Maintenance Phase - Bonus: Mike's New Podcast!
Episode Date: November 8, 2022Mike and Aubrey introduce Mike's new show, If Books Could Kill! Find it on Apple, Spotify, Stitcher, Google and wherever else you get your podcasts. Also, don't forget to pre-order Aubrey&ap...os;s new book! Support us:Â Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PayPalGet Maintenance Phase shirts, stickers and moreSupport the show
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Discussion (0)
I'm not sure if I'm gonna be able to do it.
I'm not sure if I'm gonna be able to do it.
Wait, our cameras are still on.
I've never seen you do this in person before.
It's weird.
You're like, I don't like it.
I was like, why does this feel weird?
Hi everybody and welcome to Maintenance Phase or as we call it, if diet books could kill.
Oh, that's good.
Right?
Thank you.
That's actually a better name than we have.
Absolutely.
We should have done that.
Why don't we think of this before?
I'm Aubrey Gordon.
I'm Michael Hobbs.
And today, we are bringing you a fun little treat.
Fun little treat.
Michael Hobbs has a new show if you have not already heard it.
Mike's side chick.
Yeah.
I'm gonna hopefully still say that.
Probably not.
I say if you haven't heard it yet because so many fucking people have heard it, Michael.
It's been a really weird week.
So starting, like I told you about this project, I don't know, nine months ago or something.
Yeah, it's been almost all year.
A very long time.
So people who know me and know the show, and know my like weird little personality, know
that I'm like fascinated by bad ideas.
And earlier this year, I started thinking about how to do a podcast about the most wrong
and harmful ideas of the last 50 years.
Because I feel like we're just a wash in bad ideas.
And so I started talking to my friend,
Peter Shemchiri, who co-hosts the 5-4 podcast
about why the Supreme Court sucks,
which is an excellent podcast if you're not really listening to it.
And we decided that the best way to dissect the worst ideas
is to go through like airport books, one by one.
These have become one of the main vectors for bad
history and bad statistics and misinformation. And we have for the last couple months been
recording episodes about the most harmful airport books of all time. And now we have a podcast
about it called if books could kill. It's my favorite podcast title that I've heard in like a while.
It is not mine.
It came from the same friend who told me to start a podcast
about the history of fishing called Cod Past.
This person is a fount of ideas.
If you need a title from your podcast, let me know
and I'll get you in touch.
And yeah, we launched this week and like whatever.
I put it on Twitter, Peter put on Twitter, you tweeted about it, we put this week and like whatever I put it on Twitter Peter put on Twitter you tweeted about it
We put on Instagram whatever and within 24 hours. It was the number one
Podcast on Apple podcasts number one Michael Hobbs
Number two Rachel Maddo. I know me and me and Rachel if you could introduce me that would be great and you know that my
Immediate reaction to like any form of attention is just pure panic.
I was like, of course, losing my mind all week.
I'm like, oh fuck, people are listening.
No, I have been with you at a point when we got recognized.
And I have watched you try to recede into your own body like a turtle. Just like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no being a person on the internet as you know very well. Yes. So our first episode is about Freakonomics.
It's such a joy.
So you and I talked about this.
When you started working on it,
we talked about like a couple of episode concepts
and I think it was last week before the show came out.
You sent me the Freakonomics episode.
And just like, it has just been like,
hockey stick growth
for my enthusiasm for this show,
getting out into the world.
You mentioned that you have a fascination
and sort of a fixation on bad ideas.
I would say my observation of you is,
it's not just bad ideas.
It's bad ideas that take off,
and people get attached to.
Yes.
And I struggle to think of a wilder, more entrenched,
sort of airport book set of bad ideas than the ones.
In freakingomics.
It's incredible.
I'm so fucking happy for you, buddy.
And I'm so excited for this show to be out into the world.
And I'm so excited for our listeners to have,
like, our number one request is,
can you get us more shows?
And our number one response to that is no.
Yeah, yeah.
But like, now there's another outpost for more content.
And I'm very excited about that.
So the podcast is available wherever you get your podcasts
and we'll leave links in the description
and we'll also link Aubrey's book in the description.
Delightful.
And we'll see you next week.
We'll see you next week.
Pitter.
Michael.
What do you remember about a book called A Freak Enomics?
If I recall correctly, the thesis of the book
has had my mother aborted me,
I would not have committed so many crimes. Alright, welcome to If Books Good Kill.
From your episode.
Are we taglining this, Mike?
I don't think so.
I think that was the tagline.
I don't know.
I've done that for two shows already.
I've done that for two shows already. I've done a new thing. Yeah. The dumb books that captured our collective imagination.
Yes. The books that did to our brains, what Jigsaw did to Robin Hood.
I'm Michael Hobbs. I'm a journalist and the co-host of Maintenance Fays.
I am Peter Shamsheri. I am a lawyer and the co-host of the 5-4 podcast.
Both of us are fascinated by dumb ideas and how they spread through the population.
And so a couple of months ago, we started talking about how to do a podcast about the dumbest ideas
of the last 50 years. And the more we thought about it, the more we realized that like a good
way to do it would be by going through airport books, which are kind of like the, the super spreader events at this point of American stupidity.
Yeah, there, there's a natural vessel for pseudo science and fake history. And just sort
of quintessentially American, you know, all of this complex knowledge and information, boiled down into a mush and packaged and sold
for 24.95 to people who forgot to charge their Kindle
for the flight.
This is the seventh episode that we've recorded,
but the first episode that we're releasing
because I started reading Freakonomics
and then I realized that this book is the perfect overture.
The quintessential airport book.
The quintessential like wrong and bad airport book.
It's like really shocking how bad this book is.
And it's also like the badness of the book is also matched by like how influential it was.
Right. What do you actually remember about the book itself and like the era?
It comes out in 2005, is that right?
Just five, yeah.
Okay. So in the 80s, you have sort of like the Chicago
school economists who start to like
posit all of these theories that are basically
boiled down to like, we can solve most social problems
with like economics principles.
And then you get something like freakonomics
which feels like the mainstreamification
of that concept, right?
Just taking that sort of nihilistic neoliberal sort of viewpoint
and bringing it to the masses.
Exactly.
I mean, you cannot underestimate how popular this book was.
So it sold four million copies.
It was on the bestseller list for 39 weeks.
I think an underrated aspect of this book's influence
is the fact that they had a New York Times blog
and a podcast like five years before serial.
I mean, I listened to that podcast for years.
Like, there wasn't that much else to listen to.
It was like, this are fucking Ricky Gervais.
And it's like, that's what you listen to when you were washing dishes.
I also think the subtitle of the book is important because it's a rogue economist
explores the hidden side of everything.
Like, this guy's outside the mainstream, and he's saying things they don't want you to hear,
is also like, one of the dominant paradigms of the ways that Americans are liable to believe bullshit.
We're coming off a decade of disaster movies,
each of which has one scientist that nobody believes
that's trying to get the truth to the president.
Yeah.
People love this shit.
They're primed for it.
Everybody reading this thinks that they're Pierce Brosnan
in Dante's Peak, but they're actually Randy Quaid
and Independence Day.
So I'm gonna send you some paragraphs.
The book began with a New York Times magazine article.
Stephen Dubner, who's one of the co-authors of Frekenomics,
was at the time a story editor at the New York Times.
And he was working on a story about the psychology of money.
And that's how he met Stephen Levit,
who's his co-author and this University of Chicago economist.
So the book is co-written by both of them,
but it's not kind of clear who wrote what.
Right.
And there's lots of stuff in the book
that is based on Levit studies,
but there's also lots in the book
that isn't based on Levit studies.
It's just kind of random.
Got it, got it.
So I'm sending you the first five paragraphs
of New York Times story.
Oh boy.
This is America's first introduction
to the Frekenomics guys and like the Frekenomics way of thinking.
The most brilliant young economist in America, the one so deemed at least by a jury of his elders,
breaks to a stop at a traffic light on Chicago's south side. It is a sunny day in mid-June.
An elderly homeless man approaches. He wears a torn jacket too heavy for the warm day
and a grimy red baseball cap.
The economist doesn't lock his doors or inch the car forward.
Nor does he go scrounging for spare change.
He just watches as if through one-way glass.
After a while, the homeless man moves along.
He had nice headphones, says the economist.
Still watching in the rearview mirror?
Well nicer than the ones I have.
Otherwise, it doesn't look like he has many assets.
Steven Levit tends to see things differently
than the average person,
differently to than the average economist.
What do you think?
Is that seeing things differently?
Is that, I'm pretty sure that
staring down a homeless person asking for money
and then making a snarky comment about the quality of
They're like a Kutra mall
Mm-hmm classic American tradition. Is that is it not if he's so poor?
Why does he have stuff if you've taken that headphone money Michael and invested it in an ETF?
Starting in 2002
He could have eight pairs of headphones by now.
I also love it because we're seeing this like he's different from the other economists.
In a story there's not remotely different from other like pretty well-off people
seeing a homeless man in public.
And also it's basically trying to establish him as like a rogue economist
and outside of the structures of the field, while acknowledging the fact that he's a tenured professor
at the University of Chicago,
he has degrees from Harvard and MIT,
and he won the John Bates Clark Medal.
So the article wants to use that
as like, this isn't just some crank saying stuff, right?
Like look how awarded he is within economics,
but then also will switch and be like,
oh, she's different.
I almost feel like, like,
remember when like the Trump campaign had like establishment
Washington folks talking about like the swamp
and you're just like, you feel like you're through
the looking glass a little bit, you're like, what are you?
That's you.
Exactly.
Not just an establishment economist,
but like the most establishment economist being like,
I'm a sort of a bad boy in the economics industry.
Who everybody really likes?
Yes.
He also, there's another piece of foreshadowing that says,
one paper he wrote as a graduate student
is still regularly cited.
His question was disarmingly simple.
Do more police translate into less crime?
The answer would seem obvious, yes,
but had never been proved.
Since the number of police officers tends to rise along with the number of crimes, the effectiveness of the police was tricky to measure.
Levit needed a mechanism that would unlink the crime rate from police hiring.
He found it within politics.
He noticed that mayors and governors running for reelection often hire more police officers.
By measuring those police increases against crime rates, he was able to determine that additional officers do indeed bring down violent crime.
That paper was later disputed,
another graduate student found a serious mathematical mistake
in it, but Levitt's ingenuity was obvious.
So it's not real, he found something that was fake,
and, but let's all just be in awe of his creativity.
This runner tripped and absolutely ate shit on his first lap,
but his speed was obvious.
It's like, what are we doing here?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so the article ends with tax evasion, money laundering.
I'd like to put together a set of tools that lets us catch terrorists.
I don't necessarily know yet how I'd go about it,
but given the right data,
I have a little doubt that I could figure out the answer.
Yeah.
Small problems.
Just ending terrorism.
Yeah, what am I working on now?
Look, I've been thinking about stopping terrorism, you know,
if someone can get me some numbers.
Stephen Levit may not fully believe in himself,
but he does believe in this.
Teachers and criminals and real estate agents may lie
and politicians and even CIA analysts, but numbers don't.
I don't think that Stephen Levin seems like
he lacks confidence in himself, but perhaps I'm misreading.
But then one thing I genuinely really appreciate
about Freakonomics is that everything that people
will later accuse Freakonomics is that everything that people will later
accuse Freakonomics of, they just fucking say. So, like, in this passage, he's saying, like,
everybody else lies, but the numbers don't lie. And it's like, right, the whole problem with this
is this overconfidence in quantitative data that is completely stripped of all of its societal context.
Yeah. That's why we object to this. This is a classic economics guy thing
where they act like the narratives
that they map onto the data are themselves
just as infallible as the data.
Exactly, that's a good way to put it.
Yeah.
The idea that there's always something hidden,
seems to be lurking here,
where there must be an explanation
that is counterintuitive and fascinating and
People are trying to hide it from you, right. God. This is so fucking annoying. I'm
Okay, you're having the same experience that I had
Because like you can't believe they're just saying it. That's what I cannot get over. God
So after the article got published it was a huge sensation because of all these like bold ideas.
Then like book publishers got in touch.
And then they're like quite open about the fact
that this was a rush job.
Oh my god.
And they're just like grabbed a bunch of random anecdotes.
I have a lot of respect for being like,
look, we're catching it.
Yeah, exactly.
And they're like, other people have said
there's no overarching theme to this book.
That's correct.
What we're doing is we're talking about numbers,
and it's like, okay, you just have a bunch of cute anecdotes,
and you're gonna string together the cute anecdotes
with the most fucking tri-hard transitions I've ever seen.
So I've kind of broken apart this book
and put it back together because even though the book
is only 207 pages, they only spend a paragraph or two
on each one of these anecdotes.
It's like a collection of basically like 100 cute little stories.
I'm trying to take a representative sample
of the way that they present information,
but it's like we're only gonna touch
on like 10% of the book.
Because to debunk these like ridiculous paragraphs
takes you four times longer than it took to rate them.
Right.
So we're not going to go through the book chapter by chapter,
basically because like it's too much of a mess to do that.
But I do want to talk about the core ideology of this book
and like why it exerted such a negative influence
on the culture.
The reason I wanted to read that concluding paragraph
from the original New York Times story
is that the entire Frekenomics approach
is setting up this binary
between intuitive thinking and data-driven thinking, right?
So economics is uniquely positioned to allow us
to see the world without all the human nonsense
that comes along with asking people about it.
Right, you're cutting through the bullshit. Right, and they're extremely explicit about this
in the book. So in the introduction, they say morality, it could be argued, represents the way
that people would like the world to work, whereas economics represents how it does work. No, nope nope nope nope nope nope this is just a totally false binary and the best evidence
that this is a false binary is their own book. Yeah. So in this episode we are going to talk about
all of the ways that they misuse data. The first thing we're going to talk about is the way they use
true data to reach false conclusions. So let me send you one more paragraph.
All right. What about the election truism that the amount of money spent on campaign finance
is obscenely huge. In a typical election year, campaigns for the presidency, the Senate,
and the House of Representatives spend about $1 billion. That sounds like a lot of money,
unless you care to measure it
against something seemingly less important than democratic elections. It is the same amount,
for instance, that Americans spend every year on chewing gum.
This was like classic Frekenomics where it's like phrased as some sort of debunking.
You thought political spending was bad, but wait till you hear about chewing gum.
But like those things have nothing to do with each other.
You're just juxtaposing an important thing with a frivolous thing to make them both seem frivolous.
Right, and also, like, I mean, the objection to money and politics is a moral one.
Right.
It's not like we're spending too much money in a vacuum, and that's it.
It's because it's like the literal manipulation of society.
That's the point of campaign finance.
So, yes, people have objections to that in and of itself at whatever.
And they also, another example is they have this whole thing.
They have a section about cheating and how there's this infamous thing in 1987,
where the IRS started asking people to list the social security numbers of their children
if they wanted the child tax deduction.
So you get like, it was like $2,000 at the time,
and you could just say, okay, I have little Timmy,
and then all of a sudden your tax bill would go down
by $2,000.
And then all of a sudden you had to start providing
the social security number for Timmy,
and seven million children disappeared
from the tax rolls.
They explicitly linked this to cheating. That all these people were lying about
their kids and then they had to prove that they had kids and all of a sudden all
these kids disappeared, right? What they leave out is the fact that before 1989
children were not assigned social security numbers automatically. So when the
IRS announced this thing, you're gonna have to start putting social security numbers. Every single parent in America had to fill out a form, send it to the IRS, wait two
weeks, and get their kids social security number back. So of those seven million people that didn't
include their kids on their taxes that year, a huge percentage of them were people who were like,
oh shit, I forgot to do this. I just can't include my kids this year. Most of the kids that disappeared were divorced parents
and both parents were putting the kid
for the deduction on their taxes.
And so some of that's cheating,
but also it could also just be something
of like they had never really talked about it before
or thought about it and didn't know
that they couldn't both claim the kid.
Again, the number 7 million appears to be true,
although I've seen somebody say
that it was actually more like 2 million,
but the interpretation of it,
like what they are using that number to say,
is mostly wrong.
Like we don't know how much of that was cheating.
Yeah, as, look, as someone who used to do his own taxes
and then gave it to an accountant this year,
I understand fucking it up completely.
My accountant was like, what are you,
what have you been doing?
Yeah, no cheating.
I'm like, I don't know.
I mean, I just, I kind of wing it and then I submit it and I haven't been arrested. That's, I thought I was doing, what have you been doing? Yeah, no, shh. I'm like, I don't know. I just, I kind of wing it and then I submit it
and I haven't been arrested.
That's, I thought I was doing it right.
But then, God, this is not the worst one in the whole book,
but this is like peak smug.
This will give you flashbacks to the kind of dude
who read this book.
So this is an intersection about parenting.
It's talking about risks and how people can be irrational
when they consider risks.
It says, consider the parents of an eight-year-old girl named Molly.
Her two best friends, Amy and Imani, each live nearby.
Molly's parents know that Amy's parents keep a gun in their house, so they forbid Molly
to play there.
Instead, Molly spends a lot of time at Imani's house, which has a swimming pool in the backyard.
Molly's parents feel good about having made such a smart choice to protect their
daughter. But according to the data, their choice isn't smart at all. In a given year, there's one
drowning of a child for every 11,000 residential pools in the United States. In a country with six
million pools, that means that roughly 550 children under the age of 10 drown each year.
Meanwhile, there's one child killed by a gun for every one million plus
guns. That means that roughly 175 children under 10 die each year from guns. Molly is roughly 100 times
more likely to die in a swimming accident at a Monty's house than in gunplay at Amy's.
They're making a mistake here that I can't quite articulate, but it might have to do with
the amount of guns per household.
But I want to take a step back and say, one of the least interesting things on Earth is
when people do this sort of like, people are assessing risks incorrectly.
Oh my fucking god.
Kind of analysis.
And it's like, are people supposed to know statistics like this before they like make
everyday decisions? No, this is again weirdly conservative where they're sort of being like guns
aren't as dangerous as people think. Exactly. I would love for them to be like actually
undocumented immigrants aren't as dangerous as people think. You know, things like crime,
for example, street crime are areas where people are way out of whack.
Yet these books don't seem to focus on it.
So, the obvious statistical thing to say here is that it's absurd to say deaths per gun versus deaths per swimming pool.
Most people who own guns own more than one gun.
And most people who have swimming pools have exactly one swimming pool.
So what you'd want to do is household with guns versus household with pools.
Right.
But that's not, that's like the sort of one-to-one bullshit thing.
The much bigger thing is you should not be using average mortality statistics to lecture
other people on how to parent their kids.
Right.
Right.
Most of the kids under 10 who drown, this is like really awful, is like it's mostly very
young kids in bathtubs. Another very large portion is in like lakes and rivers. It's mostly poor kids.
A lot of it is like kids with disabilities, like physical disabilities who can't swim.
Backyard pools actually are really dangerous compared to like municipal pools. But the reason is not
that kids drown when they're
playing at a friend's house and usually mom is watching when kids are playing in the pool.
Because they know it's dangerous. Usually how kids die and back your pools is the back door
is unlocked. And they wander outside and they fall into the pool at night when nobody's around
and they can't get out of the pool. If your kid can swim, they're probably fine. Like the dynamics of drownings, you shouldn't just be looking at the average number of drownings
across the entire country.
Like there's specific dynamics to this.
And of course there's specific dynamics to firearm deaths too.
But this whole thing is just like, you might think that you have a good intuition about
this.
But what if I presented you with the worst oversimplification
of the data that you've ever heard in your fucking life?
What do you think now, Molly's parents?
It's also seems totally rational for me
to be just kind of in general worried and uncomfortable
around an object that essentially only exists
to cause harm.
Like there's no reason for my child to be anywhere near a gun.
Whereas swimming pools,
like swimming is good for kids at social, it's exercise.
You as a parent might say,
like, oh, that's actually really worth the risk for me.
What they seem to be driving at in part
is that maybe we're a little too uptight
about gun restrictions and gun safety.
What they're missing is that maybe part of the reason that children are getting killed
by guns at relatively low rates is because people are cautious around them, right?
Right.
And trying to like drop that social stigma is just going to drive those numbers up.
Right.
Oh, no, I'm about to quote Ruth Bader Ginsburg and I don't want to do that.
We would do it.
Natuarius, I know you love it Ruth Bader Ginsburg and I don't want to do that. Oh, do it. Natuarius, Arby, do you know you love it?
You have a muck next to.
It's throwing away the umbrella in a rainstorm
because you're not getting wet.
Right.
That's what they seem to be advocating for here.
What drives me nuts about this section
and this kind of way of doing statistics is like,
it doesn't give you any understanding
of drownings of firearm deaths.
Yeah. All you have like a little factoid
that you can drop at like a barbecue with the other dads
and be obnoxious.
Now Molly's parents don't let her go over to Emily's house
because Emily's parents own a bear.
I let her roam free.
But did you know that bear attacks kill under 10 children
per year.
So that's the misuse of data part one.
Part two is most of the content of the book.
It's the over generalization from extremely specific data.
So there's some dude who's like an office drone in DC
and he starts selling bagels at work.
He brings in bagels and he puts like a, you know,
20 bagels in the kitchen and a bowl
and it's like a trust system.
People are supposed to take a bagel, leave a book.
Okay.
And so he starts making so much money from the bagels
that he decides to do this full time.
So now he delivers like, I don't know,
10,000 bagels a day to various offices around DC
and he does the same thing.
He leaves a big bowl of bagels and he leaves a bowl for money.
And allegedly, this guy has kept meticulous records for years.
And so he has basically the honesty of various customers, right?
Because they don't have to put it in dollar.
They can just take a bagel.
So according to this guy's data, it's like 90% of people pay for the bagel.
And there's something like borderline interesting stuff around like around the holidays. People are less likely to pay for the bagel. And there's something like borderline interesting stuff around like around the holidays.
People are less likely to pay for the bagels.
Certain kinds of companies like people in big companies
are more likely to pay for the bagels
than at small companies and people in the executive suite.
Like on those floors are less likely to pay for the bagels.
So like rich people are stingy or whatever.
I believe that.
It's kind of interesting.
Like it's a cute story, this guy.
But like, is this generalizable?
I don't really know.
Freakonomics.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Thinking like a freak.
Well, this guy give me a dollar for the bagel
on the honor system.
Maybe not Freakonomics.
It's very funny to me that like the only good parts
of this book are just the descriptive parts.
Yeah. Where it's like they just like, these are the phenomenon.
You're like, oh, interesting.
But then as soon as they try to turn them into like, Pat little lessons,
they're like, and that's why you're like, I don't know that we can really learn anything from this.
They have a whole thing with like, incentives and like, it turns out people cheat way less than you think they do.
Right. Well, maybe, but it's like these are bagels that work.
They cost a dollar.
Yeah, they're their cheap.
Yeah.
It just seems like a very unique situation
that I'm not sure you can really say anything
about humans' propensity to cheat based on this.
They then have a whole section about sumo wrestlers.
This is another study of levets.
There's a weird thing in sumo wrestling tournaments
where you do the best of 15.
So you have to win eight matches out of 15, right?
But the problem with sumo tournaments
is that oftentimes people reach their eight wins
and then they're still, they still have like three more
matches to go.
So basically you have all these matches
between like people who it just doesn't matter
if they win or not,
because they've already gotten their eight matches. And sometimes they are matched with people who
are like seven and seven and like really need to win. Really need to win. So Levitt runs the numbers
and he finds it like you would expect a sort of 50-50 split, you know, winning and losing percentage
on these matches. But it turns out it's 80-20 for people who need to win and that winning these things.
And the only explanation for this
is like widespread criminal conspiracy.
It must be fake.
But then it was wild.
So I had the same reaction as you.
I was like, this seems like a really big leap.
But then in 2011, there was an actual like huge scandal
in Sumer wrestling that confirmed it was a massive
criminal conspiracy among these dudes. Oh, hell yeah. And like, it's interesting in that there wasn't like a huge scandal in Sumer wrestling that confirmed that it was a massive promote in the past.
How long these dudes?
Oh, hell yeah.
And it's interesting in that there wasn't actually
that much selling of matches, but these guys
would just kind of meet in the dressing rooms
and be like, dude, you don't need to win this.
I need to win this.
You might just letting me win
and they'd be like, yeah, yeah, you're fine.
This is one of the only examples in Freakonomics
where he was fucking right.
Like, Kudos, I will give you this one, Steve.
Economics could have never predicted this.
Only Freakonomics could have predicted this.
Actually, well, this is the other thing
that I learned I was researching the match fixing.
Scandal, is it like, Sumo fans have been complaining
about this for literally decades.
They changed the rules in the 1970s
to try to prevent this'm obviously not effectively enough.
But everyone knows that these matches are kind of fake.
I do think that providing numbers to these things
and giving evidence to something that feels true
is a very important role for academia.
But I don't know that there's human behavior
there other than the super banal finding that when it matters
to one person and not the other,
they're probably going to trade.
Right.
You know, this reminds me of like, you know, in like, Econ 101, when you learn about moral
hazard.
Yeah, yeah.
And you feel like really smart for a day.
Yeah.
This is like some of the most basic human behavior stuff that you could ever conceive of, but
they present it like they're blowing your mind.
Well, this is something I learned from reading
a bunch of extremely scathing reviews
of this book by economists.
One thing this book does that I think became very prominent
in the early 2000s was this idea that like incentives
explain everything, right?
And if you want to understand a situation,
you sort of look at the incentives
of all the actors involved.
Right.
And of course, this book does that, right?
It like presents the bagel anecdote and like 50 other anecdotes.
And it's like, all the incentives,
economists can understand things better
than other types of scientists
because they look at the incentives.
But then when you look at the bagel example,
it's like, well, everybody has the incentive
to steal a bagel.
But only 10% of people do.
And they spend almost an entire chapter on this example of
Chicago school teachers and how Stephen Levit designed an algorithm to detect teachers who were like
erasing bubbles on standardized tests and filling in their own answers to make sure that they
didn't get fired. And it's like, oh, the incentives of the teachers. But then they mentioned sort of
offhand that it's only 5% of the teachers who cheat. So it's like 100% of the teachers. But then they mentioned sort of off hand that it's only 5% of the teachers who cheat.
So it's like 100% of the teachers have the incentive,
like very strong incentives to cheat,
but very few of them do.
So like what does it actually mean
to say incentives matter?
Right, right, right.
It could just as easily say that people pay for a bagel
because of their upbringing.
You could say it's because they're psychology. You could say it's because they're psychology.
You could say it's because they want to be moral people
and they don't want to be the kind of person
who steals a bagel.
Like those are incomplete explanations too,
but it's not clear to me that those are less scientific
than just saying like incentives over and over again.
I know, I just, this book has a very complicated
relationship with like morality.
And it sort of sees morality as like this weird irrational
thing that people do.
That's a classic conservative economist tick, right?
Where the goal of a lot of the work is to critique
liberal sentimentality in their view.
So the third way that this book misuses data
is leaping to conclusions on some things
while refusing to reach conclusions on others. This is where we get into the black names stuff.
Throughout the book, there's various examples of weird race stuff. Steven Loveit did a study on.
Do you remember the weakest link the game show?
Yeah.
It's like a cross between who wants to be a millionaire
and survivor, you like vote people off
for getting questions wrong?
Yeah, it's with the mean British lady.
Yes, the mean British lady.
It was the host.
Yeah.
So he did a study of everyone who's ever been kicked off
of that show, and it's like you'd expect
the black contestants to be kicked off, right? But actually, it wasn't, and the female contestants
weren't kicked off either.
It turns out the Hispanic and the elderly contestants
were the ones who faced discrimination.
Okay.
Other people have questioned this
because there were only 22 Hispanic contestants
on the show out of a thousand contestants,
so you can't really make claims about that.
But anyway, it's like, okay, whatever.
Then we get to the final two chapters of the book,
which are all about cultural explanations for poverty.
Yeah, here we go.
So here's a couple of paragraphs
that I don't wanna make you read.
The term that I researched your name, Roland Friar.
In addition to economic and social disparity
between blacks and whites,
Freier had become intrigued
by the virtual segregation of culture.
Blacks and whites watch different television shows.
Monday night football is the only show
that typically appears on each group's top 10 list.
Sign felt, one of the most popular sitcoms in history,
never ranked in the top 50 among blacks.
They smoke different cigarettes,
and black parents give their,
fuck shit.
It's happening.
And black parents give their children names
that are starkly different from white childrens.
Friar came to wonder,
is distinctive black culture a cause of the economic disparity
between blacks and whites,
or merely a reflection of it?
It's time to ask,
are poor people poor because it's their fault?
Yeah. I mean, are you poor because of socioeconomic structures, or are you not watching
Seinfeld? Is that the problem? The black names thing, like this is, tail is old as time,
right? People being like, well, if you have a black name, you're less likely to get
job offers. And then like, their conclusion is it's stupid to give your kid a black name instead of
like, wow, must be some serious racism at play, which is the obvious conclusion. It's worse, Peter,
it's worse. Okay. Okay. This is in a chapter called, would a rachanda by any other name smell as sweet?
This is in a chapter called, Would a Roshanda by any other name smell as sweet. Oh, shit.
Long silence.
Long silence.
Freakonomics.
We meet this Roland Fryer guy who has a database of every single person born in California
since 1961, and he starts combing through like the demographic data and like cross checking
it with like the names.
So it says, the data show that the black white gap
is a recent phenomenon.
Until the early 1970s, there was a great overlap
between black and white names.
The typical baby girl born in a black neighborhood in 1970
was given a name that was twice as common among
blacks than whites.
By 1980, she received a name that was 20 times
more common among blacks.
Boys names moved in the same direction,
but less aggressively, probably because parents of all races are less adventurous with boys names
than girls. A great many black names today are unique to blacks. More than 40% of the black girls
born in California in a given year receive a name that not one of the roughly 100,000 baby white
girls received that year. The California study also shows that white parents
send a strong signal in the opposite direction.
More than 40% of white babies are given names
that are at least four times more common among whites.
Consider Connor and Cody, Emily and Abigail.
This is interesting.
Yeah, that is interesting.
Descriptive statistics, it's like, wow, social trends.
Yeah, although this is also like a few years before the great, I don't know how to
what to call it, uh, dipshitification of white names. The Guinness effect. Yeah. We're at a time
where, um, the desire among white parents to throw a Y where an I used to be is that just, it's at peak.
We then get a long section that's basically just like
riffing on black names.
So they talk to a judge in family court in New York
who is like presumably a friend of one of theirs
who just like tells them the funniest black names
that he's ever seen.
They start out with the story of a girl named Tim Triss
who's arrested for prostitution at age 15.
You're literally making cracks about a 15-year-old
who's probably being sexually trafficked.
Yeah.
That's the joke.
Good stuff, and then we get the story of someone named Amchur,
who had been named for the first thing his parents saw
upon reaching the hospital, the sign for Albany Medical
Center Hospital Emergency Room. And then we have this paragraph. Roll and Friar, while discussing
his name's research on a radio show, took a call from a black woman who was upset with the name
just given to her baby niece. It was pronounced chateed, but was in fact spelled shithead. Or consider the twin
boys orange, jello, and lemon, jello, also black, whose parents further dignified their choice
by instituting the pronunciations, orange, and lemon, jello.
Now that first one was like 80% a prank call, but yeah, go on.
This thing of like black people giving their kids weird names is like a very well-known
urban legend.
There are numerous snopes articles about this.
This is something that was like huge in email forwards.
Yeah, yeah.
The 1990s.
There are stories of this going back to 1917.
These were like vaudeville jokes.
This thing of naming your kid after like the emergency room where you were born, this is a really old joke.
It's like black people are so stupid that they name their kids like no smoking.
Right.
Because that's like the sign above the place where they're filling out the birth certificate.
Right.
There's another one where they name their kid female because that's like the word in the box.
And like they don't understand how to fill out the form, but it's pronounced female.
Do you have you heard this,
there's like this urban legend that
there's someone named Ladasha
and how it spelled L-A-A, right?
Like just obvious bullshit.
I was amazed that this wasn't in the Freakin'omics book.
Because like every other urban legend about this
is in the Freakin'omics book.
And then the Shiseed Shateed thing,
I've seen this in a Kevin Hart routine,
I think that he did years ago was the first place
I came across it.
I like the idea that Kevin Hart is pulling jokes
from Frekenomics.
He's like, good one, guys.
But so this, like in a book that is meant to be like data driven,
you know, and like, exploring the world through
quantitative data to fall for this just rank bullshit that I don't know what the Google
situation was in 2005, but like two minutes on Google. It's like, do black people name their
kids shit? Yeah, this has been bouncing around for decades. We then get into, you know, these
studies about they send in resumes. And if you have a black name, you're less likely to go call back
than if you have a white name, right?
This says, according to one such study, if Dishon Williams and Jake Williams sent identical
resumes to the same employer, Jake Williams would be more likely to get a call back.
The implication is that black sounding names carry an economic penalty.
Such studies are tantalizing but severely limited, for they can't explain why Dishon didn't
get the call. Was he rejected because the employer is a racist and't explain why Dishonn didn't get the call.
Was he rejected because the employer is a racist
and is convinced that Dishonn Williams is black?
Or did he reject him because Dishonn
sounds like someone from a low income,
low education family?
A resume is a fairly undependable set of clues.
A recent study found that more than 50% of them contain lies.
So Dishonn may simply signal a disadvantaged background
to an employer who believes that burgers from such backgrounds
are undependable.
Ah!
You might think this is racism,
but what if I told you that they're simply associating
the name with a set of undesirable qualities
that they attached to black people. Are you fucking kidding me?
Did they not hire somebody named Muhammad due to Islamophobia?
Or did they simply believe that he was going to strap a bomb to himself and blow up the
bomb?
That's a longer way of saying Islamophobia.
Also, how come this is the one time in the book that they're like demanding more data?
Yeah, no shit.
Everything else, they'll hang on to two data points
and be like, we've proven that people are irrational
about guns, vis-a-vis swimming pool.
But with this one, they're like, let's not get crazy
before we start calling people racist.
Also, dude, this is why I mentioned
the fucking weakest link study.
Cause like three chapters ago, you're like,
whoops, turns out racism doesn't exist.
We looked at evidence from a game show.
And now they're looking at like real world examples.
These studies are extremely consistent.
There's been like a million of these by now.
This is like some of the strongest data
for racism and hiring because you can eliminate
so many variables that otherwise might complicate
the process, right?
It's just resumes and they're identical.
And also how is this free economics?
Where's the free economics here?
Well, I mean, Steven Levit did a study on this
where he's basically asking the question of like,
should Dishon change his name?
Yeah.
And so he concludes, so does a name matter?
The data show that on average, a person with a distinctly black name, whether it's a
woman named Imani or a man named Dishon, does have a worse life outcome than a woman
named Mali or a man named Jake.
But it isn't the fault of their names.
If two black boys, Jake Williams and Dishon Williams are born in the same neighborhood, into
the same family and economic circumstances, they would likely have similar life outcomes. The kind of parents who name their
son Jake don't tend to live in the neighborhoods or share economic circumstances with the kind of
parents who name their kid Dishon. A Dishon is more likely to have been handicapped by a low income,
low education, single parent background. His name is an indicator, not a cause of his outcome.
Good Lord.
I mean, first, he's just making that up, right?
The whole point of the resume studies is that they show that that's not true.
Exactly.
That actually, there are disadvantages to the name in and of itself because people are racist.
So he's just saying, no, let's ignore those studies and just get the causation exactly
backwards or at least, at at least eliminate some complexity.
But I feel like this is another feature of these books is that oftentimes they'll set up this like
straw man to debunk. So in this he's like you thought the only reason Doshan can't get a job is his name,
but it turns out most poor black people can't get jobs.
It's like, right, that's what I thought in the first place.
I didn't think it was only the name.
This is like a little darker than like what Gladwell does,
which is so we like often a little cuter,
like Gladwell would be like,
how one soccer team used jelly donuts to win a championship
and you're like, what's going on
there? And Levitts is like, it feels just a little more racist every single time. Yeah, there's a
huge amount of conservative, iron-rand bullshit presented in this book as like harsh truths.
I, and again, I would like to circle back to the whoever thought of Freakonomics as a title, because
Black people, a critique, is a much worse title.
Oh, God.
I didn't realize he was a Chicago guy, but it's starting to all click together in my brain.
Chicago and bio.
You could have stopped at that.
So speaking of which, the final way that this book misuses data is waltzing into huge pre-existing
debates and pretending to solve them.
Chapter 5 of Freakonomics is dedicated to the question, what explains the crime drop
of the 1990s?
Oh yeah.
We both know where this one is going, but we're gonna let them work up to it.
So first of all, the massive crime drop of the 1990s
is probably one of the biggest social shifts
to happen in our lifetimes.
Yes.
The murder, the national murder rate went down by 50%.
Murders in New York City went from 2,300 a year to 600 a year.
This is like an actual huge deal.
And there's a whole field of criminology dedicated
to explaining this. I interviewed three different criminologists for this. So Stephen Loveitt
says there's actually three things that explain the massive crime drop in the 1990s. Right?
So the first is imprisonment, mass incarceration. You will love this because this is a Supreme
Courty.
First of all, to explain the crime drop,
we have to explain why crime rose so much in the 1960s,
like massive increase in crime.
He says, in retrospect, it is clear
that one of the major factors pushing this trend
was a more lenient justice system.
Conviction rates declined during the 1960s
and criminals who were convicted
served shorter sentences.
This trend was driven in part by an expansion in the rights of people accused of crimes.
Along overdue expansions somewhat argue, others would argue that the expansion went too far.
At the same time, politicians were growing increasingly softer on crime.
For fear of sounding racist, the economist Gary Becker has written, since African Americans
and Hispanics commit
a disproportionate share of felonies.
So the reason we got more crime is because America was famously not racist in the 1960s.
We hadn't hit that Goldilocks just right amount of racism that we need to drive crime
down to historical lows.
So the only citations in this section of mass incarceration
reduced crime are three articles that Gary Becker wrote
in Business Week.
All three criminologists told me that this is not remotely
an accepted explanation.
Right.
Like we gave too many rights to people and then we got more crime.
I want to point out some big picture social science
shit before we advance just to get
it off my chest.
First of all, taking away the like inherent moral concerns with mass incarceration.
A lot of what it's actually doing is just containing crime, right?
Placing crime into prisons where it's generally not recorded and doesn't add to the crime rate.
Another thing is that when we talk about the decrease in crime, what we're talking about
is something very specific and it's really the decrease in certain crimes, generally violent
crimes, right?
We're talking about murders, assaults, etc.
The sort of phenomenon of corporate level crime and government level crime, right?
Crime by massive institutions is completely excluded
from these calculations.
And so I'm not saying that crime didn't go down,
but our understanding of crime is tunneled
through street level violent crime.
But this is one of the reasons why I think this book
has been such a negative force in American life,
is that a lot of policy makers
read this and I think adopted the conflation that the book is making where it's toggling back and
forth between what is the most effective policy for reducing crime and what is the right policy.
I remember when I was in grad school I took took a class on crime and punishment. And on the first day, the professor told us that like, if you imprisoned every teenage
boy on their 16th birthday and released them on their 25th birthday, you would prevent
80% of crime.
That's a horrifying policy for many reasons, but it would be very effective to deter crime.
If every speeding ticket came with the death penalty, just immediate shot to the back of
the head, we would have no speeding in America. Right. Many, many, many policies would be effective at reducing crime,
but that does not mean that they are the right policy. You know, other countries, which did not have
mass incarceration, also had huge crime drops in the 1990s, which is a worldwide phenomenon.
So I actually think that it's probably the case
that mass incarceration reduced a lot of crimes mostly
because you're just imprisoning a bunch of fucking teenagers.
But that doesn't mean that it was the right policy
and that also doesn't mean that there weren't other policies
that would have had the same outcome
with a lot less like human misery.
And also it's not an assurance of long-term declines
in the crime rate, right?
The benefit, quote unquote, is extremely immediate, right?
This person is off the streets, you know,
so to speak, and not committing crimes.
Right.
What happens in 10 years when they're out and unemployable?
Yeah.
I don't know what else to say about these sorts of analyses,
but the idea that someone is saying like,
mass incarceration is uniquely effective.
It's like, what fucking country are you looking at?
That's why America has so few murders.
Yeah.
Wait.
Right.
So that was reason one for the crime drop.
He says that explains 40% of the reduction in crime, mass incarceration.
Reason number two is that we had more cops on the street.
Of course.
This is the one time in the book they talk about, like, actual methodologies and how difficult
it is to measure many things.
So they basically say, you can't just do a correlation between, like, this city has more
cops and less crime and divine any kind of causal analysis.
But then, Stephen Levit comes up with this unique model that does allow you to do causation, where he says, after mayoral
and gubernatorial campaigns, they often hire more cops.
It's like a campaign promise.
Like, I'm going to hire 50 more cops, put them on the street, whatever.
And then you get less crime.
The main thing to know about Levitt's work on this is that it doesn't hold up.
People have found coding errors in it.
There's like mistakes in the data.
Other people have pointed out that like mayors
and governors don't hire enough cops
after elections to make much of a difference.
Like you can only really get to this
through like weird statistical mumbo jumbo.
And also there's other reasons why crime might go down
after a giant election that don't have to do with cops.
And then the number one problem with this,
which I feel like should be much more front and center
in like every debate about crime and policing,
is that crime statistics are not statistics about crime.
They are statistics about reports of crime.
Right, which run through police departments.
Exactly, and there are many, many things that would increase reports of crime, but not increase crime.
Yes.
A lot of countries that have done like large scale public information campaigns on like
sexual assault have like sky high rates of rape and sexual assault, not because they have
more of those crimes, but because people are willing to come forward about them.
You also find after after large corruption scandals
or police brutality incidents,
people become more reluctant to report crimes to the police.
And that results in what appears to be a drop in crime
because you have fewer reports of crime
and the police list that as a triumph.
Look, the police are working, we're reducing crime,
but it actually means they're not working
because people don't trust them.
So every single study of crime and discussion of crime has to start with the fact that
for most crime statistics, we don't know what the fuck we're talking about.
Most crimes are not reported to the police.
There's all kinds of weird stuff about what counts as an aggravated assault versus not an
aggravated assault.
Even violent crime statistics include robbery,
which is stealing from somebody through violence
or the threat of violence.
That's also something that depends on a judgment call.
So with the exceptions of homicides,
where basically a body is a body
and those tend to get counted.
And one of the criminologists I talked to
is that motor vehicle theft is also weirdly reliable
because people have to report it to their insurance.
Yeah, I also wanna point out, this is 2005,
another big cultural phenomenon in 2005, the wire.
Oh yeah.
And if you watch the wire, you would know
that when there's a new mayor,
they put pressure on the police departments
to keep the crime stats down artificially deflated, okay?
And I wanna be a guy that learns lessons
about city government from the wire, but I do trust it more than Stephen Levin at this
point.
There are two separate teams of researchers that tried rerunning his data and weren't
able to replicate it. So the first one just found this coding error. And then the second
team of researchers said that when you run it, you actually find more reports of crime,
but that's probably because when there's more cops on the street,
they just see more stuff.
Yeah, right.
And like, it gets included,
but it's this weird thing where a reduction in crime reports
means the cops are working and an increase in crime reports
also means the cops are working.
Yeah, yeah.
So we just really don't like know very much about what's going on.
And so, again, do cops reduce crime?
It's like a huge debate in like three different fields
and they're just like waltzing into this
and being like obviously police reduce crime
because like I did a single study.
Freakin'omics.
So that explains so mass incarceration
and policing explain 50% of the crime reduction
according to this argument.
And the third reason is Schmischmorschen.
Do you remember like this theory?
Yeah.
I mean, in broad strokes, the theory is that I'm going to try to be somewhat polite about
it, like, that crime disproportionately emanates from poor communities and is within
poor communities. Abortion is something that is utilized disproportionately by poor communities.
Therefore, the decline in crime can be explained by Roe v. Wade and the spread of abortion.
Yes. So this is from the chapter of the book.
It says,
Levitt and his co-author, John Donahue of Stanford Law School,
argued that as much as 50% of the huge drop in crime
since the early 1990s can be traced to Roe v. Wade.
Their thinking goes like this.
The women most likely to seek an abortion,
poor, single, black or teenage mothers,
were the very women whose children, if born, would have been most likely to become criminals.
But since those children weren't born, crime began to decrease during the years they would
have entered their criminal prime.
In conversation, Levit reduces the theory to a tiny syllogism.
Unwantedness leads to high crime.
Abortion leads to less unwantedness.
Abortion leads to high crime, abortion leads to less unwantedness, abortion leads to less crime.
Look, I don't even want to say that this is like,
that there is like no causal connection here.
I have no idea.
But the amount of information you would need
to draw that conclusion is enormous, right?
The fact that this comes after them casting doubt
on a much clearer correlation with the resume,
like the black names and resumes, it's fucking hilarious.
But why, Peter?
But why?
Yeah, it's a real mystery.
They begin with a cute anecdote about Romania
where abortion was a really common form of birth control.
For every four live births, there was one abortion.
And then in 1966,
Chowchescu was doing some like national
or Romanian greatness thing and he banned abortion.
So like overnight, abortion went from like extremely
common to non-existent, essentially.
And so they say, compared to Romanian children born
just a year earlier, the cohort of children born after
the abortion ban would do worse in every measurable way.
They would test lower in schools, they would have less success in the labor market, and
they would prove much more likely to become criminals.
And then they sort of lay out the argument for the way that abortion reduces crime, which
basically reduces the percentage of unwanted kids in the population.
And so, when you have abortion being legalized, so the opposite of unwanted kids in the population. And so,
when you have abortion being legalized, so the opposite of what Romania did, it's like clockwork. 18 years later, you start to see these really significant reductions in crime.
To make this argument, they have four pieces of evidence. The first is that five states legalized abortion two years before row, and all five of those states had earlier crime drops.
Okay.
The second piece of evidence is states with higher abortion rates at that time, also had bigger crime drops.
The third piece of evidence is people born after Roe v. Wade have lower crime rates.
If you look at people born after 1973,
it's like, oh, they commit less crime.
And number four is data from other countries
confirms the result.
So they say studies of Australia and Canada
have since established a similar link
between legalized abortion and crime.
Of these four pieces of evidence,
two are dubious and two are straight up lies.
So the main thing to know about all this stuff,
about like states that are legalizing abortions,
had less crime, and states with more abortions
had the biggest crime drops, is like,
mostly the data is just garbage.
So all of the states that legalized abortion earlier
had like huge rates of abortion because people were traveling to those states to get abortions.
There's no guarantee that those people are living in those states 18 years later.
Right, right.
And I really couldn't believe this.
They don't actually track like a rise in abortion.
Oh.
For this I interviewed a guy named Ted Joyce who's written a bunch of articles about this because he's an economist who specializes in abortion policy.
He points out that Stephen Levit is just assuming that there were zero abortions in all of
these states before Roe v. Wade.
You're proposing that abortion explains 50% of the crime drop.
This is a huge effect, right?
To demonstrate that you would have to have like
doubling, tripling, quadrupling of abortions, right?
But a lot of the states that legalized abortion early were fairly liberal states
that had a lot of abortions going on even when it was technically illegal.
Yeah. It's not big enough to explain this huge effect.
And then Ted Joyce also points out that that abortion didn't actually change the birth rates
all that much.
Like it was like the same number of people being born.
One of the weird things about this is that abortion in and of itself is just another way
of talking about birth rates, right?
You're saying there's this thing that decreased birth rates among poor people.
But then why not just look at birth rates among poor people?
Why do this whole rigour moral?
And also, the biggest thing to me, if it was Roe v. Wade, you have this cohort of kids
that are born after Roe v. Wade is legalized.
So if there were 20% unwanted kids in the population, now there's like 10% because there's
higher access to abortion, right?
But then when you look at the specifics
of how crime dropped, it wasn't young people
who drove the reduction, it was old people.
I read this fascinating article on the reduction
in adult homicides.
This was also a time when the demographics were shifting
where the baby boomers were aging into later adulthood.
So basically you just had the entire population
getting older, there's just fewer teenagers
in the population, so that drove a lot of reduction
in crime rates to begin with.
And at the same time, you had reductions
like fewer adults killing each other.
And the biggest decrease was among wives
killing their husbands.
Dude, rock, let's go boys.
Yeah. That's also something let's go boys. Yeah.
That's also something that draws up on all these other social shifts at the time, right?
There's like, there's no fault divorce, people waiting longer to get married,
people moving in together before they get married.
It's easier to leave somebody rather than have this sense of desperation.
Guys, just getting nice, sir.
You know, give us some credit, Michael.
No, it's definitely the decreasing murder
ability of straight men. They stopped wearing such provocative clothing. I
don't want to swap like one cute counterintuitive explanation for another
one. Yeah, yeah. There's not that many wives killing their husbands in the
country. No, it's just this is insanely noisy. Exactly. It's just so noisy. The
amount of variables we have going on here is just crazy.
And so you would expect for something like this,
for like way fewer teenagers to be killing each other,
the cascade through the population is exactly the opposite.
It starts with like 40-year-olds,
and teenagers were actually killing each other more
because this was right during the crack epidemic.
Right.
So it's this extremely weird thing where Steven Levitt says,
oh abortion explains the crime drop among teenagers.
And then people are like, oh, well, teenagers
were actually killing each other more.
Oops.
But then he says like, if you control for the crack epidemic,
then we have the effect.
We're then what's this based on?
Sorry, but control for the crack epidemic is killing me.
This is too good.
Control for the causes of crime, please.
But then, to me, this is where it gets really cynical.
So in the book, they say studies of Australia and Canada
have established a similar link between legalized abortion
and crime.
This is a lie.
This is just a straightforward fucking lie.
Ah.
In Canada, abortion was legalized in two waves, one in 1969 and one in 1988, and the crime
drops don't line up with either one of them.
And then the paper that they're citing about Australia finds mixed results.
It's like, in Australia, it's also some states did it before other states.
The researchers who clearly agree with love it and are like trying to make the data show
that. they're like
We found it earlier in some states, but not in others and also we don't have data on like the age of
Purport traders of homicide so we can't actually say whether it was teenagers
So it's like oh, so you just can't say anything right there are other studies where they found that in the UK
The crime rate fell almost equally in England
in Northern Ireland, even in Northern Ireland,
didn't legalize abortion.
There's a review of 20 countries
which found no link between abortion and crime.
Yeah.
This also brings us back to the Romania stuff.
So in the book, the way that they described this
is like this perfect mirror image of what happened
in America. So in America, we legalized abortion and then we got less crime. And in Romania, they banned
abortion, and then they got more crime. So again, the way that Frekenomics framed this is, these children
would turn out to have miserable lives. Compared to Romanian
children born just a year earlier, the cohort of children born after the abortion ban would do
worse in every measurable way. They would test lower in school, they would have less success in
the labor market, and they would also prove much more likely to become criminals. So like slam dunk,
right? One of the first things you find when you start googling around for this is you find a series of studies
by an actual Romanian who looked into the data
on the abortion ban and then this huge explosion
of birth rates right after the abortion ban.
And what he finds is exactly the opposite.
The kids born in the wake of the abortion ban
committed less crime.
So the reason for this is all about who was getting abortions in Romania.
So the people who were getting abortions were mostly middle class, more educated women.
Partly because you would get abortions from like the official medical system,
and you had to be able to afford to go see a doctor.
You had to be educated enough afford to go see a doctor.
You had to be educated enough to know that abortions were available to you, right?
And like living in a city where you could access them.
And so when they banned abortion, the birth rate spiked.
But the women who were having babies were mostly educated middle class, relatively well
off women, who could afford to give their kids the resources,
to make sure they sort of ended up okay in life.
And then when you look at America, it turns out to kind of be the same thing.
One of the things they mentioned in the Frekenomics book is that after abortion is legalized
in the United States, the cost of an abortion goes from roughly $500 to around $100, which
is like a huge difference, right?
But also $100 in the early 1970s is still a decent amount of money.
And a lot of people do not have access to abortion clinics, right?
If you live in a rural area, if you're not educated enough to know
like what the signs of pregnancy are, you don't realize what's happening.
You might have super religious parents that don't allow you to go get an abortion.
It would be very odd to act like
Roe v. Wade didn't increase abortion access for poor women
because like, obviously it did, right?
But there's not enough of a shift
in who was getting abortions to explain all that much.
Right. Right. The poorest women,
the most marginalized women in America
were having babies when abortion was illegal and they're having babies when abortion is legal.
Right. He's, he's implying that legality was the real barrier to abortion access, but it's only one barrier.
Right. And I, I really could not believe this. So when, when I read the Freakonomics book, Google around found this Romanian study, and I was thinking of like how to explain this to you, I was like, okay, so they wrote Freakonomics book, Google Around, found this Romanian study, and I was thinking of like how to explain this to you.
I was like, okay, so they wrote Freakonomics,
and then later, this Romanian guy looks into the data
and he finds that it doesn't hold up.
And like fair enough, we've all written stuff
in popular media that like eventually turns out
not to be true when we get better data, whatever, right?
Yeah.
So I went back and double checked this Romanian study.
The study came out in 2002,
three years before Freakin' on it. Oh my god. So this is not a debunking of Freakin' on it. This is
this is their source. This is the source they're using in the footnotes. Oh my god. So it's like
this to me is like a new level of cynicism for this fucking book. There's something so wild about this because what you expect from these like little pop science books is over simplification.
And what you so often get is just incorrect information, right?
What this is so fascinating about this book and like the discourse around this book is that whenever you see criticism of these dumb airport bessilers, the defense of them is usually like, well,
you got to sand down some rough edges, right? You're trying to convey complicated issues to the
lay public. And like, you know what? Fine. I have spent a lot of my career doing this. It is hard
to simplify complex ideas and like entire fields of academic studies.
I get that, right? But it's very odd to use that defense when what we're talking about is a study
says crime went down and you are saying crime went up. No one would understand that as like
simplification of a complex idea. That is a fucking lie. There's something completely insane about,
it was 40% this, 10% this, 50% this,
and it's like, what the fuck?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Let's just take a big step back
and this is speculative, but also almost certainly true.
Part of the crime drop, I don't know how much,
maybe even a very tiny amount,
part of it is probably just cultural norms shifting.
Yes, sure.
Part of it is probably education going up.
Like all these little things,
and when you're saying three things,
account for one hundred percent of it,
you're allowing for no flexibility.
But like I looked into this,
there's a really good post by John Roman,
where he goes through like 25 explanations
for the crime drop, all of which are backed up by pretty good data.
Right, but you can't combine all of them.
Right, everybody has their pet theory
and you can use statistics however you want
to bolster your pet theory.
As far as I could tell,
the consensus seems to be that it's some combination
of various justice system things.
So like incarceration, policing, I mean,
this is also a period where there's like huge technological changes.
You know, people are less likely to carry around cash now.
There's one theory that it's air conditioning,
where people were just indoors more in comfort
and not like outside hanging out where they're like interacting with people.
People talk about the VCR.
Yeah, because crime goes up in the summer, right?
That's like a classic sort of social psych 101 thing.
Yeah.
And the reason for that, of course,
that people tend to be outside more.
And the idea that things are keeping people indoors
more seems to make some sense, right?
There's also a lot more people are on medications
for various mental health things.
There's also, I think a really underrated factor is better medical procedures.
So if somebody gets shot, they're much more likely to live now than they were 40 years
ago.
So a lot of those murders just became assaults.
There's all kinds of other social changes, which like, you can't really disentangle from
the crime stuff.
So like teen pregnancy, teen fertility is way down.
That's another like long, slow shift that has happened
in our lifetimes.
Teens are less likely to use drugs in alcohol now.
Adult strength, less alcohol.
There's less, you know, whatever inflation
and unemployment is higher and just like living standards
are higher.
One theory is that it's immigration, you know,
because immigrants commit less crime.
Oh, Michael, I think you have that backwards.
Surely we are.
We are under siege, sir.
There's the lead stuff.
People are kind of like very attached to this one.
And like, I think it's in there.
I think it might explain why crime went up so much
in the 1960s, basically, because baby boomers
were become teenagers.
And then crime didn't go up as much
when like Gen X and millennials became teenagers.
Like, maybe the lead thing isn't there,
although it totally breaks down internationally and doesn't really work. I'm not invested in like, it's fake, but I'm also
not accepting that like, that's what really explains it. I don't think there's any like,
quote unquote, real explanation. Yeah. But what they're doing is the equivalent of just being like,
you're just looking at one trend and being like, wow, it looks like ice cream sales went up.
Right. And crime went down.
There it is.
Ice cream and crime.
That's all they're fucking doing here, right?
Just like throw a dart at a board, hit a data point, throw another at another board,
hit another, and you're like, those two bang.
Right.
Ultimately, you're looking at correlations.
You're looking at very noisy data on crime, very noisy data on abortions.
And like, I'm not even covering all of the statistical debate that has gone on around this.
Like, there's been a huge number of papers about like, there are basic coding errors.
In Levit study, he uses arrests as a proxy for crime.
He uses the raw number of arrests rather than the arrest rates.
So it's like New York has more crime than Wyoming.
It's like, well, yeah, because it has more people.
One of the criminologists that interviewed said
that no responsible sociologist would ever say
that it's one thing, or even like three things.
It's gonna be like 12, and they're all gonna be interlinked.
We may just never be able to untangle this.
That's a sound right.
But then what's so weird to me is like, you know,
the international comparisons don't hold up.
The timeline doesn't hold up.
The statistics don't hold up.
And yet, Levit continues to double down.
Yeah, I remember a couple of years ago, right?
Yeah, there's still publishing papers on this.
Yeah, I mean, what the fuck man?
So he just released an updated version of this.
I think it was 2018, maybe it was 2019,
and they did an updated Freakonomics episode about this,
which I listened to, and again, they find,
oh, it explains 50% of the crime drop,
but then in the Freakonomics episode,
Levit just sort of drops in.
He's like, well, it might even explain
as much as 80 or 90%.
Hell yeah.
Well, that's not in your paper, but okay.
I love the idea of a serious academic.
And this actually happens, I think,
to some more than you might expect,
but an academic puts a thesis out there,
and they're just in need of therapy.
And so when people attack the thesis,
rather than being like, you know, that's interesting.
Maybe if we reconceptualize it like this
or maybe I'm wrong, they just get defensive for 20 years.
And by the end of it, they're just a complete crank.
Well, what's so weird to me is like,
I don't even feel all that strongly
that like this effect doesn't exist.
Yeah.
If it's really important to you to say that abortion
is one of the things that's in there,
I can't really disprove that given the data that we have,
but to me, it's on the level of VHS or air conditioning.
It's vaguely plausible.
You can use statistics to say almost anything you want
if you're trying to explain 10% of this massive social shift,
you can say like the decline of vinyl records explains 10% of the crime drop if you want
to.
Using like modern physical techniques.
So I'm not going to say that like he's full of shit.
The data does not allow me to say that.
I mean, look, yeah, I mean, this is an incredibly complex set of phenomena.
And if you wanted to say that abortion is like part of this tapestry,
sure. Once you're saying it's 50%, then you need to show an unbelievable amount of data.
Yeah. And instead, he gives you fucking nothing, right? Some incorrect data from Romania and some
hypothesizing. To wrap up, I mean, I read a bunch of reviews of this book
and there was only one that pointed out
what an ideological project this is.
Once you get to the actual things
that you learned from reading this book,
it's like, okay, campaign finance doesn't matter that much
and like discrimination isn't that big of a deal.
They have a whole section that I fucking skipped
about how like protecting the forests to save the spotted owl is like not worth the money.
And like throughout the book they're setting up this binary between acting on intuition
and acting on data, right? But what we see throughout this book is that all of their
quote unquote data driven presentation is riddled with ideology, right?
They're leaving out important information.
They're using data that doesn't indicate
what they say it indicates.
They're miss citing existing research.
I don't wanna set up a weird QAnon thing
where it's like it's bullshit to look at the data
or we shouldn't look at research. That's obviously just a shallow as saying that like research will solve everything.
But I just want to stress that this is a false binary. There is no such thing as using data to
remove all human judgment, value, ideology from the way that we make decisions. We should make decisions based on values.
Right. The book has a confidence to it. That carries forward into its readers almost,
right? People had this belief that this was sort of groundbreaking in a sense.
I have to say, as much as they present that dichotomy between intuition and science,
the appeal of most of their ideas is really intuitive.
They're making these claims that might not be the consensus, but are not really counterintuitive.
Oh, well, swimming pools are dangerous too.
That's something we all sort of know that kids around swimming pools is a dangerous combination. I actually think what they're presenting is basically something that is designed to appeal
to your intuition, and that's why it's effective.
And I think very importantly, they're repackaging it and selling it back to you while telling
you that it's science, right, while telling you that it's objective, which I think is
like somehow worse, because if you know that you're going on your gut,
you can compare that to other people's guts and have a little bit of humility
about like, no, I say it this way, somebody else is it the other way,
but it's like, no, no, I'm doing science.
And everyone else is a fucking rude.
That's actually like really dangerous.
Right. And there's an, there's an implication that institutions,
like major academic institutions,
are either ignoring or covering up this information
in some way, right?
And that shit is wildly dangerous.
And there's a sense to which sometimes,
I hear about a book like Freakonomics,
and it conjures up like very specific discussions,
like the abortion component.
And then you hear all the things that the book contains.
And rather than getting clarity, it just ends up being a jumble of bullshit in my mind.
Where I'm like, damn, that book was a lot dumber than I thought.
It really is shocking how dumb this book is.
I was expecting like, Gladwell, where you have to kind of look for it.
This is also why I wanted to leaprog this to the first episode that we released
because we've talked about a lot of other books.
We've already recorded episodes on like
one of the glad well books
and the end of history and clash of civilizations.
But I think Frekenomics is really
one of the worst entries in this,
both because of how stupid it is
and also how like no one seemed to comment
on that at the time.
It's kind of incredible.
And you know, Michael, you once described this phenomenon
to me that the TED talkification of American discourse
as a common consumer, I think you would assume
that to the degree that this sort of like pop science
exists above it somewhere is a level of serious science that to the degree that this sort of like pop science exists
above it somewhere is a level of serious science
that the serious people are discussing.
But in reality, there are no serious people
and they're all reading this bullshit.
That is like a very true and haunting phenomenon.
But where like, you know, the most powerful people
in the world are absorbing the same dumb ideas
that the rest of us are.
Freakonomics!
Freakonomics!
Yes!
you