, man.
Oh, boy.
He's an incumbent president.
He's an in combat president.
So it's just, it's very hard to imagine
another Democrat being able to do better than him.
All right.
What about the competition?
I think Donald Trump is the best thing for the Democrats period, just because it would
create this turnout mechanism, this excitement around we have to stop Donald Trump.
He's attacking Decentis.
I mean,
already he's he's trying to, you know, the dysentimonious thing. But yeah, he's I kind of like,
Trump's kind of like the Don King of American politics. Yeah, it's interesting what kind of dynamic
chaos he's created. It probably led to more people being interested in politics.
Well, almost guaranteed it led to more people being interested in politics, but maybe not
in a healthy way.
Maybe it created an unhealthy relationship with politics, where it created more partisanship.
For me, I don't have a problem with partnership.
It's what kind of partnership.
So I think Trump has cultivated a lot of right populist relationship with his supporters.
It's almost like a leader, follower relationship, and a way that doesn't actually enhance people's
knowledge of politics and the issues, but actually just lead some to fall the party line.
Ideally, I think socialist politics and politics
in the left should be something different.
Eugene Debs, the great American socialist leader
of the late 19th and early 20th century,
used to say, you know, I'm not your Moses,
I can't promise to lead you to the promised land
because the black can lead you there
and you just follow me there.
Someone's just gonna lead you straight out as soon as I'm gone and
I think there's something nice about that kind of anti
You know blind following leader follower kind of dynamic on the left and it's best
that said in the way
the
But at least the political race in the United States has turned out, it seems like
it's turned into a bit of an entertainment. And there having personalities and characters
is really important. So in terms of policy and actual leadership, yes, maybe having
a leader, like an authoritarian big leader is not good, but maybe for the race
it is, for the drama of it.
You just want to have drama and attention on people who are actually going to turn out
to be good leaders.
That's a weird balance to strike.
Yeah, earn media is what they always talk about, right?
And political campaigns, like, you know, the more you can get on TV,
the better.
Even like I really like Federman, he just won his campaign,
but a good part of his early campaign, he had pivoted from talking about issues
to just talking about Dr. A's living in New Jersey and kind of having the troll campaign
against him, which I found amusing, but also it was effective obviously one, but
you know, it's a bit depressing because I would rather a whole campaign cycle about health
care and jobs and other other issues.
Yeah, yeah, and the hope is that people just get better at that kind of social media
communication.
So I do actually think there's something about doing political speeches that makes you
sound less authentic because you have to like do so many of them.
It's it must be exhausting to like day after day after day make the speech.
You're going to start sort of replaying the same stuff over and over as opposed to actually
thinking about the words that are coming out of your mouth.
And then the public will know that you're not really being that authentic.
Even though you believe those things, it's just tough.
I just wish they didn't have to constantly do speeches.
So I think that the fact that Bernie's speeches very clearly came out of, if not directly
his own pen, but his own rhetoric over the years
and he kind of wrote it seemed authentic,
even if he was repeating it.
I then trumped his just wild improvisation.
I think people found real, you know, in a certain way.
And I would love for the left more generally
to tap into some of that anti-establishment sentiment,
but obviously doing a way that's productive,
that doesn't blame immigrants or whatever else for problems,
but it's kind of built on a different basis,
but people are fed up for good reason
with a lot of conventional politics,
and we need to speak to that.
Otherwise, it'll only be the right
that is taking advantage of those peoples, anchor.
Well, I almost forgot to ask you about China.
So both historically, we talked about the Soviet Union,
but what lessons do you draw from the implementation of socialism and communism
in Maoist, China, and modern China?
What's the good in the bad?
Well, I think it's very similar to the Soviet case
and that socialism came to China through
not a base of organized workers and a capitalist country to a certain level development and so
on.
But it came through the countryside and in conditions of civil war, strife, Japanese invasion, and whatever else, and now built his base
in the peasantry, then came down to the city to govern and try to build a base and rule
over workers.
So it was kind of an inversion of classic socialist theory.
Now the same thing that I said before about Stalin and assessing the Soviet Union has to apply here
because obviously, you know, I pose authoritarianism and you know, I obviously just also some more
� and condemnations I should do. But to look at what the Chinese Communist Party actually accomplished,
I think we kind of need to take a step backwards from our moral
opposition to the means in which they accomplished it and just look at it developmentally.
China benefited greatly from the Communist Party's implementation of basic education and health care.
So in a lot of China, you had one of the conditions of women were absolutely terrible.
There was still foot behinding and all sorts of like terrible backward practice.
You had a huge vast majority of the population that was illiterate without any access to basic
education and you had no health access, especially in the countryside. So those are the three good things that China did. Improve the status of women, get everyone into primary education and improve the lot of
healthcare.
Besides for that, their agricultural campaign was a failure, just like Stonnes for many
of the Simbrans I mentioned before. The greatly forward and crash industrialization
didn't really work either.
In a way is China better than India
or other countries that didn't have the basic education
and the Strong State Authority
and the health improvements
and whatever, I think, maybe, but I think that's why we need to sometimes go beyond just
economic measures of success. Because if you told me tomorrow, the US will grow at 3% if we maintain
democracy, but it'll grow at 8%, 9% everyone will be wealthier
if we move just some sort of authoritarian government.
I think you're asking the wrong question
if we're gonna make your decision based on growth, right?
Cause it has to be based on some sort of principle.
But the same dynamic of, from the beginning,
the Chinese Communist Party, ruling over people,
emerging from the outside through armed conflicts
and ruling over ordinary Chinese people have continued. Since then,
the policies have been better economically and often at times, not always, the
technocratic governance has been you know quite good, but that doesn't mean
that the party has a democratic mandate or has the should have the right to govern as they see fit.
Because clearly, it doesn't have that mandate
in swads of the country or in places like Hong Kong
or elsewhere.
But to me,
nothing the Chinese Communist Party does
has anything to do with socialism.
I think even by their own definition today, it really doesn't.
It's a sort of nationalist authoritarian developmental state that has done some good things to
improve the living standards of the Chinese people, other things that were counterproductive.
And as a democratic socialist, I certainly don't support that state, but I also hope that
the U.S. and Biden will find a way to avoid intense robbery and competition economically
spilling over into something worse.
From a democratic socialist perspective, what's one policy or one or two ways you could fix if you could
fix China, if you took over China, what would you like to see change?
Well the democratic part becomes before the socialist part.
So I would say there needs to be multi party elections in China and state censorship
and control over the press.
In other words, need need to be done with. As far as
their immediate economic policy, I think the idea of maintaining strong state control of certain
commanding heights of the economy while liberalizing other spheres has done quite well in China's
case, lifting people out of poverty. But again, there's something really lost in the society,
even if it's getting wealthier, if ordinary people don't have
the ability to participate in dissent freely.
And the Chinese authorities have allowed some,
you know, it's not North Korea,
it's not a totally totalitarian state. There's been workplace protests. It's been all sorts of
anti-corruption, local anti-corruption protests and things like that. But it's up the government
decides what's permitted and what's not at what particular moment. And I think the long run
even if it can survive, there's a better way to do things, which is quite simply a democracy.
The thing is though, the lessons of history that China is looking at, this is a dark aspect.
So building on top of the fact that it seems like under Stalin and under Mao, under Stalin, the Soviet Union, and under Mao China has seen a lot of
economic growth.
And then one dark aspect of that, while under the great leap forward, you know, upwards
of 70 million people dead.
Today, I think there's a large number of people who admire Stalin and admire Mao.
What they admire is the stability and the strong leadership.
So, there's a lot of people who miss this over-union, right?
The reason why they miss it is that it was a system they knew that provided the basics of their livelihood.
Then afterwards, like, look at Russia in the 90s, people were in chaos.
And the Communist Party was had a huge amount
of support democratically.
Anti-democratic measures had to be taken
ironically against the Communist Party
to keep it from regaining more of a foothold in Russia.
But we don't need that trade off.
We could have a form of, imagine of Russia went to a system closer
to social democracy that maintained the stability that people wanted, the welfare state, the
people wanted, but restructured the economy and not a shock way, but in a way that made
sense and that ordinary people felt ownership of instead of just oligarchs who are a former Communist Party bureaucracy just dividing up the country for themselves.
I think the same thing in China. First of all, certainly from the West, the US government and people in the US should have no say over what should happen in China, right? The Chinese Communist Party has more authentic authority
than any of us do in the country.
But I think that the fears and stability
that a lot of Chinese people have,
why I would imagine that even in a democratic election,
the Communist Party might have majority support
is because they fear the unknown.
They fear collapse.
That was one of the big lessons of the Soviet collapse, right?
Do you want trying to divide it into five, six states?
Do you want economic turmoil?
Do you want mass, immediate privatization?
Do you want whatever welfare state you have destroyed and so on.
I think people are right to have those fears, but there's a different route towards macroeudization
that maintains stability, right? There's different routes that you could have,
you know, democracy. Not every country had to go down the route of Yugoslavia and the USSR and so on.
had to go down the route of Yugoslavia and the USSR and so on.
You are the founder of the magazine, Jacobin, of which I am a subscriber.
I recommend everybody subscribe
what they are on the left or the right.
The magazine does tend to lean left.
Does it officially say it's socialists?
Yeah, we're a socialist publication.
We try to be interesting.
So we try to like, you know, have articles
that kind of have debates and contestation
and whatever else, but we're definitely,
we're all socialists.
Well, it's a lot of really interesting articles.
So I definitely recommend that people subscribe, support.
I only like the product of the 21st century
only subscribed to the digital version,
but I guess there's also paper version.
Yeah, there's like 70,000 subscribers and print.
And print.
Does it come like on a scroll?
I don't even know to paper.
Do they even publish paper lengths?
I'm gonna mail you a bunch of copies.
No, it's perfect bound, you know, it's long issues.
Our Jackman's publisher, Remake IV,
has recently did a redesign of the publication.
So it looks really good.
It's up there in the design award competition range.
It's sexy.
I can show it off to all my friends.
Look, put it in your coffee table.
You don't even have to read it.
First, I need to get a coffee table.
But yes, I'll get both.
That's what respectable, listen, I've upgraded my life. I haven't had a couch
I don't think ever so I got a couch recently because somebody told me that serious adults have a couch
And I also got a TV because serious adults have a couch in a TV and as you see it's been here for many months
And I still haven't like unboxed it so
This I'm trying to learn how to be an adult
looking up on YouTube, how to be an adult, and learning slowly. After that, I'll look into this
whole leisure thing. Anyway, what's the origin of Jackman? What was the idea? What was the mission?
What's the origin story? So I started Jackman when I was between my sophomore and junior year of college. Basically, I was already a socialist.
I was involved in the Democratic Socialist America.
I was in the youth section, the young Democratic Socialist.
I was editing the kind of youth online magazine
called the activists back then.
And to be honest, I had my ideology.
I had my views.
I had a group of people around me
that we would debate together and occasionally write for this other publication, the activist,
and so on.
And yeah, just a product of creative ignorance in the sense that I knew I had the capacity
to maybe pull off an issue or two.
I just had no idea how long I would keep doing it, you know, and I'd just eventually consume
my life slowly, but surely, like I had different plans for my future, I kind of, you know, and I just eventually consume my life slowly, but surely like I had different plans for my future kind of, you know, but I
ended up just being a magazine publisher. I literally didn't know what a
magazine publisher was, but it just kind of happened.
What's the hardest part about running a magazine? Well, the hardest part is
obviously the things just like any enterprise, right? The things beyond your control,
like you could put out something
that you think is great or interesting,
but then you need the feedback of people
actually subscribing to it.
And you occasionally encounter periods
where you feel like you're doing your best work,
but you're not getting the audience response.
And I think you just need the kind of,
the self confidence to just keep doing it and obviously if you're totally obscure and crazy
and way off the mark you're never going to build that that audience but I think a lot of
publications have tried to same thing I guess goes with YouTube shows whatever else they try to
adapt to what everyone else is doing right away when they don't achieve success.
Whereas for me, the early issues of Jackman
got very little resonance and took a while
for it to build into something.
But a lot of it was just the confidence,
just keep going and keep publishing what I would wanna read
and just hope that I'm not so much of a weirdo
that I'm the only one.
Is there some pressure that you could speak to of audience
capture because it is a socialist publication.
You have a fan base, a readership base.
Is there times you feel pressured not to say a certain thing,
not to call out bullshit, not to criticize certain candidates,
all that kind of stuff?
Yes, definitely. Of course. not to criticize certain candidates, all that kind of stuff.
Yes, definitely, of course. I myself am loser on the self-centership
than other people, that's only because I've gotten this far
just shooting from the hip or whatever.
And occasionally, you'll come to our rash judgment,
you'll speak too soon or complain about something too soon
and you'll have to kind of either apologize
or kind of reconsider whatever else.
But on a host of issues, I have used that maybe not all
of the left has, but I know that the core of my politics
is a politics against oppression against exploitation,
against all the things that we talked about.
And if you know that's at the core of politics,
then you can maybe say, you know what?
I don't think the left should respond
to the real racists in the still around the world
by adopting an excessively racialized rhetoric.
That makes sense.
Like I fundamentally just am a universalist,
and I believe that people no matter where their
backgrounds are and so on kind of want the same things for themselves and for their families.
And I feel like a lot of the left or some of the left, not even the far left, more like
the center left has adopted kind of a stance saying, oh, we need to talk about white privilege or, you know,
white carons or white guys or old white guys doing this
or whatever else.
And to me, it's not only Ron in a moral sense,
but it's counterproductive.
Because the last thing I want is a young white teenager
who, you know, feels unrepresented politically
and wants to be a part of maybe even the left who feels unrepresented politically
and wants to be a part of maybe even the left
to feel like, oh, I should think more about my identity.
No, the whole point of anti-racist politics
is we wanna live in a world where, you know,
meaning you can go around the corner and get a bear
and we're not, you know, people of two different, you know,
races getting a bear were just two guys in America getting a bear, you know're not, you know, people of two different, you know, races getting a bear, we're just two, you know, guys in America getting a bear.
You know, it's just, we're trying to get, have the type of society in which there's less
of that sort of communal or racialized identity.
And that was a whole point of a whole generation of anti-racist struggle.
But now we seem to be kind of reifying it in the media and in culture and in politics.
And that's one issue where I've been kind of banging the drum on this to the point
that it's annoying in certain parts of the left. I don't think there's maybe extreme opposition
among socialists, but it's more like a why do you keep focusing on this? Let's focus on our real
enemy, the right instead of criticizing, you know, this part of...
No, I think it's really, I'm really glad you exist. I'm really glad you're beating that
drum because I think that's one of the reasons that the left has not had a broader impact
or has not heard by more people that could hear its message is because the othering, the othering of, like as if there's
there's two teams of as if it's black and white as opposed to having there's a common humanity
and a common struggle amongst all of us. You also wrote the book that we mentioned a few times
the Socialist manifesto, the case for radical politics in an era of
extreme inequality, what's the framework, what are the ideas of the book?
So a lot of it's a look at Socialism's past, present and future, basically. So a lot of it is
historical. The opening chapter uses a post-Assault factory. There's a way to explain certain Marxist concepts, but also a theory of change, like how we get from,
let's say, pure capitalism to more regulated,
you know, unionized and social democratic systems,
than beyond social democracy into my vision of socialism.
That's kind of the first little bit.
It's like a visionary kind of like look at the future of socialism.
But then I try to explain why some of past socialist movements have gone wrong. Because I
think we can't take for granted. I think a lot of people want to live in a
different or better society. But they look at past examples and they're
skeptical. And I think there's good reason for skepticism. So I try to explain
both these successes of certain systems like social democracy, but also what
happened in Russia, China, and kind of more of historical overview. Then the book kind of ends in
the present. It ends with looking at the Bernie Sanders campaign, why it resonated, looking at some
of the problems facing the US, the UK, other advanced economies, and why I think
the socialist message is still relevant.
Because for the longest time,
I'm 33, I became a socialist as a teenager.
And for the longest time, it seemed like
I was just a member of the historical society,
keeping alive an idea that nobody was interested in anymore.
And now it's heartening to see more young people interested in the idea,
but we actually need to, I think, have a clearer sense of what we stand for
and how we make our movement, like it used to be, more rooted in the working class.
So, if anyone ruins the tape, they go to when we first started talking about early socialism
when I was talking about the German social democratic workers movement or all these
different early parties. I think at various points I use a word worker and socialist movement
interchangeably, because in fact the time it was pretty interchangeable. Socialism was the ideology that had the appeal of the working class movement.
You couldn't really separate between the two.
Now obviously, socialism is like a fringe ideological concurrent among a very small minority
of the working class, which is fine.
But we need to get to the point, I think, ideally, where when people talk about
unions and people protesting in social boobins and socialism, they all kind of are one in the same,
as part of the same broad, broad movement.
How did you become a socialist? What was the personal story, where the idea took hold in your mind?
So, I'm the youngest of five. I was the only one on my family born in the United States.
So it was very obvious to me that my life outcomes were very
different than life outcomes of my siblings.
So my three oldest siblings didn't go to college
after high school.
Some of them got their degrees much later on as adults.
But I was from a pretty young age.
Had access to a great public school district,
and was put on the track to go to college. This is kind of the outcome. And like I said,
even my grandmother was illiterate. My mom didn't have a lot of educational opportunities
early in her life. She actually graduated from college the same year
I did. So she later got her kind of degrees and whatever else. But to me, it was obvious that
so much of my life outcomes weren't just a product of hard work or my family sacrifices because
of course, I the same family is my siblings.
But the product of state institutions,
helping out, evening things out,
public school district, public library,
like all sorts of afterschool programs,
all that was the domain of the state
and I really benefited from it.
So in essence, my core was the social democratic belief.
The state should, we distributed a bit, build
in public institutions, be an equalizer.
Now how it became a Marxist and a socialist was much more random.
I was just intellectually interested in that.
And eventually I kind of merged with two together where I merged together my more pragmatic
and practical interest in day-to-day concerns and reforms and so on, with my loftier intellectual interests
and Marxism into the politics I have today,
which I try to kind of balance and do both.
And I think a lot of socialists in the organization
that I joined as a teenager,
the Democratic Socialists of America,
and elsewhere, try to do the two,
try to maintain some sort of balanced between hair and, you know,
our vision of the future.
What do you think Marx would say if he were to read your book Socialist Manifest and do
a review?
So I think Marx would say that my vision of a Socialism after capitalism maintains key
elements of what he would, uh he would, the commodity form.
So a lot of what Marx was concerned about was
what Marx did to human relationships
in a negative sense.
His early writings especially focus a lot
on the alienation of labor.
My vision of socialism, at least in the near term, a lot about it
is about decommodifying certain sectors, so reducing the market in certain sectors and
reducing alienation, but not eliminating it. It is about eliminating exploitation and
oppression. So knowing Marx and knowing how critical he was of certain other socialist
strands and tendencies, and he would often write
very snarky notes and letters to people like angles being like this guy, a sal, he's a total
asshole. Then he would send a separate note to the sal saying, hey, can I borrow five grand?
Like, this is actually true, he did the boat, he did the boat, I think the same like the same month.
So he would be really good at Twitter is what you say. Oh, he would be the best at Twitter. And also he used to be a, he was a journalist
before with his work for the New York Tribune. He was very clever, very snarky. He would
be awesome at, at Twitter. I think him and Elon would have good back and forwards. But I think
it would be critical. Some parts, but I think that the strangest part for him would be reading
the historical sections and seeing the way in which his ideas, which was fundamentally ideas about human emancipation,
were used for evil, for hardship, you know, in ways that did the opposite of emancipated, but in some cases, you know, enslaved people, and I think he would have definitely not want to be associated with them. He probably would rather be associated with me than them, but even then only begrudgingly.
What advice would you give to young folks?
In high school, in college, how to have a career that can be proud of how to change the world.
I think be intellectually curious.
You know, read outside your current beliefs and understand and read authors on their own terms.
So the worst thing in the world to do is to read anything, especially work of fiction,
but anything and try to deduce the authors, you know, backgrounds or politics or
whatever else, like read it on its own terms first, then you could reread it and
kind of do other examinations or whatever else, and also read a lot of history. So I
started off reading books like Eric Hopper's Bums, four books on history going
from the 1700s all the way to 1994, the last book is Age of Extremes.
But I think understanding history gives you a bird's eye view of everything,
sociology, economics, everything. So these big sweeping historical books are really useful to know.
Like everybody should know basically what your, or at least like what
decade, you know, Serfdom was a ballerish, what deck date. So as laborers about ballers,
you know, what century back to Carter was, you know, when the Roman Empire fell, that's
kind of debated when the Roman Empire fell. All these, I think like being a person with
a general knowledge and general sense of history and whatever else just makes you more
eclectic and interesting and it's way better than just like especially a lot of my Indian friends,
you know, the, it's not just Indians, but the hyper focus on like, you got to specialize and you
got to like focus on on math or engineering, whatever you want to do, you just know your field
really well, but nothing else. Like, I think there's something really too, whether you're getting
at school or you're just going to do by yourself, giving yourself kind of a liberal arts education.
I think there's a lot of power to sort of having the facts of history in terms of time,
when stuff happen, but also really powerful is knowing spatially like the geography that
we're the we're a point in a map and there's interesting dynamics that happened throughout
history of all the different nations in Europe, of all the different military conflicts and the expansions and the
wars and the empires and all that kind of stuff. It really puts into context how human history
is led to the place we are today because all the different geopolitical conflicts we have today,
even the politics of the day is grounded in history. Maybe less so for the United States because it has a very young history, but that
history, even for the United States, is still there, right, from the Civil War and understanding that
gives you context to when you tweet random stuff about this or that person or politician and so on.
this or that person or politician and so on.
Yeah, very true.
Very true. One of the regrets I have currently is I have perhaps been too focused on the 20th century
in terms of history.
The president in the 20th century,
a lot of people write to me that there's a lot of lessons
to be learned in ancient history as well.
So not just even American history, but just looking farther and farther and farther back. Yeah, that feels like
it's another time, it's another place, it's totally has no lessons, but then you remind yourself
that it's the same human beings, right? Yeah, and also we're no smarter than them. We just have
more crude knowledge in part because of them. Yeah. But like, you know, they're just as they were just as clever as us, you know.
What do you think is the meaning of this whole experiment we have going on on earth?
Now, what's the meaning of life? Well, I think there's no broad meaning of life. There's,
you know, as an accident, but we ourselves need a maker on meeting. And for me,
a lot of it is about
Posterity trying to do something worthwhile
While on earth but also leaving something behind it could just be relationships with friends or family
In the future maybe having a family and then kind of leaving behind that sort of legacy
the little bits of yourself, but also, you know,
but then being able to learn the same way,
I have little bits of my parents
and my grandparents in me.
And then also, I think, in a social sense,
zooming out from just the individual on the family,
leaving the world behind a little better, you know?
I would love to be a part of a movement that created a world with a little bit less
suffering, a little bit less oppression or exploitation or whatever else.
That's really why I'm a socialist.
You know, it's not about snapping your fingers and curing the world of everything in one
in one go, but it is about, I think, putting our lives, giving
our lives some sort of meeting and purpose. And you don't have to be a socialist, do
do that. You could just do it at the, you know, at the micro level on your own day to
day interactions. But I just feel like life has no good meeting without, without thinking
of posterity in the future.
And I have to say, thank you for doing so.
Thank you for caring about the struggle of the people in the world through ideas that are bold.
And I think challenging for a lot of people in a time when socialism is something that can be attacked
aggressively by large numbers of people still persevering and still exploring those ideas,
and seeing what of those ideas can make for a better world
that's beautiful to see.
Baskar, thank you so much for talking to me.
Thank you for all the work you do.
I can't wait to see what you do next.
I appreciate it.
And yeah, thanks for keeping an open mind
with these conversations and to your audience too.
It's nice to have a space where people can debate
and think at length
and don't have to worry about soundbite culture. Thank you, brother. democracy is the road to socialism.
Thank you for listening, and hope to see you next time.
you