Modern Wisdom - #1002 - Andrew Doyle - Political Violence & The Lunatics of Your Own Side
Episode Date: October 4, 2025Andrew Doyle is Titania McGrath, host of GB News, a comedian and a writer. The world has shifted dramatically over the past few years, and the pace of change has only accelerated in recent months. Id...eas that once lived outside the mainstream have quickly entered the Overton Window, while others have been pushed out. So what does the future hold for “woke”? Is it fading, primed for a resurgence, or simply mutating into the next cultural battleground? And more importantly, what new culture war is waiting just over the horizon? Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get the brand new Whoop 5.0 and your first month for free at https://join.whoop.com/modernwisdom Get up to $50 off the RP Hypertrophy App at https://rpstrength.com/modernwisdom Get 4 extra months of Surfshark VPN at https://surfshark.com/modernwisdom Timestamps: (0:00) Are Liberals Becoming More Violent? (9:42) Why Out-of-Context Clips are So Damaging (14:44) Was Charlie Kirk a Future President? (18:50) Wokeness is Dying (35:28) The Dangers of Pushing Too Hard (45:40) Andrew’s Stance on the Wokeness (55:22) Does Environmentalism Fit into the Woke Movement? (01:00:48) The Woke Movement is Homophobic (01:16:09) Why Queers for Palestine is So Juxtaposing (01:22:41) Authoritarianism in the UK (01:36:18) The Attack on Free Speech (01:45:06) Activist Judges Need to Be Removed from Government (01:49:53) Steven’s Views on Unite the Kingdom (01:53:15) Should Jimmy Kimmel Have Been Cancelled? (02:03:50) Cancel Culture is Going Too Far (02:14:25) We Shouldn’t Feel Threatened By Disagreement (02:21:19) What Happens Next? (02:26:26) Where to Find Andrew Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The first time that we recorded, you were going from London to Edinburgh,
maybe to do the fringe?
Yes, it was at the Edinburgh fringe.
Stopped off at my house.
Yes.
Yes, we did.
2019 or 2018?
It was a long time ago.
Yeah.
We did the podcast in your living room.
Correct.
Yeah.
It was nice and homely.
Yeah.
This is a bit more minimalist.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, much more sterile.
I saw a tweet earlier on that I thought was pretty interesting.
The left's greatest enemy is not the right, but the hard left.
The right's greatest enemy.
is not the left, but the hard right, the lunatics on your own side make you look much sillier
than the opposition ever could. Yeah. Well, there's a problem, isn't there at the moment,
which is that there seems to be more of an overlap between the left and the hard left,
which doesn't exist to the same degree. It does exist on the right, but not to the same degree.
So I think, I mean, I've made the case that I think the left has to really disavow the
lunatics within its own house. That's something they really, really need to do because I've been
really shocked since this horrific murder of Charlie Kirk seeing the extent of left wing
mainstream left wing voices attempting to justify it. And I know that always happens.
You know, if you go back to the Brighton bombing at the Tory Party conference back in the early
80s, if you go back to the death of Margaret Thatcher, there were some people who were
rejoicing in death and celebrating death. So you always get a bit of that. And it's always
grotesquely unpleasant whenever you see it. That track was number one, right?
I don't think it quite got to number
Oh, maybe it did
The Witch is dead
Yeah, yeah, the one
Not hi-ho, it was ding-dong
You're confusing Wizard of Oz
With the dwarves from Snow White
And those two should be conflated
In a mash-up form
And remixed
I think that should happen
But it is true
That there's always that kind of thing
But I didn't, I've never seen the extent of it
Like there's thousands and thousands of them
Why do you think that is?
Because I think
because I think there's too much
of an eroded boundary between that far
left and left. You know, the mainstream
left, just as the mainstream right, has
a kind of responsibility to distance itself
from the more egregious crazy people on their
own side, although they're not really on their side.
But, you know, on the further extremes
of the political spectrum, and if you don't do that,
in the public imagination, the two become
conflating. What does distancing yourself look like?
It looks like saying, I don't agree when someone
celebrates murder. And who the hell
is this to claim to represent my
political position? It's actually not that
hard to do.
It's been very, any movement, I mean, look, there was a clip of a trans pride protest in
London where an activist stood up and shouted out, if you see a turf, punch them in the
fucking face.
You see a woman, so calling for violence.
Now, every movement, every protest has a few bad apples, right?
If I saw that, I wouldn't really think much of it.
What I reacted to was the crowd cheering and applauding that, because what?
What that tells you is that violence and violent rhetoric has been normalized within the trans activist community, right?
Because if I was at a parade of something that I really supported, some cause I really cared about, and I was at a protest, and someone stood up and called for violence, I'd be like, who's that?
Can we get him off the stage?
This doesn't represent us.
I wouldn't be cheering along, and I'd be incredibly disturbed if I saw supposed allies cheering that kind of thing.
You'd do something about it, wouldn't you?
So that's all I mean by that.
And I think the tweet that you quoted, I presume, is alluding to this idea that, you know, increasingly there is a tolerance, if not support, but there's certainly a tolerance for the most extreme forms of violent rhetoric on the left by the mainstream left.
And you can see that, by the way, that mainstream commentators are throwing the word fascist around and the word Nazi around, which is so dangerous.
And more than anything, it's historically illiterate.
They don't know what the word means.
what it's come to mean is a kind of catch-all to dehumanize to say this person isn't really human
there are a kind of embodiment of evil some kind of it diabolizes them and that's the effect of it
and I think that's a very dangerous thing to do and you're seeing that really on the mainstream
I saw this you gov poll talking about the difference between people on the left using violence
to achieve their political goals
versus those who don't.
And it seems like younger liberal Americans
are worryingly close to saying
that actually, yeah, it is can sometimes be justified.
25% of very liberals say that violence can sometimes be justified
in order to achieve political goals.
Is this the fire study?
There was a study by fire,
the free speech organization in America,
which only came out four or five days ago.
And I think...
This is from September 10.
So I think it's even worse than you think.
The statistics quoted in that are really chilling.
It suggests a high propensity towards the tolerance
or, I suppose, excuse making for violence.
The idea that a speaker on campus
who is espousing views you don't agree with
is making you unsafe
and therefore they deserve some kind of physical intervention.
either that a punch or, God forbid, even further, an act of assassination.
What's very disturbing, though, about that study is that the trend seems to be increasing
on the right as well among young conservatives.
They're catching up.
Now, it's always been the case, according to the fire studies, that the left is fire.
It's the foundation for individual, well, it used to be the foundation for individual rights
in education, and they changed the meaning of the acronym so that it's more...
They kept the acronym.
They kept the acronym, but changed.
now. It doesn't. It doesn't. Well, Greg Lukianov, who's in charge of it, is going to hate me for not knowing the new words. But it's still a free speech organization. But it's more, I think what they realized is it's not just about campus. We have to be there to protect free speech for everyone. They're non-partisan. They're not left or right. They're just free speech for absolutely everyone. And the last study was saying that, you know, whereas you've had leftist tolerance on university campus forever, it's always been the case that there's been more of a tolerance for violence. But the right.
is catching up. In other words, this idea that we are becoming so tribal now that if you,
if someone disagrees with you, it is now widely taken to be a kind of attack. And I know I've
looked into studies on this, apparently it's fairly natural for people when you disagree with them
to take it. Your instinct is to take it as an attack. But that is amplified when your sense of
identity is connected to a political viewpoint, you know, because you're not, you know, if,
if your whole identity is wrapped up with a particular politics and someone says, your politics
is wrong, they're saying that you're wrong, they're saying that you're rotten, there's something
about you that is, that is bad. And I think that's what's, that's happened. And actually,
what Charlie Kirk was doing was exactly what we need to do. As soon, you go into the lion's den,
you go to speak to people who fundamentally disagree with you, and you let them speak,
and you give them a platform and you engage in discussion.
And that's why I think this particular murder,
because political violence does happen from time to time and always has.
There's nothing new about that.
There is something so horrific about this particular one
because what he was doing was so noble,
was so much the right thing to be doing.
It feels like an attack on free speech itself,
as well as being attack, of course, on a poor innocent man.
Question.
Yes.
Do you think that the story or the reaction of Trump being shot if his head had been two inches to the right a year ago would have been as horrific as Charlie's was?
The reason I ask is there's a little bit of a sense that sort of, well, Trump had it coming because he's the guy at the top, he's said all of these things, he's done all of these things.
he's done all of these things.
Charlie, the sort of post-mortem roundup of a variety of clips,
some of which seem to be taken out of context,
some of which seem to be him not saying what he actually said.
This sort of evidence searching to justify,
well, maybe it's not as egregious as you actually thought,
as if any amount of words somehow justifies a bullet.
Well, I mean, first things first, the caveat always has to be
that political violence should be considered an oxymoron, those two things, those two words
shouldn't go together. The reason you have the politics is to avoid the violent. Quite.
So had Trump been killed in that assassination attempt, it would have been a human tragedy,
all political violence, all violence is a, you know, I can't endorse any of it. But you're right
to identify that it wouldn't have had the, I mean, it would have had a major impact. It would
have been seismic. Of course it would. But Charlie Kirk was not a politician. He had robust political,
views which he expressed, but he had no political clout. And I think that's why it hits people
harder, because he was effectively punished for his opinion. And whatever you think about that
opinion, the first thing you should be able to say as just a human being is that was
utterly immoral, grotesque and evil. That's the first thing you should. You know, all of this cherry
pig, let me find some quotations to say that he was a horrible person. It is a way of justifying
what happened, you know, I think.
One of the things that I saw that I'd be interested to get your take on,
a lot of the really well-meaning apologies.
I don't know what you would say, like a tribute, I suppose,
like a little tribute tweet or whatever.
Chank Yuga did one, you know, people from the left that did that.
There was always a caveat in there.
Although I didn't agree with his positions,
I would condemn and do all of the things.
And you're like, hey, that's nice.
I'm not sure.
I'm totally open to being wrong.
I don't know if the same amount of hand-wringing would need to be done
if somebody on the left had been shot
and people on the right were giving their tribute.
Yes, I suppose it depends how you look at it.
I mean, there's been a lot of criticism of that.
Why do you have to say that you disagreed with them?
Because the fundamental point is it's wrong
and you should say that it's wrong, right?
It's to protect yourself, I think,
from being seen as not having sufficient fealty to your own side
because the purity spiral that exists within the left
is not the same as it is in the right.
So possibly that.
But in addition to that, it could be something else.
Ezra Klein, for example, writes this article saying that he's grieving for mourning for Charlie Kirk.
He gets piled on by the left.
Then he writes another article and doubles down and says,
no, you're wrong.
And you're wrong to pile on me.
I am mourning for him as a human being as well.
You know, and he makes the point that he disagreed with virtually everything that Charlie Kirk said.
But I don't think that is an attempt to appease his side.
I mean, that shows he wasn't interested in appeasing his side.
He's saying what he believes.
It could be, and maybe this is a positive, it could be someone trying to say that,
trying to critique, I suppose, the very idea that it should make a difference if you agree or not.
You know, if someone who disagree.
Very meta way to look at it.
But yeah.
Well, it does make sense, doesn't it?
You know, you're standing up for the liberal principle, which is that nobody,
should be silenced with violence according to their point of view.
And it's very easy that, you know, people who agree with what he said to say that.
But actually, it's quite powerful when someone who doesn't comes out.
It's more powerful when someone from the left says it.
And so in order to do that, you have to make clear that you don't agree.
So it depends.
I mean, look, there could be all sorts of motivations.
I don't know.
I don't want to bombard people too much or be too harsh on them for making the point that they disagreed.
I think it can have a positive effect.
What I do take exception to is that.
the people who either misrepresent what he said in order to attack him, which has been happening
an awful lot, out of context clips, like you said, or not doing the basic research.
I mean, one of the big issues is we're dealing with a folk devil.
It isn't really, it isn't really Charlie Kirk they hate because they haven't watched
anything that he's ever said and they haven't really engaged.
They've seen a few out of context clips.
It's the monster of their imagination that they've collectively created.
And that's why out of context clips work, because of course, it acts as confirmation.
information bias. They see it. They think, oh yeah, that that tallies with the monster in my head, so that's great. And you see, you see it all along. You know, people like Alistair Campbell, who went online and said that Charlie Kirk supported stoning gay people to death. Now, I tweeted that clip out and said, this is categorically wrong. And he did apologize. I must be the only person ever to get an apology out of Alistair Campbell. That is an achievement. But he should have taken the effort to look into that, because it's an incredibly severe accusation. And he should,
should know better. You should be damn sure that someone's actually said something like that before
you say it. And of course, what he was saying, what Charlie Kirk was saying in the original
clip, is he was critiquing an organizer of a pride event who had quoted a book from the Old
Testament in support of pride about love and about compassion. And he was making the point that
the same book of the Bible also says that you should stone gay people to death. So he was
critiquing the idea of cherry-picking scripture for your own political agenda. That was the
point. You know, similarly, we've had this thing about, oh, well, he supported the Second Amendment.
He said that some deaths, because of any country that has guns will have some deaths, that that was a
price worth paying for the Second Amendment. That doesn't mean he was saying that everyone who is
killed by guns, that's justifiable. I mean, that's an incredible leap. And in the same clip,
he makes the clear point. He says, look, 50,000 people a year die from car accidents. And we all
collectively accept that as a cost for the convenience of getting to our destination
quicker. So anyone who has a car implicitly supports Charlie Kirk's view on the Second
Amendment. It makes them an incredible hypocrite if they have a car, but they're saying, because
actually we could all abandon our cars and save 50,000 lives a year. We don't. I actually think
we should all move to Waymo's and driverless cars because that would reduce that fatality rate
by 95% or something like that, but nevertheless. You know, so that's an example of
someone taking something he said, out of context, using it to justify the murder.
I mean, this stuff is, it's hobgoblin-like behavior.
It is incredibly low.
You seem pretty let up by the response to the Charlie thing.
It's bothered me, yeah.
It's really bothered me.
Because it's been relentless and it's just inhumane.
I have this naive faith in humanity, and I always think the best of people.
And I always assume that if you present the arguments, people are going to come around to it.
or I also assume that people who disagree with me
aren't doing so from a place of malevolence
but this is malevolence
and it's explicit malevolence
and that's sort of shaken me bit
yeah it's bothered me
you're very good at detecting that
you're like a psychotherapist
you've worked it out
and to tease it out of me
you weren't exactly subtle but
no that's true
I was talking to a friend
the day after it happened
I saw the two videos
about it
and
one of them is seared into my fucking hippocampus for the rest of time.
Like, I'm just never going to be able to forget that scene.
Yeah.
And I spoke to a friend, and I was like, mate, can you tell me how easy or difficult this shot would be to take from this place?
He's a military guy, and he's got expertise and stuff.
And he's been in and around the administration for a while.
And I just texted him, and he rang me.
And he gave me a sort of a five-minute breakdown.
interesting bit of info that I don't know if it's come out yet still now according to him
Charlie wasn't shot in the neck Charlie was shot in the chest he's wearing a steel plate
and the bullet hits him in the chest and ricochets up into his throat right so the reason that
you wear steel as opposed to like a big puffy thing is that you can wear it underneath a shirt
okay and you can't tell that you're wearing it
The disadvantage is that it doesn't absorb bullets, hings them off.
And the justification for that is, well, if you take the 360 degrees that it could come off at,
or whatever it is, 180 degrees, there's only 96.5% of them are non-fatal.
Okay.
So if it hits you in the leg, if it hits you in the arm, if it hits you in the hand, it's like you're okay.
But at least it didn't go through your chest.
Yes.
But, yeah, he first made that point and then immediately followed it up by saying,
that guy was probably going to be the future president of the United States.
The highest following among young conservative, you know, I don't know whether you saw.
I don't know if this is true.
Stephen Crowder changed his bio on X from the day before to the day after, saying he was
the number two conservative show in America to the number one conservative show in America.
Is that right?
This was either a doctored image, in which case I've done gone falling for it.
Yeah.
Or some timely bio updating, which was.
we're probably going to get on to in other regards later on as well.
But even if it wasn't the current president of the United States,
maybe it was someone that was going to shape the sort of future of American politics.
No doubt.
I mean, he was, if you watch those videos of him engaging with people,
I mean, he is brilliant at it.
And he didn't always used to be.
I mean, I remember seeing videos of him, in fact, seeing him live many, many years ago.
And, you know, he wasn't as accomplished a debater.
He was getting better and better and better.
You know, and he, the thing that he'd learned brilliantly was to hear people out, to let them speak, to let them make their point, not to keep interjecting and getting angry at them, to sort of take the emotion out of it as best he could, even though obviously he was very passionate about what he believed.
And that was so effective.
I think that's one of the reasons he was so hated, because he had realized that the best way for bad ideas to disperse is to hear them.
and so he would allow people to express exactly what they,
because they would damn themselves with some of the ridiculous logic.
And he was a fantastic communicator.
And obviously there was every possibility he would have become an elected politician.
And yeah, he had that sort of calibre.
That's true.
This episode is brought to you by Whoop.
I have been wearing Whoop for over five years now,
way before they were a partner on the show.
I've actually tracked over 1,600.
days of my life with it, according to the app, which is insane. And it's the only wearable I've
ever stuck with because it tracks everything that matters, sleep, workouts, recovery, breathing,
heart rate, even your steps. And the new 5.0 is the best version. You get all the benefits
that make Woop indispensable, 7% smaller, but now it's also got a 14-day battery life and has
health span to track your habits, how they affect your pace of aging. It's got hormonal insights for
ladies, I'm a huge, huge fan of Whoop. That's why it's the only wearable that I've ever stuck
with. And best of all, you can join for free. Pay nothing for the brand new Whoop 5.0 strap,
plus you get your first month for free, and there's a 30-day money back guarantee. So you can
buy it for free, try it for free. If you do not like it after 29 days, they just give you your money
back. Right now, you can get the brand new Whoop 5.0 and that 30-day trial by going to the link in
the description below or heading to join.wop.com slash modern wisdom.
That's join.wop.com slash modern wisdom.
The last few months, there seems to have been sort of an increase in conversations around trans ideology, progressivism, woke stuff, ratcheting up how real world the implications of that being more inflammatory has been shooters, shell casings.
It seems like the guy that shot Charlie Kirk was in relation.
with a trans person, trans roommate, and had said that hateful comments,
dad was Maga, had brought it up to the dad over the dinner table,
he was hateful, and his comments about blah, blah, blah.
Does this comport with your perspective that woke is dying?
Well, I know where you're saying this, because I wrote a book called The End of Woke,
but as you know, I think you've read it, you know that I'm not saying,
it's all over, let's have a party and go home.
What I'm saying is that too much has happened at this point for it to ever have the power that it once had.
And in other words, the process of its decline has very much begun.
We know this from the stats.
The economist did a report into Wokeness.
Support for Wokeness was at its height in 2020 around the summer of George Floyd and has been declining ever since.
We've had some major seismic changes in the world that can never be reversed.
We've had the cast review in the UK, which is a study into gender affirming care.
for children, which has exposed this idea that that is in any way appropriate or effective and
that puberty blockers are potentially very dangerous and unevanced. That's changed everything
because you've had the Tavistock Clinic closed as a result of that. So the very notion of
gender identity ideology has been damaged and dented in a way that it won't be able to recover
from. Similarly, you've had the Supreme Court in the UK ruling that biological sex is a thing.
is protected in equality law. That's been absolutely huge as well. You've had DEI programs in various
companies and corporations rolled back, even in things like McDonald's and Walmart and Facebook meta,
you know. So these big, big names, they're just getting rid of it because they know that it doesn't,
well, actually, it's not only not effective. It can actually ramp up racism in the workplace,
according to studies. So it's a really bad idea and always was, but that's all being stripped away.
So all of this stuff is happening. You've got Trump selection. You've got various sporting bodies
talking about, basically say men cannot compete in women's sports.
Now, what happens then?
I mean, I make the case in the book that
wokeness was simply the latest manifestation of authoritarianism,
which is a natural impulse to humankind.
And it emerges from the left and the right
and everywhere in between throughout history,
in various forms, in various guises.
This is just the latest form, right?
And it will emerge again.
And so the point of making is, yes,
wokeness is on its way out.
But what replaces it could be just as bad.
We were bound to get another form of authoritarianism at some point.
But I think absolutely what we call wokeness is dying.
But it could be a long death.
And it could be years and years and years before it dissipates
because it has such a stranglehold,
particularly in universities and particular,
less so now in corporations because it's being rolled back.
But in government departments, in quangos, in the UK,
we have a quango called the College of Policing.
A quango is a non-governmental organization
that effectively takes the government in trust.
to run an aspect of society.
So, for instance, the College of Policing is a quango
because it directs and trains police in England and Wales,
writes the guidelines for them,
but it's not an elected body, right?
It comes up with this sort of stuff itself.
And they are activist captured.
They are captured by gender identity ideology,
which is why police in the UK tend to turn up at your door
if you say that men and women are different.
And so my point, just to finish my point about this,
the decline of woke is that I think what will also happen is that the ideologues,
because it's a kind of pseudo-religion, they will become more defensive and more aggressive
and more extreme in the way that a cornered rat lashes out in a more extreme way than it ever
has before, hence the extreme violence that we're seeing.
Do you think that these two things are correlated?
The decline of sort of widespread acceptance and this sort of pullback in terms of the trajectory
going in the right direction for people who believe this thing
and the increased sort of kinetic real world implications of it?
Well, I don't know for sure.
I think what I could always, you know,
we know that the genderist movement has always endorsed violence.
Violence and violent rhetoric has been completely normalized in that movement.
There's a website called Turf is a Slur,
which collects thousands of screenshots of activists,
basically saying they want to kill rape and torture women
who believe that there are two sexes.
it's very, very normalized, which is why J.K. Rowling is continually inundated with rape and death threats.
She said she gets so many she could paper the house with them. And that's a big house. That's Jacob's Orling. Right. So this is, it's a real problem. But so in a way, if this latest murder is connected to genderist ideology, which I suspect it might be, but I don't know. If it is connected to that, that just makes sense. That is a continuation of what that
what that community of activists have created.
But on the other hand, it's also the most extreme reaction, isn't it?
And I suspect that, I mean, violence comes about when you've lost the debate.
Violence comes about when language doesn't work anymore.
And so therefore, you know, as wokeness, because wokeness can never work.
It was only ever, I mean, what the more in common study into this says that the woke belief system was only ever endorsed by between 8 and 10% of the population, even at its height, which means it was always a minority view.
and it was imposed on society from the top down.
It was never accepted by people.
People just went along with it
because they were terrified of the key players.
It was actually predominantly an upper-middle class movement.
It was pushed by the elites.
It never caught on in working-class communities.
Working-class people don't care about
what your pronouns are.
They care about feeding their kids.
Now, that means that this is,
from the start was always an authoritarian movement.
It was always an imposition of values
that people didn't accept or believe in.
You saw recently,
what was it, Malcolm Gladwell,
talking about how he was on a panel
and he lied
about his position
on gender ideology
now I don't think he should have lied
I think if more of us
had said the truth
we would have got out of this sooner
but he was probably terrified
I mean you've seen the way
the activists behave
they're terrifying
and that's why any
organizational or corporation or body
which goes woke
it doesn't take many
it takes one or two
a handful of activists
within that corporation
to shift it
and once a body becomes woke
it forgets about its key point and becomes merely a conduit for the ideology.
Have you tried to, or have you managed to break down what makes it such a effectively
reproducing meme? Like what was it? What are the component parts of this that allowed a single
individual within a department to? Yeah. Well, it's not to do with the ideas being robust, is it?
I mean, it's all based on fantasy.
We don't have a gendered soul that can be misaligned with our body.
That's not a thing.
And if you want to reorganize society on the basis of that pseudo-religious belief system,
you better find some evidence for it, hadn't you?
I mean, isn't it crazy that Jackie Smith,
who's the government's representative spokesperson for equalities in the House of Lords,
is asked, what is the government's working definition of gender identity,
and she can't answer the question?
She doesn't know what it is, but the government imposes various policies
on the basis of something they cannot define.
so this is not something that can be sustained through debate and they know that and that's why you get violence
that's why stone war which used to be the foremost gay rights charity in the country pivoted into gender ideology
and suddenly said no debate that was their mantra no debate we don't discuss this anymore you just go along
with it because there is no situation where the woke ideas could be debated and come out on top
it's not possible because they all based on absolute nonsense so it was never so it was never
going to be able to be sustained. So then your question is, well, why is it then that a nonsensical
view can become the mainstream? That again happens throughout history when...
Give me some examples. Well, the Inquisition did pretty well. I would say that if you're going
to be strapped to a rack and tortured, if you don't accept the creed, you might do it. Now,
I don't think the woker, they're not strapping people to the rack. But if they could burn people
at the stake, I think they would. They certainly express the rhetoric to imply that they want to commit
physical harm. And they certainly can ruin and destroy your lives. They've got a pretty good reputation
of that. They develop this system of council culture. They can destroy everything that you've ever built
for no other reason than they disagree with you. And they've done it many, many times. I mean,
the number of the list of casualties of cancer culture are now mountainous, the Himalayan.
And yet they still, the practitioners of it will still say it doesn't exist. Well, that's
convenient, isn't it? Yeah, it happens all the time. It's intimidation. I mean, it's not about
some ideas spread because they're good ideas
some ideas spread because people are too scared to disagree
that's what's happened here right so is it the enforcement mechanism
was a big part of it yeah huge it seems like something to do with sort of
weaponized empathy this sort of lifting up of a of a maligned
underprivileged group okay you've hit on something really interesting there
because i think it is a combination of the well you do and successfully
there is an element of the
how can we put it
the intimidatory it's a movement that
attracts bullies and sociopaths
right because if you are a sociopath or a psychopath
and you want to inflict as much pain on other people
this is the perfect movement for you
because you can do it but you do it under the guise of compassion
and love perfect right that's of course you do it
they're like a modern day clergy they can do
they can do whatever they want I mean it's a bit like
If you were a psychopath in Northern Ireland during the Troubles, you would join a paramilitary group.
And there you can kill and maim and be lauded for it.
There's a good example of a guy called Murphy, who was the leader of the Shankill Butchers, who if you go and visit his grave, it says, here lies a soldier.
This man was a serial killer.
He tortured people, cut them up, murdered.
He's Jack the Ripper.
It's like saying, here lies a soldier on Jack the Ripper's grave, although we don't know who Jack the Ripper was.
But you get my point.
a psychopath can
and he was lauded by that community
they thought he was a hero
right
that's what this movement does
it allows the worst in society
the most of the bullies
to do whatever they want
and be praised for it
right so there's that
there's also
I have no doubt many people
within the movement
who genuinely believe it
who genuinely think
that what they're fighting for
is compassion and justice
and equality
although they call it equity
which is the opposite of equality
And a lot of the time, I think it's just people who've been gold.
People have been gold into believing the redefinitions of words.
I mean, look, in the book, I quote two people saying the same thing.
I quote the former, sorry, I quote the former Conservative Prime Minister of the UK, Theresa May.
And a left-wing actor and comedian called Cathy Burke.
They couldn't be further apart politically.
They both say the same thing.
all that wokeness means is being nice to people and not being racist.
Therefore, we're woke.
Theresa May said in her book, she is woke and proud.
But that's not what woke means.
But they've been gulled into thinking that that's all it means.
If you could sit down with Cathy Burke and Theresa May and say,
okay, so do you support the mutilation and sterilisation of gay youths?
Do you support the censorship of free speech?
Do you support the erosion of women's rights and the taking away of their spaces?
Do you support any of this?
Do you support a hyper-racialized society where,
people are judged first and foremost for their skin colour. Do you believe any of that? They would
say no, they would be horrified. But when they say we're woke, that's what they're saying they believe.
What I'm saying is the culture. The Motten Bailey type thing. It's the Motten Bailey, exactly. The culture
has always been about language and who gets to define the meaning of terms. And unfortunately,
when you do that, when you play around with language, when you play language games,
it means a lot of people end up supporting things that are antithetical to their essential
belief system. That's what's happened there. I think Kathy Burke and Theresa May,
are anti-woke, but they call themselves woke because they don't know what woke means.
And they certainly don't understand what the activists mean when they're, when they're,
when they, you know, you know this. They say they're liberal, they're anti-liberal. They say they're
progressive, they are regressive. They say they're anti-racist, but they went to rehabilitate
racism for a new generation. You know, they say they believe in equality, but they don't.
They believe in equity, which is very, very different. They say they believe in inclusion,
but they actually believe in exclusion of anyone with a different point of view. They are,
it's pretty much across the board, whatever language they use,
is almost always the exact opposite of what they're intending to achieve.
And so you have this odd concatenation of the scary bully sociopath,
psychopath, demon types, who just want to beat the world up and be applauded for it.
And you also have the fellow travellers who believe that the demons are good
because they're wearing a nice fancy cape.
I think that's what it is.
In other news, this episode is brought to you by R.P. Strength.
This training app has made a huge impact on my gains and enjoyment in the gym over the last two years now.
It's designed by Dr. Mike Isratel and comes with over 45 pre-made training programs, 250 technique videos,
takes all of the guesswork out of crafting the ideal lifting routine by literally spoon-feeding you a step-by-step plan for every workout.
It guides you on the exact sets, reps, and weight to use.
Most importantly, how to perfect your form.
So every rep is optimized for maximum gains.
it adjusts your weight each week based on your progress and there's a 30 day money back guarantee
so you can buy it train with it for 29 days and if you do not like it they will give you your
money back right now you can get up to $50 off the RP hypertrophy app by going to the link
in the description below or heading to rpstrength.com slash modern wisdom and using the code
modern wisdom at checkout that's rpstrength.com slash modern wisdom and modern wisdom at checkout
Yeah, I think most of the cultural culture wars, because there's so few sort of original thinkers and so few people who have the agency to be able to make this sort of stuff happen, most people are seduced by a message that feels good, feels like the right thing to do.
I don't think that that many people actually have the capacity for evil.
I have the capacity.
I think everyone has the capacity for evil.
Okay, but most people don't have the conscience to be able to tolerate their own evil.
Sure.
I would say, yes, they have the capacity to do it, but in order to be able to reach that stage.
But my point being that most of the worst acts in human history, I think, have been committed by people believing that they were doing good.
I'm sure you're right, yeah.
If you were, you know, a young person today who cared about, you know, what's happening to, or cared about justice,
and you saw a group calling itself
Antifa,
anti-fascist,
when you say that's great,
I'm anti-fascist,
I hate fascists,
although I have to say,
good branding.
It's good branding,
but, you know,
like Black Lives Matter,
no one disagrees with that statement.
And therefore,
if you were to disagree
with anything,
the organisation said,
people would say,
oh, you're saying
black lives don't matter.
Of course,
it's a rhetorical trick.
Antifa is a very good thing.
But because Antifa is a concept,
anti-fascism is an old,
old concept.
It's just been appropriated.
I mean,
in the way that the democratic
People's Republic of Korea.
No one's going to say it's actually democratic just because they call themselves democratic,
right?
I don't think.
That rule that you have around university subject, that anything that's got the
word science and it tends not to be a science.
Exactly.
There we go.
There we go.
The lady doth protest.
Well, that's it.
So, you know, the thing about Antifa is that if you read, there's a book by Mark
Bray, who was a supporter of Antifa and anti-fascism, who was written a book, very well-written
book, outlining the background to.
the history of anti-fascism right back to Cable Street and beyond right up until today with the
Antifa movement. Where he singularly fails is he doesn't understand that the current Antifa movement
has no connection whatsoever to those who stood up to the actual fascists at the Battle of Cable
Street and actual fascist during the war. These are people who are taking on the mantle of something
that does not connect them to it. So what can you say about, I mean, they're missing, firstly they
don't know what fascism means, right?
So what they are taking,
but what we can say about fascism,
there's lots of disagreements about definitions, right?
The one thing we can say with utter certainty
is every fascistic regime in history
has shared one quality,
which is the violent suppression of opposition.
That's in unequivocal.
And that is the very same quality
that Antifa wholeheartedly support.
And that would be aligned with
if there is a speaker on campus
who is saying something that you...
Exactly. Right.
And that's not to say
that everyone who believes
should punch a speaker as a fascist.
But what it is saying is that they are embracing wholeheartedly a key fascist principle.
Have there been many or any instances that you're aware of of right of center student supporters barricading the doors to stop people from hearing a Hassan Piker lecture or whatever?
I fear it might be coming, but I haven't seen it yet.
Right. Okay. So, I mean, this is sort of always been the one of the big concerns that it does feel at least a little bit. And I'm hesitant of personifying political movements too much, especially not with school playground dynamics. I'm going to try and see if I can get through this in one piece. It feels a little bit to me like the right has always been seen as sort of the big bully. They're the ones who have the muscle. They've got
guns. We know there's a history of them using them. They tend to sort of just be more militant
or militaristic, like in their presentation, in the composition of the members of this group.
And you kind of just sort of expect it from them a little bit. And with that in mind,
there's always been a little bit of, well, yeah, sure, you know, the left are squawking and making
these, not the left, actually, like progressives, I think. The left, the left now.
Now, at least as far as I can see, the Kyle Kalinsky's of the world, the sort of populist left, are very much trying to distance themselves, trying to bifurcate off, whatever it is, the lunatics of your own side versus the blah, blah, blah.
How good of a job they're doing with that, I'm not sure.
But still, like, the right has always been big bully.
The left has always been a little bit like, well, what are you going to do?
The fucking trans guy.
Like the trans guy is the one that you worry, oh, he's going to come up and punch you in the street.
No, it's the hairy biker man.
That's sort of asymmetry in terms of like kinetic power.
And it seems to me, this is like old hat now from five years ago when we would have first started speaking, that the real concern was if you light sufficient fires underneath the arses of the people of the big bully as the younger brother, right?
If the younger brother keeps on sort of over and over, and you go, if you do that a few too many times, the retaliation in response.
because what you're asking for is with restraint on one side where there is a lack of restraint
on another. And this is because of sort of a history of expectation. And I certainly, I have to
assume as well, that people on the right know that this is the case as well, that they're almost
expected that this is the kind of response that they're going to have, that it is going to be
a militaristic sort of response in that way. Now, I might be totally wrong. I'm totally open
to somebody saying, no, there is just as much political violence coming from the right or on the
right or there's a bigger threat that is right of center or whatever it might be. Maybe that's
the case. Maybe it's not. But at least in terms of like how I'm seeing it, that personification
seems to be true that there's been more, there has been a type of leeway given to the left. Maybe
some of it's top down because it's more toxicly empathetic. Yeah. It's cooler. It's currently
in vogue, et cetera. It just plays better. Right. It does play better in sort of modern like
secular meritocratic equality culture. Like it does. At least on the surface it does even if it's
doesn't deliver the promises that it keeps making.
The concern is if you keep pushing and keep pushing and keep pushing, what's the response?
Well, I have no doubt you're right.
I mean, a lot of right wingers have guns, don't they?
A lot of right wingers, you know, as you say, it is like the Big Brother phenomenon.
The truth is that, well, firstly, I think the caveat should be that political violence is
extremely rare.
So therefore, looking at statistics of which side is committed to more acts of violence is always going to be tricky because, I mean, there was a, I saw a post about the degree of far right versus far left violence in America through a certain period of time.
And the right vastly was overrepresented within that.
Glad I caveated what I said.
Yes. But on the other hand, there was an article in Reason magazine analyzing the figures and showing that if you just extend the parameters by a year,
it flips, or at least the difference dissipates entirely.
You bring it up to the present day.
Because political violence is so rare.
Right.
Okay.
You're talking with such tiny numbers that a couple of incidents can flip it.
Yeah, exactly.
It's like those studies that talk about the prevalence of far right violence
against Islamist violence in America that tend to start after 2001.
Because if you go back a year, you suddenly get an extra 3,000 deaths on the other side.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah.
So it's a rare thing.
So what happened the other day in Utah is a rare, rare thing,
and you shouldn't say that that is reflective of a political affiliation, right?
My point was that those extremes are becoming more tolerated.
What you can clearly see is a greater toleration for that kind of thing in leftist discourse.
You've also, of course, seen the riots, you know, in 2020.
There were a lot of peaceful protests, by the way,
but a lot of them flipped over into riots that actually ended up with people being killed.
Okay. Now, it is true and observably true that we're not seeing that on the right in that way. There isn't that tendency, I suppose. But as you say, if they ever did, we would be in a very bad situation.
Remember how long Charlottesville was reverberated. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I always remember thinking, like, wow, this has really got staying power. This must be a big part of American history.
Yeah. Can I ask a question? No. Yes. Can I go to the toilet?
Yeah, absolutely. I don't. Because you've been drinking all of my tasty carbonated hydrating beverages.
I've got three drinks. Yeah. And my bladder is as a limited capacity.
This is the sort of, you came to my house first. Yes. It was cozy, but wholly under hydrated.
Yes. And now. This doesn't need to be part of the podcast. Like, you don't need to fill me doing it unless you're all about the naturalism.
I am.
Oh, okay. Let's go, then. I'm following. I've got the Zoom lens.
All right.
I need it, man.
I wasn't getting uncomfortable with the questioning.
Mm-hmm. Okay.
All righty.
I said, are people concerned about the fucking greater rebound off the wall?
I mean, what would happen if the right rioted in the way
that the left did in 2020.
I mean, I think it would be absolutely terrified.
Certainly better armed.
Yeah, it would be bad.
I mean, that's the point, isn't it?
That's why I talk about getting your own house in order.
You know, that's why I think mainstream leftist commentators should stop misusing language
and stop branding everyone they disagree with as fascist.
Because, you know, it does, if you genuinely thought there were fascists on the rise
and that fascism was the dominant force, you would have a responsibility to oppose it.
and I think that's what a lot of people are feeling like
because they've brought into the rhetoric
they're brought into the language.
Well, again, this is people doing good,
thinking they're doing good.
You're straight back on the fluids.
Am I not allowed to drink the fluids?
Of course you are.
No, no, no, yeah, that's, I love it.
I love it.
Ryan was like, hey, do you want another,
should we get him another water?
I'm like, mate, he's had enough.
I mean, you've had enough.
It's just my bladder that I'm worried about.
That's fine, don't worry about it.
So, you know, we've been talking between me and you
and a bunch of our friends in the UK,
we've been talking about this stuff for quite a while now.
I think it was a conversation me and you had was 2018, 2019,
and it's been this sort of consistent theme.
I used to have a little bit that I said to my friends
that were internet marketers,
which was some of the smartest people of our generation
have had their time taken up working out
how to make people click on ads.
Yes.
Which I think is true.
I also fear that some of the smartest people of our generation
have had that time taken up,
working out whether a man is a man and a woman is a woman.
Yeah, I know.
And I do,
wonder about the loss of human progress and productivity.
I mean, certainly not from me or you.
We weren't going to do anything anyway.
Sure.
From people smarter than me or you.
This, the meme and the counter meme and the countermeem and the sort of subsequent reverberations
that the aftershock that's happened from, this is something that I think is a righteous cause.
That's illogical.
be thinking about it. That's bigoted. You don't understand the problem. That's misaligned.
You don't actually realize what it is that you're fighting for. Like, and diga-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
Is this weird mimetic fucking cultural catnip that people seem to be unable to put down. And the main
reason that I hope that this stuff fucks off is so that we can actually talk about other ideas.
I agree wholeheartedly. It is a waste of time. At the same time, it's essential insofar as if
ignore it. It doesn't just go away. The falsehood wins. There's actually pretty much nothing more
important than the difference in truth and fiction. And I would say it is important when you have a
movement that comes along that pretends to be progressive and is sterilizing young people for no reason
other than ideology, destroying women's rights, destroying gay rights, rehabilitating racism.
Actually, those are really important things. And the idea of censorship and, you know,
There's nothing more important than resisting authoritarianism because it's about what kind of society you want to live in.
So, you know, I, but I take your point.
I mean, look, my background is writing musicals and drama and comedy and I've been dragged into this.
For this war.
I was dragged into this like Pacino says in Godfather 3, you know, completely against my will.
But I don't regret it or think it wasn't worthwhile.
But I think all the books I've written about this, I would have much rather have written books about other things about literature or, you know,
create other things, go back to writing scripts and comedy.
Yeah.
Which is...
Okay, I want to do, take a slightly different tact than we've had in previous conversations.
Can you give me, first off, the steel man case, the strongest case, fairest case that you can
for what the progressive movement, what the woke movement either was or is trying to achieve the moment?
society has made great progress since the civil rights movement of the 1960s and there are laws to protect people from discrimination due to protected characteristics for instance race sex sexual orientation and yet racism sexism homophobia etc does still linger in society the question is why and this is the key question of critical race theory it's you know which obviously as you know started as a legal discipline we have all these laws in place we have a society where we have progress
sufficiently to understand that the consensus is that racism is wrong, why does it still exist?
And it still exists, I'm speaking as a critical race theorist here, it still exists because society
is organized around the dominance of white people for the benefit of white people.
And therefore there are power structures that are embedded within society that we cannot
necessarily easily see. And therefore, it is up to people like me, in my voice, as a critical
race theorist to study these various degrees. You need queer theorists. You need people like
Robin DiAngelo studying whiteness so that we have... Is the steel man? Yeah. It's the strongest.
This is what they, this is their argument. But is this the strongest way that you could put forward
that case on their behalf? Like what, what are they trying to achieve if you strip away the,
the, um... But that's what they say. They say that they are detecting these, and resisting and
interrupting, which is the phrase they use, these power structures that are embedded, so deeply embedded
in society that we can no longer see them.
This is why Robin DiAngelo in white fragility
makes the case that racism today is in a way worse than Jim Crow.
Because Jim Crow was an overt racist system that you could see.
The current racist system is invisible,
except for white women like her who can see it.
Right.
Now, look, I'm obviously mocking at the same time,
but it is their case, right?
So that is that, and, you know, I don't disagree with them.
The racism still lingers and needs to be tackled, right?
So that is why I believe that is the Steelman case, because I do agree on that point.
But I don't think detecting racism where it doesn't exist,
detecting it where the evidence quite clearly shows it doesn't exist.
In fact, the opposite is true.
That's not helpful.
That's not the way you tackle racism.
You tackle racism in the liberal way, which, and I know that's difficult in America,
because Americans don't know what liberal means.
They think it means left wing.
You tackle it in the liberal way.
You identify it as and when it occurs and engage, right?
I mean, isn't that a fair way to Steelman the case?
I'm not convinced it's the strongest.
I think it's maybe the most accurate of how they would put it forward themselves.
Sure, but you're asking me to, therefore, defend their case better than they have.
Yes.
Well, it's not a defensible case.
So all I can do is replicate what they say.
Understood.
Second idea here.
Let's say that you were the person in charge of coordinating left-of-center political culture.
Yeah.
And that you could lay out some battle plans in order to make the future of left contribution to politics, culture, governance, all that stuff, better.
Yes.
What would you advise people to do?
What should they be focusing on?
What should they be jettisoning?
You would jettison woke politics because wokeness is not authentically left wing.
Because to be authentically left wing, as the entire history of left wing writing and thought tells us,
is to be interested in class inequality, economic inequality.
And they have completely jettisoned that.
They have substituted money for identity, group identity.
And that's where the problem starts.
That's where the problem started,
what you call the cultural turn of Marxism.
What genuinely authentically left-wing people want to do,
I mean, they recognize that pronouns and multiple gender identity,
this is a bourgeois luxury,
This is a middle-class luxury.
The woke movement, calling itself left-wing,
created cancel culture.
The only people who were able to resist cancel culture
were the uncancelable, billionaires, millionaires.
It also arranged a system whereby workers,
working-class people, were told that they were all racist,
whether they believed it or not,
and they had to undertake unconscious bias sessions,
retraining, reprogramming.
And if they objected,
they would probably be fired or disciplined
and the woke would side
with the multi-billion dollar corporations over the workers
any movement that arranges things
so that only the super rich
get to say what they think
cannot be said to be authentically left wing
now I understand why I get criticism for saying that
because people say oh you're saying whokeness isn't left
I understand that its origins are in the left
I completely get that
philosophically speaking
I understand but it's a perversion of Marxism
it's a perversion of those original ideas
ideas. So if I were a left-wing campaign, a socialist campaigner, I would say, let's get
back to the concept of the means of production, of what socialist writers have said for generations
and not waste our time with the politics of group identity, which ultimately, above all,
attacks the working class. On that, sounds an awful lot like Gary Stevenson. It sounds an awful
a lot like the kind of lines that he's talking on.
I don't know who Gary Stevenson is.
Gary's economics.
Oh, well, that's why, because I'm hopelessly inadequate when it comes to economic.
You know Gary's economics?
No.
You don't know Gary's economics.
Okay.
I can see a shock in your eyes.
He is, as far as I can see, the quickest growing left of center commentator in the UK.
Very nice.
By distance.
Okay.
Is he online?
Is that the...
Yeah, he's on YouTube a lot.
He's got an honorary doctorate.
from URCS or whatever it's called recently, wherever Louise Perry went.
And he debated Daniel Priestley and he talks a lot about economic inequality, lots and lots and lots.
Well, I apologize to Gary for not knowing who you want.
I think that I highly advised that he sort of track him.
I think he's very, very worth sort of putting a GPS tracker on because...
Does it tally with what I'm saying?
Yeah, 100%.
I haven't, I mean, he's certainly left of centre, massively so.
I'm sure he's talked about it at some point,
but I really don't hear him talking about race,
about group identity,
certainly not about sexual orientation of fucking gender,
you know,
any of this stuff.
But he is hard in the pain on wealth tax,
millionaires and billionaires,
working people,
cost of living crisis,
housing,
like really fucking hard of it.
I mean,
that's not to say that the super rich can't be left wing.
I mean,
if you take someone like Tony Ben,
I think he was aristocratic,
virtually, and he was a major left-wing voice.
But what I'm saying is, though, the activists are predominantly overwhelmingly upper-middle
class fighting for their own interests, right?
I mean, we see this again and again, net zero, which is going to affect the poorest people,
worst of all, it's why the posher people, it's why whenever you see one of these activists
throwing orange paint over a work of art, and you hear them talk, they sound like a caricature.
They sound like someone from a PG-Woodhouse novel, and it's so.
strange here it's like
it's like I've dressed up and made it a
satirical character and I'm doing it
you know they have names like what's the name of
Hugo Ponsford was one of the names of the
Colston Hall that's a joke
that's a joke like but it's true
so you know when a
movement is so dominated by the upper middle
classes by the by the privileged
and they're lecturing you about privilege
I mean for a start it's funny and it opens itself
up to start out it does sound like a sketch
that you would have written in your
right right i mean that's that's why people saying we're the underdogs when every major
billion dollar corporation is behind you when megan markle and the and an actual prince is
behind you you know when when academia is behind you when the when the government is behind you this
is you're not oppressed like these people are the establishment um but what a ruse eh you can be
privileged rich establishment still call yourself the underdog and still have a cause isn't that kind of
interesting.
So these are not genuine socialists, are they?
They're not relinquishing their power.
And we saw the same with the Brexit.
You know, all of a sudden, Brexit, it was the same thing.
You know, we had people claiming to be on the left,
cheerleading for an international trading bloc that has capitalism baked into the heart
of its constitution.
That is run predominantly by right-wing politicians, Thatcherites.
Right?
By, you know, by people like Juncker and, you know, Donald Tusk.
I mean, what's going, this is not, why are you cheerleading for that person?
I thought you were left wing, weren't you?
Because it was never about the EU.
Like, the EU has always, left wingers have always opposed the EU.
You know, I think the Labour manifest of early 80s, 82, explicitly said, we're coming out of the EEC.
Like Tony Ben, Jeremy Corbyn, who's been campaigning to get out for years and then pretended
he didn't, as if he voted to remain.
There's no chance.
You know, left wingers understood and always understood that the EU was.
a fundamentally right-wing body. How does
environmentalism fold
into the woke movement? Well,
because I think what happens with the woke
movement is that because it's an ideology,
it's an ill thought through
ideology, and it's more about
displaying fealty
to a set of causes that you don't need
to know all that much about.
This is why
if you were someone I didn't know
and you said a woke thing in support of
say Black Lives Matter or queers for
Palestine or something else,
I would be able to tell you your opinions on every single subject under the sun.
I've never been proven wrong on that, by the way.
You know, you don't get those disagreements.
You don't get, like, it's a set of rules.
It's a script.
And that's why Greta Thunberg can pivot from environmental activism into pro-Palestine activism.
It's easy for her.
Just put on that, what's it called?
A kaffir?
No, that's the drink, isn't it?
I'd like that.
It's a great drink.
I've only recently discovered it.
It's wonderful.
Yeah.
the best way to get, uh, what is it, what's that stuff, um, uh, like, uh, cultured,
like probiotic, yeah, yeah, yeah, it's good for you. I mean, I don't know what it's doing in there.
It's better than sauerkraut, which was the other alternative. Isn't that just cabbage?
But it's, yeah, it's pickled. I don't want that. I don't want that. You don't want to be swigging
that in the morning. No, no, I want a, I want a nice tasty yogurt that says that it's good for me.
It has the illusion of, it's creamy, isn't it? Yeah. But it's not really that bad for you.
And this is what she's been wearing. She's been wearing.
dousing herself
All over herself.
Personally, I would support
Greta Thumburg
if she came out doused in
Kefeyer.
I would absolutely support her.
I think she needs to be more
performative and theatrical.
Absolutely.
Although I liked her taking a little
flotilla to the border.
Rory Sutherland was sat there
a couple of months ago
and he was explaining to me
just this wonderful, in his Rory way,
wonderful idea that people
look at a guy in a helicopter
and think that that's somebody
who's really rich.
But they don't understand that that is a person who, yes, is cash rich, but is evidently time poor because he needs to get somewhere fast.
Yeah, yeah.
He said, what you really need is somebody who is using a dirigible because that shows that they are both cash rich and time rich, because the pace that they're going to get anywhere in a hot air blimp or a hot air balloon would be even richer because you don't.
even get to choose where you go. It's like, where are you going to go? Wherever the wind takes me.
Now, that is real wealth. Right. Time, time rich, so time rich that I might not even arrive.
What was Greta Thumburg's vehicle? Flotilla. It was a flotilla, wasn't it? Yeah.
Wasn't a speedboat? Exactly. So that actually is a type of privilege in a way. Yeah, and she was
Instagramming the hell out of it, and she was there with the Onion Knight from Game of Thrones.
He was there. You know, the act who plays the Onion Knight. He was on the same boat. So it was a bit
a celebrity hangout he was he was playing a jordy in game of thrones was he had a bit of a jordy accent did he
yeah which is i can't remember suspicious of him everson you should i mean it's a dodgy place newcastle
environmentalism well you know it's just one of that i mean it's it's one of those look hey uh you know
maybe they maybe environmentalists have a case right my point is it actually doesn't matter about the
the details of the belief it's one of the approved beliefs within the intersectional uh you know it's it's
It's the hydra.
The woke hydra, if you imagine a beast with many heads, there's a queer theory head,
genderist head, there's a race, a BLM head, there's an environmental head, you know,
and they're all connected to the same intersectional beast.
If you imagine this creature, you know, and if you lop off a head, the head grows back.
I think in the original myth, the two heads.
So one, yeah, let's not take the analogy too far.
But what I would say is, yeah, I mean, that's the, I mean, I mistrust any ideology.
I mistrust anyone.
who doesn't think for themselves on individual issues,
but we'll consult a chart or a book or a set of rules
because it means you're not really thinking for yourself.
It's the hardest, right?
Someone explain this to me,
someone who knows a lot more about this than me,
is that there's a thing called the Cognitive Miser model
and that we instinctively and evolutionarily
always opt for the easiest solution
or the thing that's easier to understand.
And there might, look, I'm that's secondhand.
But that makes sense, doesn't it?
because thinking is one of the hardest things.
It's so hard to, you know, when you read something and you think,
oh, that's making me think in a different way.
A lot of people just throw the book away at that point.
But what we should be cultural, and this is why in my book I go on about the chapter on education.
Because we should be instilling this idea that that's the best thing.
Like when you, to challenge your certainties, you know,
I just saw a tweet before I came in to see you about a university professor saying,
one of my students is telling me that Queen Elizabeth I first was trans.
and the slightest gentlest pushback, saying, what's your evidence for that, could result in a complaint to HR, so I'm scared to do so.
But that's an example, a young person who knows nothing about the world, because none of us do when we're 18, telling an academic who studied history that Queen Elizabeth First was trans, with not a shred of evidence, and a slight pushback will throw their whole world into some sort of tailsting.
The correction mechanism isn't there anymore.
What is?
Queen Elizabeth First was not trans, by.
Okay.
That for sure.
Okay.
Cool.
You don't know how she identifies.
I can tell you, it wasn't they then pronouns.
A quick aside, using the internet without a VPN today is like leaving your front door wide open
and hoping that no one walks in.
Websites, apps and data brokers are constantly collecting your personal information,
what you search, what you watch, what you buy, where you are.
It all gets tracked.
And Surfshark protects you from that.
It encrypts your internet connection so your activity stays private, even on sketchy public
Wi-Fi at airports, cafes or hotels.
And it lets you change your virtual location.
with a single click. Their clean web feature also blocks ads, trackers and malware before they
even load, so you stay safer and your browsing is smoother. You can run Surfshark on every
device that you own, unlimited installs on one account. And right now, you can get four
extra months of Surfshark for free by going to the link in the description below or heading
to Surfshark.com slash Modern Wisdom and using a code Modern Wisdom at checkout. That's
surfshark.com slash modern wisdom and modern wisdom a checkout.
I am interested in what's happening with the gays.
Are you?
You're coming over to our side?
Not yet.
Okay.
Well, just no.
Although the internet has had its rumors for a while.
This is a funny one.
So Spotify miscaptioned a sentence that I said on Rogan a year and a half ago.
And I said, so me and my housemate, sometimes on an afternoon, we watch videos of motorcross.
And it's captioned it.
use AI and try to you do it in context.
And housemate's a very British term.
Do people not use that in America?
It seems not like roommate would be the equivalent.
Housemate, no.
So it transcribed it as husband.
He said, me and my husband watch motocross on a Saturday afternoon.
And I got the number of screenshots that went around of C, I knew he was always, knew he was
batting for the other side.
Here it is, here's a irrefutable proof.
I'm like, first off, if it was.
was irrefutable proof. I haven't exactly been hiding it very well by saying it on the biggest
podcast in the world. Secondly, I was watching motocross. That's a least gay thing that we can
think of. Anyway, what's happening with woke homophobia in the gays? Well, as you know,
as a chapter in my book entitled woke homophobia. So thank you for teeing that up. What I would
say is what's happening is that the genderist movement has been embraced among a lot of gay people
because they've brought into this idea
that there is such a thing
as the LGBTIQIA plus community.
The problem with that is after the first three letters,
you have people who are, whose ideology
is antagonistic to gay rights.
It's the opposite.
It's like trying to shoehorn
two opposing phenomena into the one thing.
The premise of gay rights has always been
that there are a minority in any given population
who are innately attracted to their own sex.
If you come along and say
biological sex isn't a thing,
thing, and that if you are excluding from your dating pool, people of your own, people of the
opposite sex, who happen to identify into your sex, then you are, in fact, a bigot. That is, I mean,
let me give an example, Grindr. I don't know if you're familiar with Grindr. Not, this is a test.
Not intimately. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean, well, me and my husband. Your husband knows by
Grindr. Yeah, yeah, exactly. Well, you know, this is a gay hookup app. You're not allowed to filter out
women who identify as men on that app, even though the people on the app are there for sex.
I'm not on the app, by the way. I should just emphasize that. I imagine Grindr to me seems like
sort of the German engineering of the dating apps. There's no, there can't be much messing about
on there. No, of course. Right. But this seems to really get in the way. This seems antithetical to the
philosophy, the underlying principle of Grindr,
quite.
Again, I must, I need to reiterate that I'm not intimately familiar with this.
The Lady Doth protests.
Whatever, right.
No, no, of course.
Okay.
Yeah, you're right.
On the website, on Grindr's website, it actually says, we are not allowing you,
you can filter for all sorts of preferences.
Height, weight, whatever, age.
We're not going to allow you to filter out women who identify as men because that's
bigoted.
That makes you a bigot.
It says it in black and white.
What that is, is a gay hookup site, shaming gay men for
being gay because sexuality is discriminatory.
If men want to sleep with men, it's not because they're bigots, it's because they're gay.
Now, this shouldn't have to be spelled out.
Again, it comes back to that point why are we spending our time explaining the obvious.
So what you have is the genderist movement is an anti-gay movement, quite fundamentally,
not just because it shames lesbians for not being attracted to people with penises, not because
it shames gay men for not being attracted to people with vaginas, although that's a big part of
it.
There's also the fact that it seeks the mutilation, sterilization, and castration of gay youth,
which I think is a pretty extreme anti-gay position.
You saw LGBT Alliance, which is the only gay rights organization of any worth in the UK,
had a conference last year where a group of genderist activists released cockroaches and insects and locusts,
a plague into the auditorium.
Right.
That is the sort of thing neo-Nazis would have done, isn't it?
back in the day at a gay conference, a gay rights conference, it is by definition an anti-gay
movement, and that can't be emphasized enough. And this is why a lot of gay people hate the
progress pride flag and say it doesn't represent them. When they see that progress pride flag,
they see it as a homophobic flag, a flag that is against their interests. And that's why it's
not acceptable for the mayor of London, for instance, to festoon the city with a flag that basically
he says gay people aren't welcome here, just because he doesn't understand the implications of
how divisive that flag is. Now, this is something that's not understood. In American, particularly,
support for gay marriage is going down. You see a lot of people blaming gay people for the
excesses of woke genderists who want to twerk in front of three-year-olds or have sexualized
drag queen performances for kids. But that is not the gay rights people. Those are the people
who are working against gay rights quite explicitly. So it's weird to blame the victims of this,
for perpetrating it. It's a complete misunderstanding of the situation. And it's very
dangerous. And that's why gay people really have to overtly and vocally reject the forced
teeming with the QIA plus stuff.
There isn't a massive amount in common. There's nothing in common. The idea of sexual orientation
has nothing to do with gender identity. Gender identity is an esoteric,
pseudo-religious belief system, which revolves around the idea of a soul, a mismatch between
soul and body. Sexual orientation is who you're attracted to. The two have actually nothing in
common. It's like force-teaming vegans with carnivores. It doesn't make sense. So that's why
more and more people are rejecting it. And that message, I think, has to be screamed loud and clear
because a lot of people, particularly on the right, have come to the view that it's all the same thing.
And part of the problem is that a lot of gay people have, again, been gold, hoodwinked into the
Surely, I mean, look, as far as I'm aware from my exclusively outside of the tent position,
yes.
When it comes to the meat and potatoes of what's going on with the gay community,
the genitals are a really big part of that.
Like, that's like a, you know, like a core tenant of what's going on there.
Certainly an aspect.
Yeah, yeah.
this needs to come into cut you made the point earlier on as sort of a luxury beliefs type position
right that people that live in gated communities can say defund the police because they're
not the ones that have to deal with in city crime etc seems to me rather short-sighted
if people in the gs and the ls and the bs that the gs and the ls i think are a little suspicious
of anyway but that's a separate some are
They are going to get sort of shot in the foot, or at least shot in the algorithm on Grindr at some point, by permitting this sort of encroachment, territory encroachment thing, this conflation of sexual orientation with gender identity, with whatever the sort of next thing is.
And that is, given how important the genitals are, that is a price.
You're really putting you money where your mouth is with that.
Is no one realized that that's like a potential?
Well, they have because, you know, your sexual orientation doesn't lie.
You know what you find attractive.
And if your ideology puts you in a position where you're saying,
I'm going to have sex with someone I do not desire just to make my point.
I mean, wow, that's tough.
That's not an easy thing to do.
So, you know, you have a situation now where lesbians in all.
Australia, it's illegal for them to gather without men present who want to be there, men who
identifies women, because it's considered discriminatory to exclude those individuals. That is
an anti-gay law, quite palpably. You have lesbian dating sites are now replete with people
with penises and beards. But of course, lesbians... I didn't realize I was a lesbian, I'd have been
my whole life. There you are. Yeah. There you are. See how easy it is? You see, and
you think it's a joke, but you could go on a lesbian dating app.
And this is actually more sinister.
Something else has happened where on Grindr, for instance,
because there's a lot of young women on there who have been told the lie
that if they have surgery and take hormones,
gay men will find them attractive.
They don't.
And there are now straight men going on Grindr to pick up women who think they're men
because it's an easy target, right?
Now, that's really expensive.
Now, look, that's really exploitative, isn't it, because it's...
Jesus Christ.
I know, these are vulnerable people, by the way.
These are people who genuinely think they've changed sex.
Oh, my God.
And they haven't.
Okay.
And you see those awful leaked screenshots of people sort of complaining.
Like, why does no one find me attractive?
You know, I'm trying to pick up men.
Why does that?
Because you're a woman.
And you're going to gay bars.
I had a message from a friend who was in a sex club in Berlin saying there's, there's, like,
women in here who've had their breasts removed who think they're men.
And, you know, I hate to put it crude.
the corner. I hate to put it crudely. It's a bono killer. Like no one in that, no one in that sex
club wants to have sex anymore because they don't find women attractive. It's not that they
hate women or the same reason for lesbian. Lesbians, lesbians don't, they're not misandrous because
they don't want to sleep with someone with the penis. It's they're lesbians. This shouldn't
be, it's not rocket science. And so this is a, you know, this kind of shaming of gay people for
being gay, isn't that weird that that's now coming from people who think they're on the left
and progressive.
Well, that was, you know, it still sticks in my mind.
I think it might be in our first ever episode where you told me about this story of
the father of a young boy who was pretty effeminate and had decided that he was a girl
and that had been affirmed, I don't think chemically yet, but he was going to begin to
identify as this girl.
And they'd asked the father sort of how he felt about it and he said something to the
effect of, I'm just so glad that I don't need to see my little boy mincing around the garden anymore.
Yeah, it was in a documentary called Trans Kids Who Knows Best, I think it was Channel 4.
Sort of rehabilitated homophobia thing.
The insiders and whistleblowers at the Tavistock Pediatric Gender Clinic said that homophobia was endemic among parents
and even among some members of staff, some clinicians.
What do you think that says about human nature that we, parents are somehow more accepting of their son or daughter
identifying as a different gender
than they are of their son or daughter
being attracted to people of the same sex.
Well, two things.
I would say it's the mentality of the Iranian regime
because, of course, in Iran, they'll kill you for being gay,
but they'll fund you if you want to get a sex change
so that you're no longer gay.
They would rather have the facsimile of heterosexuality
rather than homosexuality, right?
it's rampant anti-gay homophobia isn't it it's it's it's extreme but I'm not surprised by it I think
I tell you why I mean like of all the kind of discriminatory ideas homophobia I kind of get the most
and the reason for that is the sex act is so powerful is so is so potent and there is a
disgust response with sexual activity that you don't that you don't like right yeah
And that doesn't mean that you are, you hate people for their different inclinations,
but you yourself have a disgust response, right?
So I remember seeing a video of Richard Dawkins looking at gay pornography of two elderly men having sex.
And he's saying, oh, no, I don't like that, etc.
You know, but that doesn't mean he hates gay men who want to have sex who are in their 80s or whatever.
It's just, and good on them if they're still doing it in their 80s, by the way.
But he's saying, his response is discussed.
Now, that's why I think homophobia will never go away
because I think it's an instinctive response for a lot of people.
And I think a lot of parents...
I don't want that, therefore it makes me feel like this.
It's a question there.
Is that homophobia?
Well, the word is massively misused.
I don't like it really because the word implies something pathological, doesn't it?
Like you have a fear.
Conscious prejudice.
Yeah, like I don't think it...
In a lot of cases, it's just...
Like saying I'm like cockroachophobic.
Right.
Right, not to make the comparison.
But then, on the other hand, words are fluid.
The phrase arachnophobia is, you know, you're scared of spiders.
Sometimes it's a disgust response to spiders.
It's a word that, you know, we shouldn't be too literal-minded and say anything with
a phobia must mean fear, you know, because words evolve and all the rest of it.
But, yeah, there's something about, yeah, the word is unsatisfactory.
Because, for instance, some people who just, for instance, don't agree with gay marriage
are branded as homophobic.
Well, that's not fear or hatred.
often it's just religious conviction
a different thing
often it comes from a good place
right so you know
a lot of my family probably are against that
I don't think they're evil bigots
so I would say
coming back to that
disgust response
because I think that is there
because I think there is a
resistance
to the fact that a minority
of humankind will always
be attracted to their own sex
same in the animal kingdom of course
that
the inability to accept that
reality creates hostility
and in that sense
that kind of anti-gay, fierce anti-gay sentiment
that wants to wipe out an element of reality
I don't mean genocidly
I mean just pretend it doesn't exist
that's similar to the woke mentality
a denial of reality
because it makes you uncomfortable
but I think it's always going to be there
and I suspect that is what's going on
I mean, that's why so many parents were observed to have a problem with the idea of a gay kid at the Tavistock.
That's why members of staff at the Tavistock had that dark joke where they would say,
soon there will be no gay people left.
That was a joke among the staff.
Because they knew what they would do.
They knew that all these boys that were suddenly turning up were camp gay boys.
They were going to grow up gay.
A lot of the girls just butch and would probably grow up to be gay themselves.
Or not.
Or maybe not, right?
But we do know from Hannah Barnes' book on the subject
that between 80 and 90%
80 and 90% of the adolescents referred to the Taverstock
were same-sex attracted.
So that's a hell of a lot.
This feels like a gay conversion clinic
on the NHS, borrowing the playbook of Iran,
on the NHS.
You may as well get some Mueller from Tehran to run the NHS.
What the hell's going on?
I want to talk about sort of what's happening in the UK
specifically with
well this is a question
for you is the new
woke campaign in the
UK about immigrants
now is that the new tip of the
spear for this sort of stuff or
how do you think it sort of slots into your
existing worldview of this kind of
it's one of the many ideas the idea that
refugees can do
no harm that
immigrants are saintly are sanctified
and one of the things that the woke
does is it sets up a an
oppression hierarchy, and it makes excuses for, I mean, it doesn't know what to do, does it,
with Islamist terrorism, for instance, because Islam is so high on their oppression hierarchy,
doesn't really know how to handle that, does it? It doesn't handle it particularly well.
It doesn't recognize that there's a problem, and it certainly doesn't recognize a problem
when there's a conflict of their own hierarchy, you know, when, for instance, Trevor Phillips'
research for Channel 4 found that a majority of UK Muslims, not extremists, Muslims,
felt that homosexuality ought to be illegal.
I think it was 52%.
Well, that's difficult for them, isn't it?
Because they're pro-Islam and can't criticise Islam, but they're also pro-gay.
What do you do?
You set up queers for Palestine.
You know, it's that kind of cognitive dissonance, absolutely insane.
The immigration issue, of course, is a very emotive one.
And it's difficult, therefore, to have these conversations about it.
There is a sense in which there is a conviction
among some woke activists
that the idea of borders
is not necessary
there's also a kind of utopian belief
that everyone around the world wants the same thing
every culture wants freedom
every culture wants democracy
every culture is innately good
but there are some cultures that are worse than others
there are some cultures that believe that
young girls should be mutilated
genetically mutilated for their own good
There are some cultures that believe women are less important than men.
There are some cultures that believe that gay people ought to be killed, right?
I have no qualms whatsoever about saying that that is a morally inferior culture
to one that says girls shouldn't be mutilated, for instance.
And I think there's been a real problem and misunderstanding of liberalism.
I talk about liberalism in my book a lot.
Because a lot of people blame liberals for this, for the mess that we're in.
And a lot of people will say that the liberal view is that you can kind of air-drock
in anyone from any culture to any other culture and they all want freedom and they all want
democracy. That's not what liberals believe. That's what you would call, I suppose, liberal
universalism. The idea that you don't need borders, you don't need the nation state.
Actually, what liberalism is about and liberalism can only come about is if it is cultivated
over many years, over many generations, it's hard work sustaining a liberal society.
It requires the rule of law. It requires the development of a social
contract of agreed behavior. It requires tradition. It requires critical thinking. It requires
those parameters that are developed not through authoritarian means, but through consensus
over a long, long time. And that's why when you demolish all of that, you demolish liberalism.
It isn't right to say that the grooming gang scandal was because of liberals, because they were
too nice and tolerant. The grooming gang scandal was a failure to adhere to the principles of
liberalism because what it suddenly said is we should apply the law differently according to
your race. That's not a liberal position. That's the opposite. Similarly with woke,
wokeness is an anti-liberal movement. A lot of people will say it's liberal. It's not. It's the
opposite. If you are enforcing your ideology on someone else and mutilating kids and calling for
censorship, all of these things are a failure to be liberal, not an example of liberalism run wild.
weird one, isn't it? Because you often hear this. I mean, it would be like, it would be like
blaming the Institute of Marriage for divorce. People failing
and rejecting liberalism, that's not the fault of liberalism. It doesn't really make sense,
but this is a huge, huge misunderstanding. I think a lot of the time when people are criticizing
liberalism, they're really criticising, criticizing liberal universalism, and it's not the same
thing. How do people square this circle between pro-Islam and pro-gay?
A rejection of reality. That's the only way you can do it. So is it a marriage of
tenuous convenience between the two of them? How are you supposed to be queers for Palestine?
Like what the fuck are? Well, look, there are gay Muslims that always have been. And those are
the ones who, they're the people who really lose out by this, this woke insistence that there's
no problem within that belief system against gay people. I mean, that's insane. It's the same
of, it's the same as those who defend Sharia courts in the UK. I mean, there's 85, I think,
Sharia courts in the UK, a parallel system of law effectively. I mean, I know they say it has no
legal clout, but the truth is that if you're a woman going to a Sharia court, you have to defer to
men and the way in which Sharia values women, which is not all that much. That's a reality. That's why
Muslim feminists are continually campaigning against Sharia courts in the UK, right? What you're
saying, if you're a privileged white Western, just agreeing with Sharia courts out of some kind
of intersectional belief that it's all happy, clapping and wonderful, you're basically saying
that Muslim women don't count. You care about women and women's rights, but just not Muslim women,
That's what you're saying.
And similarly with the gay rights issue,
you have to accept that there is a conflict and there is a problem.
The statistics don't lie.
The prevalence of anti-gay sentiment
and the belief that homosexuality ought to be criminalized
within the mainstream Muslim population is huge.
That's a problem to be tackled.
Is this not going to come into conflict in reality at some point?
Well, already has.
That's why you've seen queers for Palestine, that entire thing.
But that's not.
That's trying to merge,
trying and failing to merge two things.
Why don't they put their money where their mouth is?
Why don't they go to Gaza and Saudi Arabia
and set up at their Pride March?
Why don't they just do it?
And then you...
How they get on.
And then you'll test it.
And that's, you know,
then you'll find out how,
what a good idea that is.
You mentioned authoritarianism
is the primary concern
that you've got in all of its different manifestations.
our recent country of exit for both of us now. Congratulations.
For moving to America?
Yes, correct.
I got out.
Yeah.
Well, look, I have been critical of lots of things, and this is both bottom up and top down.
I really didn't like what I saw when the riots happened after some of those stabbings and stuff.
I saw people behaving in a way that reminded me of what it was like to go to school.
Which riots were these?
There was a bunch in Middlesbrough.
It was after that dance class, was it the guy?
The Southport killing.
Yes, that was it.
Of the girls at the Taylor Swift yoga dance class.
Taylor Swift yoga dance class.
It was a Taylor Swift themed yoga dance class.
And the kids, very young kids were murdered.
And yes, there was, okay, there were riots.
But there were riots.
There were riots in Middlesbrough.
And I know these streets.
It's where me and my friends would hang out.
We would have driven down.
and I was I've been critical I've been critical of the UK but that's not for me to sort of try and pull
the ladder up after I've managed to get out on the last chopper out of Saigon so to speak
more so just like I really tried while it was in the UK I employed between sort of three and four
thousand 18 to 25 year olds over the space of a 15 year career like I personally coached
hundreds and hundreds of young people on becoming better at business and
understanding the world around them. And largely most of that was just fucking personal stuff.
So you and your new girlfriend that you've been with for three weeks, yeah, stuff's hard.
Like there's a bit of advice or whatever it might be. Really, really, really trying to do that.
And those, that pocket of people went on to really do sometimes great stuff. And hopefully I
contributed to their life. But I did feel a little despondent. I'm like, I made like a pretty
big fucking dent in the populace of one city. And the tall poppy syndrome, the low standard,
They're like mutual binding together over how shit things are.
Like some of these things are beautiful, self-deprecating sanguine looks at sort of British life.
Yeah. But when it starts to sort of live inside of you and peer out through your eyes, it can become a little exhausting, which is why a lot of the people, I think, entrepreneurs tend to leave the UK beyond tax and weather and blah, blah, quality of life and all the rest of the stuff.
They leave because the culture doesn't feel to be so positive to some.
So I had my issues.
I am now at a stage very much where I'm trying to, from here, look at, okay, what actually
sort of can be done and what are the big issues.
But this is very, I'm sort of like trying to look over the fence back into a house that I used to live in.
Yeah, yeah.
Your concern is authoritarianism.
Yeah.
How authoritarian is the UK in your perspective right now?
Well, it's not a tyranny.
it's not a despotism, it's not fascist,
but it is deeply authoritarian, yes.
We have an authoritarian government.
We have a Labour government
that is ramping up censorship,
but they inherited a lot of it
from the previous Conservative government.
This is my point.
The cultural for me has never been about left or right.
The worst excesses of the woke movement
came about under Tory rule,
under conservative rule, under the right wing.
Labour have picked up the baton and run with it
When it comes to the online safety bill, for instance,
that was a Tory measure,
which Labor have taken and just increased it and made it worse.
Labor have been trying to introduce an official definition of Islamophobia,
which makes no sense because the draft definition is that it's a form of racism
against Muslimness or perceived Muslimness.
Well, Islam isn't a race.
So it's starting from a factually incorrect point.
Kiyah Stama believes in censorship.
He's a technocrat.
His instincts are authoritarian, and he will always double down on this.
It's very interesting when you see him in the White House with J.D. Vance and Donald Trump,
and he talks about that.
He's very proud of the history of free speech in the UK.
But, of course, he uses that word history.
It's not really there anymore.
There's a viral clip that's going viral this week about a woman.
Deborah Anderson, I think her name is, American citizen living in the UK,
police officer turns up at her door, and the footage is all there.
And she's saying, look, you can come in, but you better have a damn good reason.
And he says, I'm here because you posted something.
something on Facebook that someone found upsetting.
And she says, what is it? And no, she says, I don't need to know what it is.
She says, I can write what I want on Facebook. He says, well, what I want you to do is
apologize to that person. If you don't, you'll have to come down to the police station for an
interview. So that's a coercive, intimidatory. You know, we've seen the Times did a recent
Freedom of Information Request Report showing that 12,000 people a year are arrested in the UK
for things they say online, offensive things they say online. It's 30 a day. That's more than any
other country in the West, as far as I'm aware, or probably anywhere else in the world.
We have non-crime hate incidents, the police record. I think since non-crime hate incidents
were instituted in 2014, there's been over a quarter of a million. I've probably got some
against my name. All that is, is someone thinks you've said something offensive against their
protected characteristic. You phone the police. The police don't need to investigate. They don't need
evidence of hatred. They just record it against your name as a non-crime hate incident. And that
can show up in disclosure and barring service checks. If you are going for
a teaching job or something like that can actually affect your employment record.
It's effectively a way for someone with a grudge to fuck up your life.
And it's there.
By the way, the police shouldn't be auditing your thoughts and emotions anyway in a free society.
We've seen numerous viral videos of police turning up at someone's door.
There was that guy, Darren Brady, the veteran who, the army veteran who was arrested, put in handcuffs on video because he caused anxiety for posting a meme, which was complaining about the authoritarianism of the Pride movement, a view that I share.
by the way. So why am I in handcuffs? Well, maybe I should be.
The police, and as I've said, all of this is because the police
have been trained to believe that being offensive is an offence by law,
and it's their job to monitor speech. And that's because of the College of Policing.
College of policing introduced non-crime hate incidents by itself. The government
didn't tell them to do it. In fact, the government told them to stop doing it twice.
The Home Secretary, two different Home Secretary said, you can't do that.
your police, you're meant to be investigating crime, not non-crime.
I mean, that should be obvious, shouldn't it?
And by the way, they ignored them.
They're like, no, no, we're the police.
We want to investigate non-crime, right?
This would be like your doctor phoning up and saying, oh, I hear you're really healthy.
We need to talk about that.
It's absolutely insane.
And that's been going on since 2014.
Two Home Secretary say you have to stop it.
The High Court says it's not lawful.
The High Court says this is plainly an interference with freedom of expression
and the College of Policing, because they're a quango with no accountability, ignore them.
And then the head of the College of Policing says, well, maybe the problem is that we need to change the name.
Let's not call it non-crime haters, let's call it something else, but keep it, as if a rebranding can sort this out.
This is what I mean by activists.
They don't care about the law because they've created their own framework for morality and law.
That's why since the Supreme Court judgment, saying that you have to provide single-sex, or if you do provide,
If you do claim you're providing single-sex spaces, they have to be single-sex.
You can't let men who identify as women into women's spaces.
That's the law, and it's always been the law.
And the Supreme Court has clarified that.
You still have the Scottish government ignoring it.
The Scottish government.
You've still got various bodies and charities and institutions and schools saying,
we are going to break the law.
We've had them posting online saying, we're going to break the law.
We're going to do it.
Good luck, by the way.
They've posted it online for all to see.
The receipts are there.
So thanks for that.
When those go to court, they'll lose.
quite obviously.
So to come back to your question,
which I think was about,
I went off on one then.
Authoritarianism.
Yeah, how authoritarian is it?
Very.
And you know,
you've had a vet Cooper who's,
you know,
in the Labour government saying that she wants to
ramp up non-crime hate incidents.
They're not interested.
No one in the Labour government is trying to,
or has even suggested repealing hate speech laws.
Why do we have hate speech laws?
It doesn't make any sense.
They've got,
they're basically codified in three different acts.
The Public Order Act, the Communications Act, and the Malicious Communications Act.
And these include things like causing anxiety or distress.
Or in the case of the Communications Act, writing something that is grossly offensive.
That's the actual phrase that's used, grossly offensive.
What does that mean?
When the Irish government recently tried to put through their hate speech bill, do you know how they defined hatred?
They said, and I quote, hatred means hatred of,
any protected characteristics. It actually used the phrase, hatred means hatred. As you know,
any definition that is circular is not an authentic definition and is wide open to exploitation because
you can say anything is hatred then. Well, I've decided that criticism of the government is hatred,
and now we've got on the statute books the ability to lock you up for it. Don't they know anything
about history? Don't they know how this works? It's a circular definition that is absolutely pointless.
There is no agreed definition of what hatred means anyway. And by the way, hatred is a human
emotion that is hardwired over many, many centuries of millennia of human evolution.
You're not going to wipe out a human emotion with the stroke of a pen.
And the people who think they can do that are tyrants.
Well, that's strong.
Authoritarians.
Let's go with authoritarian.
And I think it's irredeemable because I think Kirstama's, I think, is baked into his DNA
to be elitist and authoritarian to believe that he knows best and to believe that he should
control the thoughts and speech of the public.
we get rid of him, which we will, we are in a terrible state, we need to abolish the
College of Policing. We need to repeal all hate speech legislation. We need to incorporate
a sensible understanding of what incitement to violence means. At the moment, anyone who writes
something offensive is accused of incitement to violence. The case of Lucy Connolly is very
interesting. So this was a mother and childminder who had posted online in the
aftermath of those riots you mentioned after Southport, she was very distressed. She'd lost a child
herself because of NHS negligence. She's very sensitive to the death of children. And she posted
online something very reckless and stupid and very unpleasant, which was, I don't care if you burn down
those hotels with the migrants in. It was an expression not a call to do it, but an expression
of indifference if people did do it. She served over a year in prison. She was sentenced to 31 months,
served over a year. That tweet was deleted within hours. And it was,
She had no clout, no influence.
There was no possibility that that tweet could ever lead to violence, and it didn't.
But she still spent over a year in prison.
This week, an influencer after Charlie Kirk's murder in England, with over 200,000 followers, posted that it was a good thing that Charlie Kirk was murdered.
And she said, kill them all.
Right wing, right wing commentators, kill them all.
She used the phrase twice.
The police said, oh, there's nothing to investigate here.
Why?
What's the difference between those two?
What do you think?
Well, ideological slant.
That's it.
That's it.
We have a two-tier policing system in our country.
We absolutely do.
That's why women who are routinely bombarded with death and rape threats by trans activists,
those activists just don't get investigated.
It's fine.
You can have a photograph of two Scottish politicians in front of a placard at a protest that says decapitate turfs with a picture of a guillotine in case you didn't get it.
And they'll say there's nothing to see here.
We can't work out who that is.
So let's forget about that.
But a mother who writes a reckless tweet and deletes it almost immediately that would never have caused any violence and could not possibly have done so.
She has to spend over a year in prison.
Someone with 200,000 followers can say, kill them all, and they'll ignore that.
Now, I'm not saying she should be investigating, by the way.
I don't even think that should qualify as incitement to violence.
But what I would say is there's clearly a distinction between the way the police treat certain people.
Right, they will investigate women who misgender.
They will put you in a cell for using language that offends the trans community,
but they won't do it if you send a rape threat to a woman.
So there's a huge problem.
When it comes to incitement to violence, the America has it right.
America has a thing called the Brandenburg test,
which came about, I think it was in the late 1960s,
when the leader, KKK leader called Clarence Brandenberg,
was prosecuted for incitement to violence,
and that was overturned, I think, by the Supreme Court.
And the standard was, well, in order,
to incite violence, and this is now
in law in the US,
in order to fulfill the Brandenburg test
for incitement of violence,
it has to be,
the words have to be intended
to ferment violence,
likely to do so,
and that any potential violence
would have to be imminent.
So you're talking about the kind of scenario
where a demagogue is in front of thousands of followers,
riles up the crowd,
then points at someone and says,
kill him now, and they do.
That would be something that fulfills
the Brandenburg test for incisignment to violence.
A tweet by someone with no clout
whatsoever, deleted almost immediately, that didn't lead to any violence at all and was never
intended to. That comes nowhere near the bar to incitement violence, but she still spent
over a year in prison. I think Americans are horrified by the Lucy Connolly case. I think they
see that and think that can, they know that could never happen here. Well, there's an entire
subgenre niche of content on YouTube and lots and lots of streaming sites now, which is
American commentators watching the downfall of the UK.
Right.
Like it is...
It's so embarrassing, isn't it?
It is a significant...
It's probably the single biggest online cultural export that we are giving.
Is that right?
I'm almost sure.
If you were to look at hours, hours watched over the last six months to nine months of anything
that's coming out of the UK, it will...
Most of it will be American commentators doing reactions to protests, to those tours that people do where they say, I'm going to go and see the poorest town in Britain.
And it's, you know, some fucking seaside town that three quarters of the high street are boarded up and everybody's on fucking Trank or something.
And it's all of this, it's almost like, or reacting to a non-crime hate speech incidents and police turning up at people's doors and sort of looking at it with, I don't know, like kind of like seeing an elephant balancing on a ball in a circus or something.
Like, oh my God, look at that.
It is humiliating.
It's crazy.
Yeah, but you know why?
Because we're meant to be the home of free speech, right?
The Enlightenment.
We have the three Johns.
We have Milton and Locke and Mill.
We have this tradition of free speech.
The most eloquent defenders of free speech have been from the British Isles.
We've got the history of the Magna Carta, 1215.
The barons forced the king to be subject to the rule of law.
Freedom matters.
It's in our tapestry of our history.
The Bill of Rights of 1689 is it around then, you know, where parliamentary debate is protected.
We have English common law for God's sake.
We have free speech embedded in our history in such a way that we exported it to the Americans.
We gave it to the Yanks.
And now they're laughing at us because we've given it up.
Absolutely crazy.
But then I worry as well, there are some people on the, particularly on the left in America,
who are willfully pretending this isn't happening.
I mean, I wrote an article for The Washington Post,
where I outlined some of the more egregious examples of British people
being prosecuted and arrested for their speech.
And the comment section was just full, because the Washington Post readership are largely
like the Guardian kind of readership, very ideologically one-sided.
And their chief objections to the article was just that they didn't believe it.
They thought I was making it up.
And that's interesting because of all the publications I've written for and do write for,
the Washington Post fact checks absolutely every last thing.
I wrote an article about the worst novelist who ever lived,
and I quoted many, many things in it.
And they asked me to chase up every single quotation.
They were really, really rigorous, and I really respect them for it.
But it was fascinating that the comments for this article were saying,
it just isn't happening.
Well, it is happening.
the receipts are there, the evidence is that it's incontrovertible
that the UK is going down a very, very dark path
in terms of censorship and opposition to free speech.
I mean, that viral video I mentioned about Deborah Anderson,
she's an American citizen.
And there she is with a police officer, like some jumped-up school prefect saying,
you better go and apologize.
Otherwise, I'm going to take you to the police station.
My friend, Graham Linehan, arrested.
Tell me the story about what happened with Graham.
Well, Graham and I have been working on a sitcom.
We've been working with this company.
in America. I've set up a company called Friendly Fire Studios with Rob Schneider, who's an actor
comedian over here, done it in Arizona in Scottsdale. And we're having a great time. And I've,
it's great because I feel so creative again. I've spent so many long, exactly what we're talking
about earlier. Defensive. I've been commenting all the time. Now I'm creating. Now I'm creating.
I'm doing what I used to do, what I always used to do. And it's been great. And, um, and, you know,
Graham, he gets a flight back to the UK. And, um, and, you know, Graham, he gets a flight back to the UK. And,
you make a joke
I did I'm sure I joked him
in the days before about getting arrested
when he goes back to the UK
and then I'm with
Martin Martin Gawler who's a producer
I used to work with the GB News
who's now working with us at Friendly Fire Studios
and we're sitting together
and we start getting texts from Graham
messages from Graham I've been arrested
I'm in the hospital because of high blood pressure
and we're like this is absolutely crazy
what happened
was he flew back to Heathrow
he thought something was a miss
because when he checked in they said
oh we've got to move your seat
and he thought something was a miss
but anyway he landed
so he's the first to get out
police meet him five armed police
five police with guns
at the jet bridge from the plane
I think that's where it is yes
and he sits down
and they tell him that they're arresting him
for three tweets that he posted
earlier in the year
perhaps I should clarify
what the tweets were
one of them was an image of a trans rights protest
and he said something like
you can smell it from ear or something like that
something to do with the smell.
Not illegal, right? Not illegal.
Another one was he was talking about
women, you know, because since the Supreme Court ruling,
a lot of men who identifies women are still going into women's toilets.
And he's saying, he says, you know,
if a man is in your space and won't get out, make a fuss,
you know, call the police and if all else fails,
kick them in the balls.
And of course, that's a joke.
It's making the point that if you can kick someone in the balls,
they shouldn't be in a woman's toilet, right?
There's that joke element.
But it's also the kind of advice that every father gives his daughter, right?
Again, not incitement to violence.
Nowhere close to incitement to violence.
And I can't remember what the third one was.
It was something to do with it.
It was something even more innocuous than that.
That one, the punch them in the balls one,
was the most extreme, apparently.
But it's, and so,
Those three tweets ended up, he was in a cell, he was taken off, arrested.
One of the police officers or someone took his blood pressure,
realized it was dangerously high as it would be,
if you've just been apprehended by five men with guns.
Or if you've recently moved to America and started eating the standard American diet.
I think Graham's seen quite well, actually.
He's doing all right.
But, and so his blood pressure is into stroke risk territory.
Jesus Christ.
So they had to take him to the hospital.
and yeah and then of course the next day
you know we got these texts and we were like
contact Toby Young, contact the free speech union
this is absolutely crazy
free speech union did get involved
and as they always do thank God for what Toby's done by the way
I mean it's been a lifeline for so many people
he saved so many people from losing their jobs
the fact we even need a free speech union in the UK
is a sad indictment
and then great and then it's everywhere
it's all over the front cover of every paper
even in America everyone's talking
about it, the president's talking about it.
Nigel Farage is talking to Congress about it.
It's absolutely everywhere.
Again, this is the export.
Well, it's embarrassing, isn't it?
A comedy writer, the guy who created Father Ted is arrested for tweets.
Doesn't look good.
Even Kirstama has to weigh in say, actually, this is probably not a good use of police time.
It gets really funny, when Mark Rowley, who's the head of the senior police officer in the UK, says it's not our fault.
The police have to, because of the law, the police have to investigate all of this stuff.
Really?
well a woman's just said kill them all and you're not going to investigate that so clearly there's some discretion involved it's not true by the way he's wrong that's completely disingenuous and in fact baroness emma nicholson of winterbourne wrote a letter from the house of lords on the house of lord's letter paper it's great to read where she says maybe mr rowley should tell your police officers if they stop being stupid why don't they exercise some intelligent judgment because they do all the time because police officers all the time decide which allegations of crimes to investigate and which to dismissal
miss as frivolous. They do it all the time, including, by the way, burglaries. I can't be bothered
with that, because you're never going to get anywhere anyway. But no, a comedy writer who writes a
tweet, a bit of a spicy tweet. That joke that everybody in the UK is doing, which is saying,
ring 999 to say that there's somebody that's currently trying to rob my house.
They say, sorry, we can't get anyone over there. He says, oh, by the way, just misgendered me.
And immediately, they... Not a joke. It sounds like a joke, but it's actually true.
If you say to the police, you can perceive that the crime in place,
the crime being committed was motivated by hatred towards a protected characteristic.
They'll be over there in a heartbeat.
It's a good trick, by the way.
You should do it.
But just to get the police to do their fucking job.
So that, you know, and the problem here, of course, is the police have been weaponized
and have allowed themselves to be weaponized by intersectional activists to work on behalf of genderists.
How do you, again, square the circle of the UK, did you, under the US seem to roll back some stuff to do with,
gender identity or become definitive.
What, the UK, sorry?
The US did, didn't it?
Yes.
Well, there's been the various executive orders.
Right.
What about the UK?
Did they not say that to?
Yeah, the Supreme Court.
The UK.
UK Supreme Court has ruled that sex in the...
There's a Supreme Court in the UK.
Yes, it was instituted by Tony Blair.
Okay.
Shouldn't be there really.
Okay.
But thank God it has clarified the law on this point.
Right, but that seems to be...
Or is the Supreme Court outside of much of the sphere of influence of some of the
fuckery that's going on at the moment? Well, this is the point. The law works up until the point
where activists get involved. The judiciary is not immune to activist judges. Can you clarify
what the ruling was of the UK Supreme Court? Okay, so we've got a thing called the Equality Act,
which protects all sorts of protected characteristics, sex, race, et cetera, and also beliefs.
Now, for a long time, groups like Stonewall and activist groups have been.
going into corporations and charities and things
and saying, if someone wants to use a toilet
that aligns with their gender, you have to let them
by law because of the Equality Act
protection for gender reassignment,
which is one of the characteristics.
But that overrides the protection
for sex. And they're saying
that's the law. That was never the law.
Four women in Scotland,
which is a group of feminist campaigners,
it's really just three women who
just weren't having it. And they took on the
Scottish government because the Scottish government had
misinterpreted the law in this way.
And they won. The Supreme Court said to the Scottish government, you've got this wrong.
Sex in the Equality Act means biological sex.
Because activists were interpreting it as meaning gender identity.
It means sex.
Now, what would you do, though, if an activist judge had made that decision?
It would have been flipped.
How do we know this?
The former president of the Supreme Court was a woman called Baroness Hale.
And she said recently that she disagrees with the Supreme Court ruling.
she thinks they've got it wrong
and she's been talking to some doctors
who've told her that biological sex doesn't exist actually
that's an activist
now that's dangerous
the head of the Supreme Court
doesn't believe biological sex exists
because some doctors
who also you would think should know
what biological sex is also claim that it doesn't exist
this is the pernicious nature of the woke movement
is that it makes intelligent people in positions of power
say things that even a six-year-old could tell you wasn't true
now that's what's happening
I'm getting all head up on I
this drink
is this energy drink
you've given me
yeah good good
it's nice
is that the plan
to get me all hopped up
correct
and angry
yes
click bait
how dare you
I don't be used
in this way
well look
I think we can go back
to before that product
existed and see
that you've got the same
demeanor
whenever you get head up
no I know that's true
no I'm not blaming you
so my point here is
that seems like
okay
good flag planted in the ground
yes
is that not coming into contact
with reality
That's my point. People keep denying the law. The Scottish government, now people are having to take the Scottish government to court because it's ignoring or overruling what the Supreme Court says. And various other people are doing the same thing. That's what they do. They just ignore the law. If the law doesn't fit their ideology, they'll, you know, their ideology matters more than the law in the way that Islamism. Same thing. The ideology matters more than the law of the land. And that can't be the case in a liberal society, in a liberal democracy. So I'm afraid when it comes to these activists, it is going to have to be.
be law fair. Like, it is going to be the case that they're going to have to be challenged in
the courts and they will lose. It's just going to take a hell of a lot, a long time. When it
comes to genderism, it really matters. One of the interesting things about the Supreme Court
ruling is it really, really flagged up the significance for gay rights, that if you go along
with this genderist interpretation of the world, gay rights are obliterated. They correctly interpreted
the sort of second and third order consequences of this happening. Well, they were saying that, you know,
even if you have a gender recognition certificate
which creates the legal fiction
that you've changed sex. They were saying that doesn't mean
you've changed sex because
lesbians aren't attracted to a piece of paper.
So that's what that's
what that ruling has done. And that's
a relief. But as I say,
if you'd just been a few years out
and if Lady Hale had been in charge of the Supreme Court
it would have gone the other way.
Because judges are human beings, you're always going to get
activist judges. Knife edge stuff.
But you need some sort of, that's why
we need some sort of means of removing judges who are prioritizing activism and ideology over
the law. That's going to be hard because you also want a separation of the judiciary and the
executive. What do you make of the counter movement in the UK? So the Unite the Kingdom thing,
150,000 people trudging through. It was every unspeakable person from Twitter over the last
Katie Hopkins is there with Carl Benjamin and a Tommy Robinson cherry on.
top. It's very interesting, isn't it? It's a big march. And of course, you have, you know,
the marchers claiming there are many, many millions there and the police saying there are only
100,000 there or something. And of course, it's somewhere in the middle. You always have to
assume. But again, it's about narratives, isn't it? People presenting different narratives. Why not
just tell us the truth, the fuck's sake? All of those people being smeared as far right and
racist, usual thing. And of course, it's nowhere near true. I'm not saying there are any
racists there. If you were a racist, it would be good place to be. Sure, exactly. Tiny minority
there, of course. People with legitimate concerns who are sick of being smeared as far right
and racist. People who just doubled down, the media class that just doubles down on this
misrepresentation, which of course feeds the very beast they're trying to slay. I mean,
you're going to end up with more people going on the march next time because they are reacting.
They're protesting precisely that. The mischaracterization of legitimate concerns as far right
and racist. If you carry on doing it, the resentment will grow. It's the same with Brexit.
During the Brexit debates, the media class was smearing anyone who was considering voting Brexit as far right and racist.
And you know what?
If you're neither of those things and you're told that you are because you vote a certain way, what are you going to do in the ballot box?
You're going to be like, fuck you.
That's what swung at, I think.
I actually think the attempts to smear people in that way swung it the other way.
Cell phone.
And so you get the same thing, I think, with the Unite the Right or whatever it's called.
What was it called, by the way?
Unite the Kingdom.
United the Kingdom, whatever it's called.
I mean, and the smearing of those,
and it's very interesting because Trevor Phillips,
who went there to see it for himself,
and he delivered a monologue on Sky News,
saying they're just normal people.
This isn't a racist march.
There's a different races are there.
They close the march with a black gospel choir singing.
Like, it's just not what you think it is.
And I think this is something,
this is going to be the big challenge going forward,
is this, the threat of narrative.
the idea that truth is secondary to the story that you tell.
And that is something that we are continually battling with,
that there are too many people, I think,
who are willing to misrepresent for the sake of their ideology.
They see it as a means to an end.
And that's true on the right and the left, I'm afraid to say.
And we have to just get back to the primacy of truth,
even truth that you don't want to acknowledge, right?
That's the thing.
And it's everywhere throughout the Woke movement, you know?
I mean, you might like to believe,
that you are neither male nor female, but you are either male or female. You can call yourself
non-binary, you can ask people to say they and them, doesn't change the fact that you are, as a matter of
fact, either male or female. And we have to, I think, stop indulging fantasy. We have to get back to
reality. And even if it's a reality you're uncomfortable with, you can be compassionate about someone
who's uncomfortable with the way the world is. But that doesn't mean that you reorganize the world to
appease the uneric, you know, make-believe world that someone else has concocted for
themselves. What do you think comes next? You've laid a relatively apocalyptic, bleak
picture. Have I? Yeah. I was trying to be positive. Well, okay. Maybe British positive. Let's go
American positive. Okay. But look, actually, it doesn't need to be that at all. I don't, I don't care.
I just want to know what you think, you know, we've explained this interesting arc over the last
couple of decades or so of kind of how we got here and how that's coming into contact with
reality and maybe it's running out of steam a little bit and perhaps it's going to be it's going
to go out not with a fizz but with a pretty fucking chaotic bang well as i say in the book the
argument is that you know this isn't the end of authoritarianism as woke is on the decline as it
certainly is and there's all sorts of evidence for that um something else will come and you know
one of the things I warn about in the book is the rise of authoritarianism on the right.
I mean, you can see it happening.
What are the best examples of that?
Well, you've seen examples of cancel culture from the right.
You've seen, of course, right-wing individuals who've been targeted for cancellation simply for expressing their opinions.
There's now a level of schadenfreude.
You know, when you see people on the left saying ill-advised and horrible things online,
why not phone their employ and get them fired because you know what you've been doing it to us you've been tracking the jimmy kimmel thing yes exactly this is a good example but but you know the jimmy kimmel thing is slightly more uh complicated insofar as that that decision i believe was made by abc the network to to access it's just been suspended doesn't he i think it's suspended without a return date yet and if you track it back it seems like the biggest distributor of
ABC to local areas around the U.S.
Yes.
Wants to merge with another company which requires FCC OK, and that's a Trump appointee.
And the story, the sort of lineage is Trump pressure to FCC, FCC pressure to this thing.
They have slid in and said, we're not going to air him anymore on these areas.
ABC said, oh, fuck, like we're just going to put the push on it.
Sounds like a business decision, doesn't it?
It does
It does sound like a business decision
In my opinion
What Jimmy Kimmel said wasn't
Beyond the Pale
I think that it was
Evidently a joke
And one of the two clips
There may be other clips
I haven't seen
But the two main ones
One of them was him
Mocking Trump
For being asked
How are you coping
In the aftermath of your friend
Charlie Kirk's death
And he said
I'm doing okay
I think
You'll see this group of trucks
That are coming over here
We're going to build
A ballroom in the White House
They've been trying to get it
For 150 years, it's going to be...
That's a joke.
He's making a joke about Trump.
Yes, and he's saying this is not how a grieving friend talks about...
Yeah, but you don't know what's going through Trump's head there.
Of course, but his joke is this is how a toddler talks about a dead goldfish.
And then his most recent one, at least the second one that I saw that I think was kind of the one that really did it, was...
He said, we don't know if this particular individual has got sort of mageleaning...
bona fides basically and the specific wording has been debated and it's like sufficiently vague and
all the rest of it and yes business decision and the schadenfreude and the righteous turn around like
we have dealt with it for long enough therefore but it just it's a difficult thing because what
you're asking people that are on the right and unhappy at what jimmy kemel said because he's
pointing the finger at somebody that's on their camp yeah what you're asking them to do is take the
high road in a way that people on the left haven't been prepared to do during lots of these
cancellations. There's a lot of complications with this particular case. So, firstly, I would need to
see why the decision was made. If someone from ABC has said this is because of government pressure
or pressure at the federal level, then we have a problem, the state intervening. They're saying it
wasn't that. They'll never say that. Well, okay. There's all sorts of reasons why my suspicion,
although I've got no proof of this is that
because the ratings have been declining so steeply
over the past few years,
they're using this opportunity to get rid of it.
Yeah, because he's not popular.
It's not working.
The ratings have been plummeting.
So it's like, it's an excuse to get rid of him.
Potentially, but I don't know, right?
I don't know.
There's the other issue.
I mean, the wording of the MAGA thing,
I mean, I watched it.
It seemed pretty clear to me he was saying
that the shooter was MAGA.
He says, people on the right
are just bending over backwards
to try and pretend that the shooter
wasn't MAGA. The phrasing, if you look at it, it looks pretty unequivocal that he's saying
the shooter. And that's false. That's factually wrong. It might be a mistake, an honest mistake,
but it's factually wrong. And you've got to remember, again, the added complication is it's a
satirical comedy show, but it's not just a satirical comedy show. It's also a political
commentary show. Now, I've hosted a show like that in the UK called Headliners, where we
blended commentary and politics with satire and humor. But that doesn't mean we could say factual
inaccuracies and say, oh, it's just satire, because we knew that the show was a balance
of the two, and we were still subject to off-com regulations. And if we said something that was
factually wrong, we would correct it and say, we apologize, this was incorrect. What I suspect,
so Kim Orch should be held to those standards as well. What I suspect should have happened is he
should have apologized and said, this was, this was factually wrong. I got this wrong. Not
apologize for a joke, because actually the MAGA section wasn't framed as a joke. It was
framed as a comment. I specifically checked that. But even so,
there's that weird gray area with comedy and commentary going on there.
That makes it more complicated.
The added complication is, to what extent did ABC actually respond to the pressure from the government?
If they did accept an instruction from the government to cancel it, that's cancel culture.
That's a problem.
But I don't think that is the case.
I think the buck stops with ABC.
And they could have said, no, we're keeping the show on.
They made this decision, I think.
But again, I don't know the full story.
Maybe there's more going on than I know about.
But the other point, I think, is that I will always de facto.
offend the right of a comedian to make a joke, even if I find it offensive or upsetting. I think
we have to retain that. But when it comes to cancer culture, there's a big misunderstanding
about cancel culture. Cancer culture is the disproportionate reaction, the bullying and targeting
of someone for an opinion by contacting their employers and trying to ruin their livelihood
and reputation for something they've said and something they believe. And that is something
that the left or people who claim to be on the left have become very adept at. But that does
not mean that if someone is fired for doing a bad job, that is cancel culture. Kimmel,
by all accounts, he's not doing a good job. That was a mistake that he shouldn't have made.
But ostensibly, the reason that he is being polled, the timing of that is...
But again, we don't know, right? So if it is the case that he has been fired, because the government
has put pressure on them to do so for political reasons, that's cancel culture. That should be resisted.
If he has been fired by ABC, because they've been wanting to get rid of him for ages, they don't
think he's very good and he's not very good at his job. That's not
cancel culture. But the
reason why I'm hesitant on this particular case
is there are so many complications and I don't
know the full facts. So I can't make a call
on it. But for instance, let's give
another example. So if someone makes
a joke about Charlie Kirk's horrific death,
some idiot online
working minimum wage
in Walmart or something like that,
should they be fired? Contact? No, I don't think they should.
I think it's unpleasant, grotesque.
I think, you know,
I would describe it as evil to cheer on someone
death. But I don't think someone should have their life ruined because of a stupid comment
online. What if you're a health worker? What if you work for a hospital and you say people
with your, who have different political views and you ought to be killed? Well, I think you've
disqualified yourself from your job. Let's say the example of the president, the president-elect
of Oxford Union, of the Oxford Union, the most famous debating society in the world who
gloated about Charlie Kirk's death, even though he debated him in person months before.
and he gloated about it online, he mocked it, he thought it was funny.
Now, if you're going to be the head of an institution which is devoted, has free speech at the heart of its charter,
you've just disqualified yourself in the role.
It is untenable for you to run that institution.
What's happened to that guy?
Oh, he's doubled down and said he's staying and, you know, there's also a clip circulating of him saying,
his political opponent should be taken out by any means necessary.
All of this stuff, here's what I say about that.
He is entitled to those views, and he's entitled to express those views.
That doesn't mean he's qualified to run the Oxford Union.
This is so weird to me that people think that failing to fulfill basic job requirements
and being fired for it is council culture.
When I was a teacher, if I'd have looked at the national curriculum,
what I've signed up voluntarily, contractually obliged to teach,
if I'd say, screw that, I'm going to stand in my classroom and swear at the kids,
and say your parents are all prostitutes
and let's not talk about English literature
I just want to talk about
hens or something
I don't know
and then they called me and said
we're going to fire you because you're not doing your job
I can't then scream free speech
this is my free speech
you'd be an idiot
so I think when it comes to cancer culture
you have to understand
that it depends on
the position that the person is in
part of your job implicitly when you sign up
to be a doctor is not to go online and say that you want people to die, right? So that's not
that, of course you should be fired. What are you talking about? You can't, you, you've made your own
position untenable. Really, the president of the oxygen union should resign. But this is a man with no
clearly no moral compass, no integrity. So of course he won't. But if he does get kicked out,
I won't consider that a free speech issue. But if, you know, the like the woman who was, who after
Trump's, after the assassination attempt on Trump, I think she was working in some supermarket
and she wrote, I'm annoyed the bullet missed or something. Why can't they aim better or something
like that? And then someone came in and filmed her and asked her about it. And that clip went viral
and she was fired. Now that's a woman on minimum wage, can't afford to lose a job, said something
stupid and horrible online. I don't think she should be fired. I think that's council culture.
So again, like, there's no set rules. You need to understand the nuances
of this? I've seen a trend online, mostly around the Charlie Kirk thing. I can't remember
the specific example, but it was some account that had tweeted some reprehensible thing about
why he deserved it or whatever, that everybody was condemning, except for the few top comments that
were part of that same ecosystem. And one of the first things that I've seen now is a trend
of people oh it was a it was a researcher at northumbria university a phd researcher
at northumbria university and it was lord miles you know lord miles this dark tourism guy he went and
he was captured by the taliban for nine months and came back having been given a gold mine by them
fucking fascinating yeah yeah yeah yeah he's like the sort of peak autist of of twitter anyway um
he he was the particular uh respondent in this example but i've seen it happen a bunch of
people go and do this sleuthing, where do they work, what do they do, who's important to
them thing, and then screenshot in the replies, their email, screenshoting the original tweet
to the people that employ them or do their an education institution, and then tag both the
original and the Twitter of the person of the group that they've just emailed to apply pressure
and to have sort of this outsized panopticon thing go on
where everybody else gets to see this unfold
and then all of the subsequent replies are in there.
And that feels like, it feels like cancel culture in action.
Some people may say,
well, this is a righteous calling to account
for people that are doing and saying things
and behaving in ways
that require some sort of recompense or revenge
or whatever it might be.
But on the other side of that,
I think the justified,
reason or the steelman case for doing the Lord Miles thing is that because there is rightly or
wrongly an interpretation of two-tier policing, they feel like this is not going to be
investigated unless some citizen journalism, citizen policing is done. And I am the guy to step
up to do it. So, and this unique framework like mousetrap situation where you do this thing
and you screenshot the thing and you put it in the replies to the original one and you, you know,
everybody watches this shit unfold. And then, you know, it obviously just creates pressure.
It creates pressure on the organizations to see that they are now in the blast radius of this
original thing that somebody said. And it all just unfolds. And that, I've seen it more. Obviously,
you know, still kind of in the aftershock of this event happening and this replete with
opportunities for this to happen. People to tweet stupid things. People to cite them. People to get
them fired, so on and so forth. But that is a, to me, a sort of worrying development because
it's just going to be a trend. It's like a type of artillery that both sides can use to fire at each
other. But that's it. It's exactly that. You have to be consistent on this because you can say
these comments are horrible and offensive and therefore the person should be fired. But some of
those people will find the comments that you make reprehensible and offensive and say that you
should be fired. It's not a sufficient justification. People are entitled to their opinions. And actually
it's not even about the opinion they expressed,
it's about the principle which is bigger than that,
which is that people should be able to say what they want.
However, as I come back to this point,
there are certain views that you might express
that disqualify you from certain roles in society.
That shouldn't be a controversial point.
Okay, when Rachel Dolezal was discovered,
you know, she was the president of a chapter of the NAAACP,
the National Association for the Advancement of Color People,
when she was outed as white
pretending to be black
or at least identifying as black
a lot of people in that organisation
said she should step down
they weren't trying to cancel her
they were saying that maybe
a civil rights group
to advance the rights of black people
isn't best run by a white woman
are you allowed to say coloured people now
well it's an older
because the organisation
goes back a long way
I thought people of colour
no I actually thought people of colour
had been dispensed with
and we were back to
oh is that right well I can't keep up
I mean, because it was color people, then people of color.
I can't see the distinction between those two, but apparently one's really offensive and one isn't.
But the NAACP predates the language shift.
And it can't change its acronym, because that's going to get too complicated.
So it just...
It's fire all over again.
Except fire didn't change the acronym.
They just changed the meaning.
Yeah, yeah.
But so I don't blame them for keeping the older acronym.
But the point is, of course, a civil rights group dedicated to black people, you shouldn't have a chapter of that that's run by a white woman, okay?
It's not cancer culture to point that.
out, there are certain roles that we're...
Pre-requisites, fine. You know, if I am a rabid, I don't know, I don't know, say I'm a pagan deity
worshipper that every morning I get down on my feet and I sacrifice a goat and I do because I want
to appease the spirit of fertility, you know, from my, I don't know, from my local rockery or
something. I don't know what it is. But I do that every morning and I smear myself in the blood and
and I dance. I do this dance, this provocative dance, and I chant these sort of mantras to my deity.
And then I run the atheist society, and I'm the head of the atheist society.
And maybe it's in a private WhatsApp group message. Maybe I just talk about how great my God is.
And maybe that gets out. But if it does get out, I've pretty much, I've been exposed. I shouldn't be running the atheist society.
Is it council culture for me to get fired? No, I'm just not appropriate for the job.
I mean, this is so basic to me that, you know, you can't run the Oxford Union if you don't believe in free speech, right?
It's the same thing.
You can't run a, I don't know, a vegan society if you're eating three burgers every day.
It's an interesting demonstration of sort of some of the weird quirks of human psychology and how we're able to deal with discomfort and pressure.
And it's kind of the, I don't know why I've never been talking.
tortured. I don't intend I'm torturing anybody, but I always think about movies where there is a
James Bond type who's being taught, and they're doing everything they can to him, and he's just,
you know, gritting his teeth, because he doesn't really think he's worth anything anyway, and he can,
he can withstand it. And then they bring the sort of love interest in, or they bring the innocent
local boy that he's taken in and he's helping him clean the car or whatever it is. They bring him in,
and they start threatening it. And no, no, no, I can't. I can't. And there's something about
our actions being the creator of discomfort or restriction in somebody else
that is this sort of weird speed run shortcut through human psychology to like a unique
type of pain it's this sort of responsibility it's guilt it's it's it's shame it's this
person didn't ask for it. It's sort of all of this stuff
wrapped up together and this is... Empathy as well probably.
And the reverse is being used when you apply pressure to the employer of the person who said
the thing. Yeah. Which is that you are implicitly or kind of even explicitly
endorsing by continuing to employ them as if the perspective of a as the cashier on Donald Trump's
shooting. Yeah.
in some way impinges on her ability to scan your,
now what this does do is mean that the higher up you get in an institution,
the more likely it is that your sort of executive perspective on stuff.
You could say that the COO of a tech company,
British tech company, nothing to do with America,
operates exclusively inside of the UK,
is sort of culpable for his perspective around power
and the use of violence around power
in a way that a cashier
and that to me feels weird
because now I'm like, well,
what is it,
there's this sort of stratified out
like the rich people
are supposed to have a great assent,
you know what I mean?
It still doesn't affect his ability
to be the CEO of a fucking tech company
but he should be culpable
in maybe a way that the cashier shouldn't.
Well, just that, you know,
if you have more responsibility,
you should be more responsible.
And you know that the things that you
right in public reflect on your, on your organization. If you are a figurehead of that
organization, I don't think that's particularly controversial. But I think you're right that the person
who scans at your check out, it doesn't matter what horrible opinions they have. It doesn't affect
their ability to do the job and you shouldn't go after them. And also because if you do go after
them, you're jeopardizing the principle of free speech itself. What you're doing is you're setting
a president that will rebound on you without a doubt. So I think we just have to, I think we just have
to clarify what we mean by council culture. A lot people don't know what it means.
and we need to understand the difference between someone being fired for not being able to do their job
and someone being fired for a horrible opinion.
I think it's, to me, it's a no-brainer, but I do get frustrated at the amount of times I explained this.
And I think people, because for instance, if I say a certain person isn't qualified to do a job anymore,
they say, well, that's cancer culture.
I thought you were for free speech, et cetera.
You've got to do this same dance all over.
You've got to do the same explanation again.
But the principle, as I say, come back to this point,
the principle of free speech is more important
than one individual who said something horrible.
And also I come back to this point that anyone could be cancelled
at any time if you had full access to everything they've ever written.
Jimmy Carl's got an insight around that,
which he says, the joke that's going to end my career has already been said.
Yeah.
It's already out there.
Yeah. And I think, you know, especially if you're over 35 now,
you've spent sufficient time on the internet
to say the reprehensible thing
probably if you're over fucking 20
but yeah
there's something in
our telegram or signal or WhatsApp
or I message or Twitter DMs
or fucking... Well it'll be jokes with your friends
friends who know the context of who you are
and what you really believe which means that you can say
the horrible thing and the joke is
that you obviously don't believe the horrible thing
what is
what is driving this sort of
puritanical
desire to
see evil in people
and this is evil of any kind
because it's happening in both directions
and we spoke about the new Puritans
and we did that thing last time
but it's happening in both directions
it's like this shows
that they are the
bigot racist xenophob
homophobe transphobe
or on the other side
that they are the sort of
un-American unpatriotic
Marxist communist
what drives that?
Okay you're going to hate me for this
I need to go to the toilet again
run it back
I love it and you know what
I had three buckets of coffee before I came here.
Yeah.
And then I had all your drinks.
Fine.
And that's why I'm being a bit-
Performance-enhancing.
Yeah, I love it.
Do you mind?
Yeah, correct on.
All right, okay.
It's good.
It's not that I want some time to think about that answer.
It is a great question, though.
It is a great question, all right.
All right.
Right.
I've got the question about hair.
Oh, beautiful.
So I said.
So porous.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, but this is, you know, they talk about drinking like a camel.
Like this is bladdering like a podcaster.
Yeah.
Well, running back.
Keep it going.
shall I just stop
there's a
No keep going
this is this is
it's doing something to my brain
is that the point
it's the point
oh my god
there's the point
you've been conned by me
the both sides
fucking spit roasting human centipede
of why are people pointing
the finger
so you're talking there about
purity spirals
and this growing tendency
to conceive that
if anyone disagrees with you
in one slight point
it means that they have exposed themselves
as being some evil, individual, irredeemable,
and that's a product of ideological thinking.
You know from the Gulag Archipelago, the Solzhen text,
talks about how good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being.
And it would be so easy, wouldn't it?
If you could just put all the bad people in one place
and all the good people in another place,
and then get rid of all the bad people.
But that's not how humanity works.
What he identifies there and what that whole book is about
is the human susceptibility to evil,
irrespective of who or what you are.
And that is something that needs to be acknowledged.
But if you're an ideologue and you believe that you should perceive the world through a set of preordained rules, any deviation from those rules is the worst betrayal.
I mean, I think it's why I've had a particular nasty backlash from the left because they perceive me as someone who came from their own tribe.
It's why to go back to Northern Ireland, it's why touts, informers, people from their own side were always more viciously treating.
The worst thing you can be as a rat.
Yeah, they were the ones they tortured and brutalized more than.
the UDA or the you know the other side of the UVF or whatever um because there's something
more offensive to people about someone on their own team deviating i've been dog parled by people
on the left by gender critical feminists even who who i've supported for many many years and
be very vocal in my support but because of a minor disagreement they dog parled me all night i wrote
about it in the book it was absolutely intense until it got to the point where there there were people
talking about how they wanted to murder gay men and all the rest and i thought i'm not doing this
and then I turn the phone off.
But I think that's, the purity spiral is something we should resist.
The expectation that someone on your side, quote unquote, side should agree with every last point.
That terrifies me.
I mean, there's a moment in the book where I talk about, rather nostalgically, about my time at university,
where we would sit up all night arguing, getting drunk, arguing robustly about politics and still being friends the next day.
was all cool and it was sort of part of it. There was a fun to it. I don't know if I think those
days are gone. I don't think you can do it anymore. I mean, certainly, I have some friends I can
still do that with. And because I'm not party political, you know, they can't always predict
where I stand on certain issues and arguments do ensue, but not vicious and not just robust
disagreements. That's great. That's what we should be striving for. And that's why this cherry-picking
of Charlie Kirk's videos to show how he was an evil person because he disagreed me on this
or this and this. It's so, it's infantile. Actually, I think the whole thing, the whole
culture war could be boiled down to a kind of mass infantilism. You know, an inability of adults
to behave like adults. Tantrums. Tantramizing, which is not a word. I've just made it up,
but mass tantramizing. I just see it absolutely everywhere. I'm sick of it, actually. It bothers
me. Disagreement is healthy. It's something we should be.
be encouraging, and we certainly shouldn't feel threatened by it. Why should I feel threatened
if you disagree with me on any particular point? I welcome that. Why? Because I guess,
well, first thing, I might be wrong. I mean, there is a real lack of humility in all of this
stuff. When someone disagrees with you, if you take offense or think that that is, signifies that
that individual is evil, that is a narcissistic response, because what you are saying is, my position is
the default of humankind, and anyone who deviates is either lying or evil or stupid.
How about maybe you're wrong? Or maybe the topic is a bit more nuanced than that, and you
can meet somewhere in the middle. Why do we argue? We argue, partly to refine our own position,
but also because we're aware that we're wrong about a lot of things at any given time,
and we need to be challenged. And also, there is an element of truth to every perspective,
however abhorrent it might be. There's always something in there. Uh,
So why have we got into that position?
Well, I think it comes back to education.
I think it comes back to a failure of education and a failure of socialization.
It shouldn't be a threat to hear a plurality of ideas.
It shouldn't be threatening to acknowledge that we're bound to be wrong about certain things.
I mean, it's an old dictum, isn't it?
But the wiser you are, the more you know how little you know.
And that surely should be the baseline for limited creatures,
that we are. We're not demigods. We're not capable of omniscience. So why not, why not, why not
just acknowledge that? And stop demonizing. I mean, that's the other thing. I think there's a kind
of pseudo-theological aspect to all of this, which is the division of the world into good
and evil. It's very simplistic. Disney's done it for years. You can always spot a baddie in
Disney because they're ugly. It's very convenient. Apart from a hunchback and autodrome, of course.
but why divide the world into good and evil in that way
when we know that every individual is capable of both
it's kind of incoherent
but we do it anyway
well because most people are not reading notes from underground
or fucking like the Gulag Archipelago
because it's hard and complex
and it's easier to have the Big Bang Theory
or whatever the equivalent is
although notes from underground is the shortest of his books
that's true you can do it in a day
Yeah.
We didn't finish out what does the future look like projecting out?
We didn't because I've been drinking this energy drink.
I went off on a tangent and I didn't let you finish it.
All right.
It's high velocity stuff.
Let's get back into it.
So what was the question again?
What do you think?
What happens next?
You want me to do my mother Shepton and predict the future?
Yeah, divination, Cassandra, whatever you want to call yourself.
Do you know Mother Shepton?
No.
You should because you're an ortherner.
Okay.
If you go to Nersborough, do you know Nairnsbru?
I do.
Go to Nersbrah, you can visit the cave where Mother Shipped and lived.
She was a medieval prophetess.
Okay.
She lived in a cave.
Okay.
And you can go and see, visit her cave.
Does it give you, do you get the gift of prescience by going there or what?
I didn't.
Right.
Well, we'll see.
We'll see what you come up there now and then compare it in 12 months time.
By the way, just to say, there's a well, there's a little well by the cave.
One of the reasons they thought she was magical is that this well was surrounding
by stone animals, and they thought that she had the power to turn creatures into stone.
And what it was is that well is a petrifying well, and it has certain chemicals and elements
within it that if you leave any dead body or any inorganic material, organic material in it
for long enough, it will turn to stone.
And that's why people have a, you can see the stone handbags and stone shoes and things
that people have left to turn to stone.
It's interesting.
Very cool.
Anyway, people don't know enough about Mother Shipton, do they?
Anyway, my point was, she predicted the Great Five of London.
How about that?
Not bad.
but she also said
the end of the world
would come in 1991
and I think she just said it
because it rhymed
and it wasn't true
anyway let's move on
to my own prediction
and my own prediction
of what will happen next
and I think I make the case
in the book
I don't know
but what is for certain
is that authoritarianism
as the default condition
of humankind
will definitely reemerge
and we probably better be vigilant
about it
and look out for where it might come from
and I am nervous about
a backlash against woke authoritarianism that says, well, now it's our turn.
I think that's a worry.
In a way that we've already seen it with cancel culture.
Yeah.
Or, you know, the current president of the United States, Donald Trump,
who thinks that you should go to prison for burning a flag.
Well, he said that more than once.
That's not a liberal position, is it?
I mean, that's an authoritarian position.
And that shouldn't happen.
I think what would happen is if he did try and push that through the Supreme Court would
overrule it.
but nonetheless, that's worrying.
I don't think, I mean, and again,
the backlash against liberalism,
because people have misunderstood liberalism
and they blame liberalism for what's gone wrong
with the culture war,
people are now saying liberalism didn't work,
so we now need our own form of authoritarianism
to deal with the problems of leftist authoritarianism,
and that's just going to exacerbate the problem.
Yeah, it's crazy.
What we actually, the argument I make in the book
is that we need to install actual liberal values,
which say that individual autonomy
freedom, freedom of speech, freedom of conscience,
freedom of belief, freedom of assembling.
What's freedom of conscience?
As in you were free to believe whatever you believe,
whatever your morality within,
and this is a key caveat, within the rule of law, right?
So one of the aspects of liberalism that isn't understood,
people think it's a free-for-all.
People think they mean you can selfishly do whatever you want
and there's no consequences.
That's the opposite of liberalism,
because every, as I trace in the book, every great liberal thinker has said and understood that the rule of law and the social contract that we develop together is an essential aspect of the preservation of a liberal system. A liberal system can only work if you have those frameworks in place. That doesn't mean to say that the law can't be wrong, that there can't be unjust laws. That's why liberalism takes so long to build into society, because it's a constant negotiation of challenging the things that are wrong in society and debating them and arguing and the marketplace of
ideas and all those things. And if you jettison all of that, because we've allowed woke authoritarianism
to win out temporarily, then you're just going to, it's going to rebound on you eventually. Don't set the,
don't set the, don't instill a new form of authoritarianism into society that will then establish
a precedent that will undermine your own position, because that's what always happens. And you can just, you know,
you can just look at history.
You know that this is where we're leading.
So whether that will happen or not,
I mean, a lot of the rhetoric about deportations, for instance,
there are people who would like to take that to an extreme degree, I think.
Zero tolerance for people making mistakes,
as you've said with council culture and the things that people say.
The compiling of lists for wrong think.
all of that stuff makes me very nervous
just because I know enough about
I'm not a historian, but I know enough about
history to know where that leads and what that looks like
and I know enough about history to know
that it's best avoided.
Andrew Doyle, ladies and gentlemen.
Cheers. Cheers. Cheers, indeed.
Nice to see you.
Where should people go? Check out the book,
check out everything else that you're doing.
And what is next for you now that you're in the US?
Well, I've moved to the US, as I say,
to start this company, Friendly Fire Studios,
working with
Rob and Graham and Martin
and we're writing things
and we're going to
hopefully start producing some things
some comedies and some films
that's the goal
you know it's early days
so I can't really say too much
because I don't know
going back to creativity
I think is key for me
because I fear that
being too steeped in the cultural war
for too long
can drive anyone mad
or you become an engine
right
you sort of a conveyor belt
for thing like stimulus comes in the front and a condensed version of what that was
yeah out the back and uh yeah you don't want to be the final guy in the human centipede of
of whatever today what a way to put it yeah you know it's just great because also like i
writing creatively again uh it's been so liberating and also you know and i'm working
on a new series of lectures for the peterson academy because i did one on shakespeare's tragedies
last year. So I'm doing one of Shakespeare's comedies now. So I've been rereading all the comedies
and it's been just a joy. It's like. Breath of Fresh, yeah. Yeah, it's like, you know, you're reading,
I mean, Shakespeare wrote, you know, he wrote, what, 37 plays, about half of them are masterpieces.
So you're, you're, you know, bathing in some of the greatest work that has ever been committed to
paper and you are. It's a, it's a reminder. It's a reminder.
of what we are at risk of losing, you know, I think literature and art is one of the pillars
of civilization. And so there's nothing more rewarding than immersing yourself in that. And of
course, you know, this was my doctorate was in Shakespeare. I'm going back to stuff I was once
immersed in and I loved it. And so it's so refreshing to be able to. So in terms of what I'm
going to be doing, yeah, those lectures are coming up. So if you join the Peterson, I'll sort of enroll
at the Peterson Academy. You can see my lectures on Shakespeare.
as tragedies, and then soon the comedies.
And I'll be writing hopefully, and hopefully you'll see some sitcoms and films come out with
my name attached to them.
Or in the meantime, you can read my substack, which is Andrew Doyle.org, or my book, End of Woke.
It's the new book that I've written, or any of my other books, if you like.
No pressure.
And so I'm easy enough to find.
Just go online, follow the trail of sulphur.
You can sniff me out.
I'm told that I'm evil, so it shouldn't be difficult for you to locate me.
I appreciate you. Thank you. Thank you very much.
If you're wanting to read more, you probably want some good books to read that are going to be easy and enjoyable and not bore you and make you feel despondent at the fact that you can only get through half a page without bowing out.
And that is why I made the Modern Wisdom Reading List, a list of 100 of the best books, the most interesting, impactful and entertaining that I've ever found.
and nonfiction, and there's real life stories, and there's a description about why I like it,
and there's links to go and buy it, and it's completely free. You can get it right now by going
to chriswillex.com slash books. That's chriswillex.com slash books.