Modern Wisdom - #748 - Rob Henderson - How Privileged Thinking Drives Our Entire Culture
Episode Date: February 22, 2024Rob Henderson is a PhD graduate from the University of Cambridge, a US Air Force Veteran and an author. The people who make the rules are not the ones impacted by the rules. Luxury beliefs are ideas a...nd opinions that confer status on the upper class, while often inflicting costs on the lower classes. And they're everywhere. Expect to learn Rob's opinion on the recent catastrophes in American higher education, why luxury beliefs have become more common than ever before, what Rob learned during his journey through all class levels, what it's like to truly be in poverty, Rob's advice for how people can become better readers and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get the Whoop 4.0 for free and get your first month for free at https://join.whoop.com/modernwisdom (discount automatically applied) Get a 20% discount on Nomatic’s amazing luggage at https://nomatic.com/modernwisdom (use code MODERNWISDOM) Take your personal data back with Incogni. Get 60% off an annual plan at https://incogni.com/modernwisdom (use code MODERNWISDOM) 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: http://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: http://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: http://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)
Hello everybody, welcome back to the show.
My guest today is Rob Henderson.
He's a PhD graduate from the University of Cambridge, a US Air Force veteran, and an
author.
The people who make the rules are not the ones impacted by the rules.
Luxury beliefs are ideas and opinions that confer status on the upper class, while often
inflicting costs on the lower class.
And they're everywhere.
Expect to learn Rob's opinion on the recent catastrophes in American higher education, why luxury beliefs have become more common
than ever before, what Rob learned during his journey through all class levels, what
it's like to truly be in poverty, Rob's advice for how people can become better readers,
and much more.
Rob happens to be one of the smartest people on the internet. I love his
Twitter, I love his sub-stack, he's always deep in the research, finding cool
stuff about social psychology or human nature or anthropology or evolution or
whatever and he's brilliant and I will continue to bring him on the show until
the sun engulfs the earth because I like him and I hope that you do too. This
episode is brought to you by Woop. I've won Woop for over four years now since way
before they were a partner on the show and it is the only wearable I have ever stuck with
because it's the best. It is so innocuous. You do not remember that you've got it on and yet it
tracks absolutely everything 24 seven via something from your wrist. It tracks your heart rate, tracks your sleep, your recovery, all of your workouts, your
resting heart rate, your heart rate variability, how much you're breathing throughout the night.
It puts all of this into an app and spits out very simple, easy to understand and fantastically
usable data.
It's phenomenal.
I am a massive, massive fan of Woop and that is why it's the only wearable that I've ever
stuck with. You can join for free, pay nothing for the brand new Woop 4.0 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, and if you do not like it, after 29 days, they will give
you your money back.
Head to join.woop.com slash modern wisdom. That's join.woop.com slash modern wisdom.
You might have seen that I recently went on tour
in the UK, Ireland, Dubai, Canada, and the US,
and the entire time for a full month,
I didn't check a single bag in
because hold luggage is a Psyop,
meant to keep you poor and late.
In fact, I never need to check bags anymore,
thanks to Nomadic.
They make the best, most functional, durable and innovative backpacks and luggage that
I've ever found. Their 20-litre travel pack and carry-on classic are absolute game-changers.
They're beautifully designed, not over-engineered, and will literally last you a lifetime with
their lifetime guarantee. Best of all, you can return or exchange any product within
30 days for any reason, so you can return or exchange any product within 30 days
for any reason, so you can buy your new bag, try it for a month and if you do not like it,
they will give you your money back. Right now, you can get a 20% discount and see everything
that I use and recommend by going to nomadic.com slash modern wisdom and using the code modern
wisdom at checkout. That's nomadic.com slash modernwisdom
and modernwisdom at checkout.
If you keep getting tons of spam phone calls
and have an inbox that's filled with junk,
your information might be spread all over the internet,
which is pretty terrifying to think about.
This is why I've partnered with Incogni.
Incogni help prevent scam attacks
by automatically opting you out of shady databases.
They scrape the entire internet to make sure that your name is taken off dozens of data broker lists so that your phone
will become strangely quiet and your inbox will no longer feel like a hornet's nest.
You can cancel at any time, plus they offer a free 30-day money back guarantee, so you
can buy it completely risk-free, use it for 29 days and if you do not like it for any
reason they will give you your money back.
Right now, you can get a 60% discount off their annual plan by going to incogny.com
slash modernwisdom and using the code modernwisdom at checkout. That's i-n-c-o-g-n-i dot com slash
modernwisdom and modernwisdom at checkout.
But now, ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Rob Henderson.
What do you make of the last few months of fallout from Yale and Harvard and such? I mean, yeah, we saw that big testimonial from the president.
Yeah, it was Harvard, MIT, Penn.
I mean, I wasn't surprised by it.
I mean, a lot of people, I think, are finally fully realizing they're coming to their senses.
People have been saying this for a while now.
Oh, you know, eventually the pendulum will swing back
and people will finally figure out
what's really going on in these institutions
and this sort of ideology that's been spilling out
of the universities.
And now I think they finally are actually truly realizing it.
But yeah, I saw the, it's kind of the birth
of what a lot of people call wokeness in 2015 when I arrived on campus
at Yale.
That was my first semester.
I saw what was happening there.
Yeah, I think you can draw a straight line from some of those events in 2015 to what we're
seeing now.
Yeah, it's been really ugly, but kind of amusing from my perspective because I was one of the,
I'd like to think that I was one of the sort of early observers and people who could recognize what was occurring.
And then later on, you know, so Jordan Peterson was another and there have been other critics of higher ed and especially these elite universities.
But yeah, it's been really, really amusing and also sort of disheartening to see it.
It's this sort of odd blend of fatalism, shard and Freud, nihilism, sort of pleasure,
displeasure, like, ick, pity.
It's a real concatenation of things.
And obviously, we've got a couple of mutual friends that have either been directly or
tangentially involved.
Vincent, our mutual friend, I managed to get removed from a higher education institution
because of him appearing on this podcast.
Carol Hoeven, who is a really good mutual friend,
has kind of been thrust into the middle of this.
She told me that she basically felt like
she'd been used like a football.
And for the people who know who Carol is,
she went on Rogan, I think she cried like six times on Joe's show.
She cried at least three times on mine.
We went for breakfast.
I'm pretty sure she cried like three times at breakfast.
She's just a very sort of emotional person.
She is really sort of feeling this.
And yeah, you realize in a sort of proxy fucking battle
like this,
the people that are useful political footballs
to be kicked around often end up paying a pretty high price.
And no one ever thinks about them because you're like,
oh no, but you're a flaming warrior for free speech
or whatever.
And you go, well, yeah, but I didn't ask to be.
Yeah, yeah.
Very few people want to be fired.
I mean, a lot of people may not be familiar
with just how difficult it is to get an academic job in the first place.
I mean, I'm friends with Vincent, I saw.
I mean, he was hustling hard and he had a very impressive
academic record and no one wants to be in that position.
I think their critics or their detractors say like,
oh, you know, oh, poor me with your cancel culture.
And now look at you going on all these podcasts and playing
up your victimhood and all of this.
But that's not what it is.
I think it's, for some people, it's just a consolation that while I lost my dream job,
at the very least I can sort of communicate these horrible experiences.
Let me salvage fucking something.
Exactly.
And yeah, I was observing all of this from afar.
I mean, one thing that I've pointed out before is that for every public academic cancellation
you see, there are probably five to ten others that
are not covered in the media.
Most people actually don't enjoy the limelight that much, especially academics who tend to
be kind of weird nerds with their obscure niche interests.
They just want to keep their head down, do their research, be left alone, and then suddenly
they are accused of X, Y, or Z, and they just want to silently have it blow over.
And that's the sort of modal case,
that's the usual case.
And so yeah, it's been,
we can see it now that finally people are recognizing
that there's a serious issue.
I didn't even want to an academic job.
I mean, by the time I was probably about halfway
through my PhD, I saw what was happening.
I remember, yeah, I would have very contentious discussions with other PhD students and postdocs
and kind of early career researchers, and I would tell them, like,
I don't think that, you know, if you color outside the lines, if you are an independent thinker,
it will be very difficult for you to get a sort of typical tenure-track academic job now.
Not impossible, but just much harder than it
would have been maybe 10 or 15 years ago.
And people would say, oh no, that's ridiculous,
it's ridiculous.
And now, you know, four plus years later,
I'm seeing like some of those friends are having difficulty.
Some of them have been hired and fired by now.
I mean, it's been, you know,
I've seen the whole spectrum of outcomes.
Some of them have successfully obtained jobs
and just, you know, keep their mouth shut.
But for me, I just, that wasn't what I thought academia was going to be like.
I thought it was going to be this little contained bubble, I guess some people call it
the ivory tower, where you can live that life of the mind and communicate interesting ideas and
debate and disagree, but still sort of inch away towards the truth, or at least inch
away towards interesting ideas. But, you know, that's interestingly happening more on places
like podcasts and sub-stack and alternate sort of parallel institutions.
Yeah, it's fascinating to think as well about, I guess, soft cancellations. I had Ricky Schlott
on who co-authored the Canceling of the American mind with Greg Lukyanov.
And she was talking about all of the different ways that people kind of get soft cancelled.
And it's just not being invited to the end of your party.
You know, it's people sitting in different locations to you.
I think she went to maybe NYU Stern.
And she was hiding Jordan Peterson books under her bed.
You know, like fucking Anne Frank in the attic,
that philosophical Anne Frank.
And she was saying that, you know, there's lots of sort of ideological shit tests.
She called them, which I thought was a really great name.
You know, what do you think about Ben Shapiro?
You know, just like fucking throw that hand grenade into the room and see if anyone pipes up.
Or doesn't pipe up.
That was something that I learned when I was in grad school was does anyone just remain
silent and not say, oh, he's so he's an evil right wing, whatever.
Right.
Right.
If they just kind of keep their head down and don't say anything, you know, I sort of,
oh, I observed that silence is compliance or whatever.
Silence is violence or whatever it is.
What about the, um, you had this interesting idea about the hidden hierarchies of the Harvard
Extension School thing.
Yeah.
Well, I saw that with, I was observing what was occurring on Twitter slash X with Christopher
Rufo who was one of the sort of architects of pointing out and removing the Harvard professor after her comments about
kind of condoning anti-Semitism on campus and then discovering her plagiarism and all
this.
But after he was perceived to be successful, I mean, she was ousted, she was pressured
to resign, and she did.
All of these professors at elite universities and all of
these, you know, this university supporting members of the chattering class were saying,
oh, Christopher Rufo got a degree from the Harvard Extension School. And, you know, are
people aware that that's not the real Harvard and people do people understand that that's
not typically what we think of as a real graduate studies degree at a master's,
it's not a real master's degree from Harvard.
They just wanted people to be very aware that this, you know, this sort of outsider, this
pleb who got this degree from this extension school, he's not a real academic, he's not
a real serious thinker.
Yeah, he's written books.
Yes, he works at a very prominent think tank and yes, he's like very successful in the
real world, but he has his degree, which is sort of getting
things backwards, right? You want the degree in order to signify that you're capable in
the real world, but you know, they have the, oh, this guy's capable in the real world,
but now they're looking at the degree as if it's somehow, it's fraudulent and therefore
this nullifies all of his accomplishments. That's indicative of his real value. Exactly.
Yeah, they're placing his value on the educational credential rather all of his accomplishments. That's indicative of his real value. Exactly, yeah, they're placing his value
on the educational credential rather than
on his effectiveness in his life and in his career.
So, you know, I'm watching this and I'm thinking like,
yeah, this is exactly, I mean, I've seen this,
you know, since entering college,
since entering higher ed, this strange status anxiety,
particularly among people who attend these
kind of institutions.
I mean, the people who were pointing this out about Rufo's degree were professors or
graduates of whatever, Harvard or Oberlin or Stanford, whatever.
Like, these kinds of places that-
People that knew the language, they understood what an extension school was.
Yes, exactly.
And it's just amazing to me that Harvard even has this program in the first place because it relies on that duplicitous game of, you know, if you're a member of the unwashed masses
and you go to the Harvard Extension School website, it actually says, we are Harvard,
you will have the Harvard degree, you can put it, I don't even say something like, you'll
have the, you know, you'll be able to put Harvard on your resume.
This is on the official website.
While simultaneously communicating the coded
message to everyone else at Harvard and everyone else in this sort of rarefied segment of society
that, you know, we have to do that. You know, we have to put that on the website, but it's
not really hard.
You're not on the main stage. You're kind of on the second stage in the festival. It's
like the overflow room.
Yeah. It's just, it shocks me that they're willing to take the reputational hit to operate
a degree mill. I mean, to me, it's just very like, tawdry, like it's almost like, you know,
I have this, maybe this judgmental attitude,
like this is like very kind of vulgar that you guys
would even do this in the first place,
that you're playing this game.
And yeah, I thought it was very, yeah, very ugly,
the way that they were, they were pointing this out
about Rufo.
And it also ended up backfiring, I think,
because they felt this sort of,
this faction of cultural elites and these legacy
institutions felt threatened.
They felt like they had received an L and so they had to lash out and get back at him.
Well, it's the same as, you know, someone does something to you, a really cutting jibe.
And you're like, shit shoes.
Like it's just, you know, it's the only thing that you're like,
you're fucking just grappling at something.
I remember once there was this guy, it's so funny.
There's this, uh, dude stood in the front door of a nightclub
complaining about the fact that he couldn't get in and he just kept on
chirping and kept on chirping and kept on chirping.
And I was feeling particularly pissy that day or whatever.
So I said something back to him and I've got like two or three, six foot four
Geordie gorillas either side of me that are working and I'm something back to him and I've got like two or three, six foot four Jordy guerrillas
either side of me that are working and I'm busy trying to organize clipboard to something
else and he couldn't think of anything to do.
So I had a necklace on of some kind like on the outside of a t-shirt and he sort of reached
forward and like grab that and like that was the one thing and then sort of scuttled off.
And I was like, like my 35 pound like fashion net necklace
isn't a big deal, but just that that's the one thing.
And it's kind of the same as Christopher Rufo's like,
W, W, W, W, extension school.
Like it's not, you're not part of the real chattering classes.
Yeah, yeah, that's exactly.
Yeah, it was very like short-sighted.
And ultimately, I think it was damaging to them.
Oh, anyone else that's got that degree always thinking about going to that place is like,
oh, well, they said that ultimately when the rubber meets the road, Chris Rufo's just one of the
fucking peasants the same as the rest of us. So maybe I shouldn't think about, oh, that's
interesting. So you're saying that anyone who might want to apply for the Harvard Extension School will see that.
And so, they'll have fewer applicants.
The institution will ultimately be less profitable.
I didn't even think about that part.
Definitely less prestigious.
I was thinking more on the reputation end of it rather than the sort of economic end.
But yeah, this idea that people will observe...
I mean, I thought it was an error for two reasons.
One was that it was...
Most people don't like snobs, right?
So they see this and they just feel like icky about it,
that they're even pointing this out in the first place
or that they think that they're somehow superior.
They don't like that attitude.
And then the second was that it, to me,
it kind of exposed the hollowness
of the egalitarian dogma,
the supposed egalitarian dogma of elite academia that,
you know, oh, we're of elite academia that, you know, oh,
we're all for equity and, you know, DEI or whatever it is that we're so accepting and
tolerant and welcoming.
But by the way, like, you know, your aristocratic title is fraudulent and you're a fake.
And, you know, so, you know, I was texting a friend earlier about this.
He's actually a grad student at Harvard.
And I was like, my impression of this was basically like the attitude at elite universities is everyone is equal, but some
people are less equal than others. Right? It's sort of a spin on the animal farm idea.
We're all equal, but some people are more equal.
Well, you heard that George Orwell quote. You said how in The Road to Wigan Pier, George
Orwell's explaining how upper class snobs, while theoretically pining for a classless
society cling like glue to their miserable fragments of social prestige. explaining how upper class snobs, while theoretically pining for a classless society,
cling like glue to their miserable fragments of social prestige.
I love that line. I mean, the book is great. Orwell was so astute in his analysis of class,
but that was just, yeah, I mean, this has been going on for 100 years now.
And that was the first thing that came to mind when I was seeing this, that these supposedly open-minded,
tolerant, welcoming people were suddenly pointing out that he got a degree from the institution, right?
Like, it's your website, it's your institution.
You got over the bar that everybody asked for, but you kind of landed in an awkward place on the crash mat.
Yeah.
You know, and yeah, you're so right. It's this.
And this is why, fundamentally, I think that people are so skeptical and critical
of anyone who proselytizes about their morality or how ethical or how caring they are publicly.
You should go, what are you covering up for?
I don't believe that you actually think that.
And sure enough, when the gloves are off and you see someone in a little bit of pressure
or receiving a little bit of heat,
where did they go? Well, all of the inclusivity and egalitarianism and care for the beauty of academia overall,
all of that's out the window.
Yeah, when the pressure's on, right, when people feel threatened, when they feel
in a sense of sort of emotional intensity, a lot of negative emotion, suddenly,
you know, the mask slips and you can see what they really think about. Toys are out of the pram, they're just as,
and you know, this is the concern
that people had all along.
It's like, oh, that's what we thought you were like.
We thought that you were highfalutin,
not actually caring, adrenocome drinking,
long-hooded nose, pentagram dancing, like dickheads. And sure enough, your mask is slipped.
So, I mean, this, you've got your brand new book out, which everyone can go and buy right
now, as you go and buy it this very second.
We haven't ever spoken about this because pretty much since I've known you at some point,
you've been working on your memoir, Troubled.
Luxury Beliefs.
That is a kind of example of luxury belief, although it's not
patient zero. How do you explain to my audience that hasn't yet heard you talk about a topic that
you've repopularized? How do you explain luxury beliefs?
Right. Luxury beliefs are ideas and opinions that confer status on the affluent, while often
inflicting costs on the lower classes. And a core component of a luxury belief
is that the believer is often sheltered
from the consequences of his or her belief.
Um, and, you know, we can get into specific examples,
but yeah, I like this one that we've been sort of touching
on this snobbish attitude about higher ed and how...
Yeah, so on the one hand, I mean, you're...
When people are pointing out that this school
or that school is better than the other, um, you are sort of boosting your own status, right?
Especially these people who are already graduates of or teaching at these institutions, they're
bolstering their own status.
And then, you know, by speaking in this way about the hierarchies and, you know, which
school is actually above which other school, they are sort of inflicting costs on everyone
else who would like to ascend the educational ladder, who would like to get a degree.
But a lot of these people just don't interact much with people who are
upwardly mobile or trying to be upwardly mobile, who are trying to go to university,
trying to get a degree. The vast majority, and I talk about a lot of the statistics in
my book about this in the later chapters, about how more than 80% of Ivy League
graduates have at least one parent who went to university. I mean, that's, they're sort
of a mercenaries from birth. They've never actually interacted with a person or had a
15 minute conversation with someone who doesn't have a degree or on their way to getting a
degree. And it's just not on their radar. And so in their world, you know, everyone
went to university or everyone should go or anyone who doesn't
go to the same category of university that they went to, there's something wrong with
them.
And I noticed this a lot when I arrived on campus.
And it's very subtle.
I mean, at first, I was sort of, to some degree, I think I was duped because I fell for the,
oh, everyone's equal, everyone's fine.
And also the other thing about these institutions now is that they don't look the same, right?
One of the ideas about, or one of the components of the luxury belief idea is that luxury beliefs
have to a large extent replaced luxury goods, which isn't to say that luxury goods don't
still signify status.
Brand names and all of those things still matter, but my claim is that luxury goods have become a noisier signal of status.
You can't tell right away necessarily anymore when you just go about your life in public,
who's rich and who's poor just by how they look.
And so, I build on these sort of sociological frameworks in my writing and in my book, work
from Thorsten Weyblen at the turn of the 20th century here with the theory of the leisure class. He wrote about how the upper class, the aristocrats of his time, they demonstrated their
status through tuxedos and evening gowns and pocket watches and monocles and expensive and
intricate hobbies and attending lavish events, hiring servants, those kinds of things. And then by the mid-20th century, there was a sociologist named Pierre Bordeaux who wrote
a book called Distinction, a Social Critique of the Judgment of Taste.
And one of his insights in that book was that rich people, affluent people, they'll convert
their economic capital into cultural capital.
And so they'll spend money in order to demonstrate their class or exhibit their membership to
this rarefied strat of society.
And so in his day, again in the mid-20th century, and he was mostly commenting on French culture,
but people can sort of understand what he's getting at, where people would spend money
to learn about the subtleties of wine or the intricacies of art or fashion.
Falconry is something. Yeah, falconry or be intricacies of art or falconry is the thing.
Yeah, falconry or beagling or golf or these kinds of,
you know, that you have to have money,
you can't be the kind of person who works a manual job
or who, you know, with color.
Soft times.
Yeah, soft hands.
You see the same thing in almost the reverse
in Asian societies at the moment.
When I went to Thailand for the first time,
all of the receptionists were wearing
lighter makeup on their face. Mm, all right. I went to Thailand for the first time, all of the receptionists were wearing lighter makeup on their face.
I thought to myself, why?
Because it's so silly because the face finishes on whatever the jawline here and the blending
between the face and the neck is difficult to do.
And I thought, why?
And I asked someone, why the fuck are they making their faces pale?
And they said, oh, well, it's because the indigent laborers, the people that work out
in the fields are heavily tanned.
So the higher class jobs are the ones that are inside,
which means that the paler you are,
the more status is conferred on you by your profession.
But then I also realized how stupid of me
and how myopically Western of me to do that,
coming from Newcastle upon Tyne,
the Jersey shore of the UK
Where girls turn themselves orange to signify I have all of this leisure time
I'm able to go away on holiday to exotic places and lay by the beach and get sun on me. I like that. Yeah. Yeah, that's very interesting
Yeah, yeah, so if you if you live in like northern Europe or somewhere cold where there isn't a lot of sun
Having a tan is the the signifier status. So yeah, I think, yeah, that's an important point here
that, you know, it does vary from culture to culture.
I mean, I point, you know, I point this out,
the research and everything in my writing
about how status itself,
the specific examples and manifestations can be ephemeral,
they can vary by time and place and culture
and generation and so on,
but the desire for status, the desire to exhibit it,
to show other people how prestigious or how dominant or how important you are, that
that remains.
And so my claim is that luxury beliefs, I mean, they're mostly confined to that sort
of highly educated people who attend elite universities, people who study there, people
who are graduates of these places, who tend to operate legacy
institutions who run media and academia and who generate knowledge, people who work in
sort of culturally influential organizations.
And a lot of them hold these luxury beliefs.
I think we saw this in 2020 and 2021 with the Defund the Police movement.
I mean, I coined the term luxury beliefs in 2019
and started to write about it and do the research
to sort of support this idea and point everything out
that sort of all of the sociological concepts
undergirding it.
And then the like six months later,
people started talking about defunding the police. I was like, I don'ting the police. I felt like I didn't even have to like, you know, here's the reasoning behind
luxury beliefs is just defund the police. Like it's right there. You don't even have
to-
It's the most whenever somebody brings up your work to me and talks about luxury beliefs,
the patient zero example is defund the police.
Yeah. Because it's so intuitive.
Of course. Can you explain why that encapsulates luxury beliefs, structurally or functionally so well?
Yeah, yeah.
So, yeah, the luxury beliefs idea, if you say defund the police, you are increasing your
own status because, I mean, you look like a caring person.
You look open-minded and interesting and highly educated.
And so, and it also signifies that you're the kind of person who went to
certain kinds of schools, you consume certain kinds of media, you listen to certain kinds
of podcasts and so on. And so, it makes you look a certain way to your peers. But once
the support for defund the police becomes implemented into policy, once police stations
and police departments have
reduced funding, once you cultivate an attitude, so it's not just the policy, but
you're also cultivating the culture and the attitude around law enforcement that
oh, we don't need police. You sort of give permission to people to be suspicious
of police or to be derogatory towards police. As a result, we saw that a lot
of police officers started retiring in large numbers.
There's reports in major US cities that they're having difficulty with recruitment because if
you're a smart, capable young person who wants to make a difference in your community, like why
would you want that job if you know that people are going to view you with suspicion or with some
kind of, you know, that you're sort of malicious
or evil.
I mean, cops, I mean, they get paid okay, but it's not like considering the potential
danger they face in their job, part of the reason why people would want to do it is because
cops formerly used to be seen as respectable and admirable, and people conferred a lot
of status onto them.
Well, think about the difference between when a policeman currently in the sort of current
defund the police era that we're in, policemen turns up at a scene versus a firefighter or
an ambulance A&E person. The other two emergency services are seen heralded as heroes.
And the police, like, is it AC like the ACAB, all cops are bastards.
I got about that.
Yeah.
And so who wants that job?
And so gradually, and we saw this in the aftermath of the Defund the Police movement that violent
crime spiked all across the US, especially in major cities, homicide rates increased
to levels not seen since the early 1990s.
And so when all of this was unfolding, I actually tried to find some survey data to see like
who's actually, you know, like, because I don't know anyone in my personal life who
thinks that we should defund the police.
I mean, other than, you know, some, some people at Cambridge and other elite universities,
but ordinary people who are outside of these institutions, I didn't know anyone who was
supporting this movement.
So I had a suspicion this was actually a legitimate luxury belief.
I looked at survey data for it, found one in UGov in 2020, which found that they collected
data from a representative sample of Americans and they broke down the data by income category
and it was the highest income Americans who were the most supportive of defunding the
police and it was the lowest income Americans who were the least supportive. And then when later, the different findings were reported for major US cities,
like Minneapolis and Detroit, one in New York City, they found that white Democrats were far
more supportive of defunding the police than black and Hispanic Democrats. And so it was like the people who were supposedly so kind and so sympathetic towards the marginalized
and the dispossessed and the poor and so on, they were supporting something that actually
those groups didn't even want. And I mean, an increased number of them were being victimized
as a result of it. In my book, I point out that if you compare the lowest
income Americans to Americans who earn the median income, there's, what is it, there
two to three times more likely to be victims of violent crimes. There are seven times more
likely to be victims of assault. There are 20 times more likely to be victims of sexual assault.
Like essentially across the board, the lower your income, the more likely you are to be victims of assault, they're 20 times more likely to be victims of sexual assault, like essentially across the board, the lower your income, the more likely you are to be a target
of crime. Could do with the police. Yes, exactly. You could, yeah, it would be nice to have someone
you could call if you're being burglarized or assaulted. And so, yeah, it was a complete
sort of backfiring. And I haven't seen, you know, there hasn't really been any sort of accountability
or any kind of, um, acknowledgement of what happened in the aftermath of that movement.
Yeah.
It's wild.
And then obviously the, the big elephant in the room here is that the people who
were supporting it are the ones who are the most likely to live in a gated community,
in an area or a neighborhood that has not called
the police in a decade since the last time that someone from the community that they're
probably talking about trying to protect accidentally wandered through their gated community.
So it's rules for thee, but not for me.
And let me explain to you, poor, underclass peasant person, what is best for you from my vantage point
out here in my very comfortable home.
Yes, yes, yeah, yeah.
So that's, yeah, that's one of the components of the luxury belief is that the believer sheltered
from the consequences of the belief.
And so, yeah, the people who were supporting the Defund the Police movement,
largely college educated, living in safe communities, living in gated communities,
there were reports during the political unrest in 2020
and all of the BLM demonstrations and so on,
all of the riots that people in,
like rich people in Chicago were hiring private security
to patrol their neighborhoods because, you know,
the police were either distracted due to all of the
social unrest and crime that was occurring,
or because police were retiring and so on.
And so they were hiring private security in these rich neighborhoods.
And then in New York City, there were reports of people just fleeing to the Hamptons.
Like, you know, if you have money and you have resources, you can just flee to your private
little gated area and from home start tweeting about defund the police and get all the likes and
plot it from there. Oh my God, you're so caring. I know the cops are so wrong.
Like they're treating these poor black people so badly.
And you can, I mean, I think people who are sort of
affluent upper middle class people,
they have a mistaken view of what sort of poverty looks like.
Their only exposure to it is when they see,
when they see it reported in the media,
when it's a criminal who's committed some kind of
transgression and that surfaces up, and then they learn about the criminal's back story and they
start to feel sympathetic and so on and so forth, and there's not nearly as much time spent on the
victims of that person's crime. And so often what happens is that in at least the imagination of this Strato-of-society that you know, they conflate poverty with criminality and the reason why
someone commits crimes is because they're poor without really digging into the data or the research and understanding that the vast majority of poor people
never commit any crimes. They're more they're far more likely to be victims of crime than a perpetrator and they don't really think about this and
then through the sort of portrayal of poverty,
I think in pop culture is kind of mistaken too,
at least in more sort of recent media,
where, you know, very few TV shows,
it's just not exciting to see some working class person
making, you know, minimum wage,
going to work, clocking in, clocking out,
going home to their family and living a normal life.
But it's more interesting to see, you know in, clocking out, going home to their family, and living a normal life.
But it's more interesting to see the struggling schoolteacher who decides to break bad and
start cooking meth and lashing out at the system.
That's just a much more interesting story.
So that is, I mean, there was this movie that came out, I think it was last year, the year
before Emily the criminal with Aubrey Plaza.
I don't know if you saw it, but it was like the perfect kind of movie for this, for this, you know, the luxury belief class.
It's this young woman who works in food catering and she has this dickhead boss and she has
dream, I think she is a college graduate.
She has dreams of being an artist, but she has difficulty monetizing her artwork and
so she caters food, but then she like gets hooked in with this gang and like learns how
to shoplift and you know, the whole thing is like, you know, well, you know, screw the system, you know, I can't make money off my artwork and I have to shoplift. The whole thing is like, screw the system.
I can't make money off my artwork and I have to work in food catering.
This is just ridiculous.
So I'm going to start stealing and robbing people.
The movie is portraying this as a perfectly reasonable course of action.
It's basically like Breaking Bad but the young woman version.
For art.
Yeah.
I just think that's part of what drives the luxury beliefs phenomenon.
Yeah, it's wild, man.
And when you see that, you really can't unsee it.
Mary Harrington had this about a lot of the advances that were proposed by the feminist
movement in the 50s, 60s, and 70s were put forward by women for whom the
impact wouldn't affect them.
So a perfect example is, I guess the push toward independence and the derogation of
chivalry by men, because chivalry in some ways can be patronizing, must be patronizing
to women.
Like I can open the door for myself.
I can carry my own bags.
Like I can pull my own chair out like I can pull my own chair out
I can pay for my own dinner and in a world where women are trying to find and establish themselves
socioeconomically as independent agents aside from the husband or partner that they're supposed to need I can understand
Why that would be the case, but as she said it is a direct line from
Men shouldn't open the door and
don't need to, to why you shouldn't hit your wife, right? Because the consensus is women
are more fragile, vulnerable and need to be protected and men should be the ones that
do that protecting. And it's the women who are married to men who had a two-pound household,
who had a relatively good example of how to treat
women when they were growing up, who have been through all of the institutions that
have kind of softly embedded what chivalry is in any case, because that's just the way
that a more sophisticated social life goes.
But that doesn't think about women who are in an underclass or working-class environment,
who are in a relationship with a guy who never knew his father, whose mom was cycling in and
out of different boyfriends or partners or whatever in the house, who was maybe abused
physically or verbally or emotionally or whatever while they were growing up, all of whose friends
are ruffians that are going about and anti-social behavior and all of this stuff.
And it's like, well, I know that for you,
lady, the drives of Mercedes-Benz,
you might like the idea of being liberated
from men holding the door open for you,
but downstream from that, you've also liberated women
from being protected from their underclass partner
from hitting them when he gets annoyed on a nighttime.
And I really, I just thought that that was
such an interesting frame.
The same thing goes for support for abortion rights, right?
When you think about that, is I think that it is skewed
toward the people in the upper class believe that it is a great
idea to restrict abortion rights overall, to give less access.
But you think, well, maybe if you were woman, 213 of one particular village
somewhere, who's six kids deep, to three different men, maybe easy access to birth control would
be a good thing for them to have. And yeah, it's just, it's so interesting how it can
be split up by race, or it can be split up by class, or it can be split up within gender.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that was, I mean, it's interesting because I think that a lot of the people who promote these views,
or who think that these are sort of progressive or fashionable or enlightened,
they don't think about how it would affect someone outside of their social strata,
or they mistakenly overextend the way that they think to everyone
else that, well, here's what would be good for me, or here's what would be good for
my class or my group, and therefore it would be good for everyone, or the only reason why
other people aren't thinking like me or aren't pursuing the same kind of life as me is because
they don't have the same, or because my preferences aren't implemented in society or throughout
culture.
I mean, yeah, what you said earlier about Mary Harrington's point is interesting.
I mean, I saw this firsthand that where I grew up, basically anyone like, you know,
who was remotely sort of academically inclined, you know, went off to some state university,
everyone who wasn't but still had some sort of restlessness or ambition, they joined the military,
and then all the guys who were left behind. I mean, there's, you know, not much left for the who wasn't but still had some sort of restlessness or ambition. They joined the military. And then
all the guys who were left behind, I mean, there's not much left for the women there to pick from.
And a lot of these guys did grow up without dads or without good sort of male role models around.
And yeah, what ends up happening often is like, women get impregnated. They have children with
multiple men or the men, you know, they
have multiple partners and don't interact with their kids.
I mean, I, you know, I have now have friends that I graduated from high school with who
are these guys.
And yeah, it's just, it looks very different, right?
Like that, the sort of liberation and the belief that, you know, women don't need a man or
men shouldn't, you know, women can live the same kind of life as a man.
And maybe it's true if you are affluent and you go off to college
and you're going to be a young professional career-driven person.
Under six figures.
But if you're just working a menial job and you're not,
I mean, most people aren't going to derive a ton of satisfaction
from the way that they make money.
Well, there's a story that you, I remember you telling me maybe about some lady friend
that you'd spoken to about,
she said that we should be able to move beyond
the nuclear family because it's restrictive and constraining.
Yeah, yeah, this was someone I graduated from Yale with.
We were somehow got on the topic of family and future
and this kind of thing.
And she was basically telling me that, yeah, marriage is this outdated patriarchal institution
and we should, society should move beyond it.
We should evolve, get past it.
And so I asked her, well, how did you grow up?
What was your like family life situation when you were a child?
And she said, you know, I was raised by my mom and my dad and, you know,
I did have that kind of, you know, conventional family.
And then I asked her what she planned to do later in her, you know, once, you know, because
she was planning to, she was working at a technology firm, she was going to go to law
school, but I asked her in her future when she has a family or if she wanted a family,
what would she do?
And she said, oh yeah, you know, I do want a family someday, you know, I'll probably
get married and have a husband and, you know, essentially get married and like, oh yeah, I do want a family someday, and I'll probably get married and have a husband, and essentially get married and partake in this
outdated patriarchal institution.
And so I was thinking that, okay,
you benefited from this age-old,
ancient sort of patriarchal, but this institution,
and you plan to carry the benefits of that arrangement
forward for your own children.
But your official public position is no one should do this, it's outdated,
she was sort of denigrating it, trying to downplay it, saying other people shouldn't do this.
And to me, it seemed very duplicitous that, you know, this clearly marriage has positive benefits.
I mean, that was something that I learned when I got to college was
almost every single one of my classmates and peers came from two parent families, whereas where I grew up, it was basically
zero.
And so clearly marriage had some, you know, some kind of effect here.
And yet the place, the group that is the most likely to downplay the benefits of marriage
are the most likely to be products of successful marriages under the most likely to form marriages themselves.
How come you're not more bitter about your childhood?
I mean, I used to be.
I used to actually be more angry when I was in my late teens, early 20s.
I mean, I think part of it was just getting older.
I think just age, things just kind of tend
to like burn out in dim over time anyway. And I think, you know, the other was just a lot of sort
of self focused work, self improvement, trying to, you know, get past it and put it all into context and realize that on the one hand,
people are responsible for what they do in their lives.
But on the other, I mean, to understand the genealogy of the ideas that led us to this point,
that's been helpful too, to understand that, yes,
like day to day we have agency over our lives, but the sort of, there are these decisions and
cultural trajectories and all of these other forces that are in place that play a role too.
And so, you know, when I start to dig at the root of this of, you know, who is responsible for some
of these ideas, who promotes the luxury beliefs and so on,
and entering into institutions where I can see it, it helps me to just understand it.
And I think that sort of settles my anger a bit too.
It's very interesting thinking about that. I had a C.R.A.V.L.A. on. She's a psychotherapist,
pushing back very hard against what she calls Instagram therapy,
which is identifying everybody as a victim and they've got trauma and stuff.
And she said, remembering that you experience trauma isn't being a victim, making your identity
out of it is.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I think that's well put. I mean, I didn't really think of myself
as a victim and people didn't call me a victim. I never thought on those terms until I got
to college. Before that, it was just day to day life. I mean, it was just, you know, trying
to struggling to get by, trying to make money, trying to whatever, living paycheck to paycheck,
and then later joining the military. And, you know, just my plate was full. Later, you know, sort of towards the end of my enlistment
before I entered college, I did do a stint in rehab
and I talked to therapists and you know,
I did sort of address a lot of the issues
that I had experienced when I was a kid.
And that was helpful too, I think,
to just sort of contextualize it and also to,
you know, to just sort of be more open with the people
I grew up with and close with, you know, my sister
and my mom and all these people to just,
you know, my adoptive family to talk to them
about all of this.
I mean, that's helpful too.
I think there is this tendency for young people,
young men in particular that, you know,
self-sufficiency will solve
all your problems to just be completely self-reliant. You don't have to rely on anyone. Your relationships
are sort of peripheral. And I lived that way for a while, and it probably did help to sort of,
I don't know, led me to equip myself to be a self-sufficient person. But later, I did realize that actually, relationships are important.
I went through the first six years after I left home.
I never visited.
I never visited for the holidays.
I never visited for any kind of special occasions.
I did visit on and off whenever, really whenever it suited my schedule.
I was very selfish.
But then later, you know, now I make an effort, now I make an effort to do all of those things and
realize that actually, you know, all of these things, relationships are more important than you think, especially when you're young, right? There is value there, even if you think there isn't.
Yeah, there's a degree of romanticism about monk mode and loan-rangering it.
And I think my current theory on this is that monk mode is a great tool but a bad master
because if you continue to pray at the altar of it over a long enough amount of time, the
reason that you're doing some equivalent of monk mode, right, which is a
over reliance on self sufficiency, introspection and isolation so that you can focus on making
yourself into a better version of you. Because quite rightly, there are a lot of distractions
out there in the world. And if you're trying to do a ton of self work, or you're going
to therapy, or you're in rehab, you're probably not going to have the most flourishing social
life. It's going to be difficult for you to juggle all of these plates. And if you do try and juggle all of the plates, you're going
to restrict your progress in that area. Like committing yourself to one thing or a very
narrow band of things is more than, it's not additive, it's multiplicative, right? It allows
you to triple down, quadruple down all of your efforts into one very tight area. And
I found myself toward the end of my twenties through my manopause that I really, really enjoyed
monk mode. But I saw, especially for someone that has introverted tendencies, and I get my energy
mostly from being on my own a lot of the time, that it started to become more alluring to me
than being back out into the world. But the problem with that is the reason that you're
doing the monk mode thing or the rehab thing or whatever is to form yourself into a functional member of society who can then
go and reintegrate.
And that's the problem that the progress can become addictive to the point where it stops
you from doing the thing.
The thing that you're doing is sacrificing the thing that you were doing it in order to
get.
Yeah.
Yes.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, you sort of mistake the means for the end, the end goal. You're. Yeah. Yes, yeah, yeah. Yeah, you sort of mistake the means for the end,
the end goal, you're sort of, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's, I think it's difficult to keep that in mind.
I think a lot of people have difficulty with that,
especially when you're young.
Like what are your actions attempting to accomplish,
which are overarching goal?
You know, Robert Green makes that distinction
between tactician versus strategist, right?
The tactician is just what's directly in front of you, what do you need to do next?
And the strategist is, well, what's all of this for?
Like what are each of those steps trying to get you to?
And I think, yeah, when you're young, you just think, oh, I want to make money.
And like money becomes the thing.
And it's like, well, what's the money for?
Like, what do you want to do with that money when you build up your bank account?
What is that?
The goal is just to have a big number on your balance, or is it to take care of
your loved ones, to have the freedom to on your balance or is it to take care of your loved
ones to have the freedom to be able to interact with people that you care about and to provide and
those kinds of things. And I think I, I mean, I kind of came to that realization when I was
in my mid-20s, but it wasn't until in my later 20s, really probably right not until I was about to
start grad school. I was like 20, 28, but I really had that realization that,
oh, the reason why I'm working so hard
and trying to get educated and successful
and trying to make money and all of these things is
so that I could take care of my current family,
my adoptive family, but then also for if
and when I have a family later,
we'll say when, that I'll be able to take care of them too
in a way that I lacked when I was a kid.
And that's what ultimately all of these things are for. It's not just
whatever, increase the numbers on my social media, on my balance or something like that.
So your background, the life that you went through
to where you ended up,
Air Force? Yeah, Air Force.
Air Force, US Air Force, GI Bill, Yale, Cambridge, PhD book, you know, it's going
to be an amazing selling book, all the rest of the stuff.
What do you attribute that trajectory to given that your friends with so many of the people
that you grew up with that are still, they, that guy with three baby mamas and a bunch of alimony or whatever and they're
in the same town in the same whatever, what was formative or what do you attribute the
change in you to that the other people didn't?
I mean, there are probably, you know, there's a variety of factors. I think one is, um, you know, you, you do need to have like a, a certain amount of
like innate drive or ambition in the first place.
And that I, I'm not entirely sure you can, you can, you can drill that into people.
Um, so you have to have that sort of raw material in the first place.
But one point that I try to make in the book is that things could have very
easily gone a different direction. Um, I think having sort of aptitude and drive
and ambition, those are necessary but not sufficient that there are a lot of guys I
think who are sort of smart and talented and ambitious, but they're just surrounded by
chaos and disorder and, you know, lack opportunity or they've just been sort of beaten down by
life so much that they don't even think to like spot the opportunities
that are around you and capitalize on them.
And so that was there.
So I think some of the raw material was probably there.
And then the other thing was just making this,
you know, kind of halfway impulsive decision
when I was 17 to just enlist and get out of my hometown.
And I kind of knew that, you know, I, at this point,
you know, I had two jobs when, you know, I'd had two jobs
when I was in high school.
I was a dishwasher at a restaurant and then I was a bag boy at a grocery store and I kind
of looked around at my coworkers who were a little older than me.
These were guys, you know, this kind of guy in their early to mid twenties, you know, maybe
they like some of them like they were like 24 but had a girlfriend in high school and
they were just like kind of creepy weird stoner guy or the guy who would ride a dirt bike and just smoke a lot of weed in the parking lot
and just kind of aimless and adrift.
I thought, I think now when you're 17 or 18, that's kind of cool to live that life, but
when you're 24 or 28, that's kind of pathetic.
Even when I was a teenager, I had that thought that, yeah, sometimes my friends and I would ask these guys
to like get us beer, hook us up with weed or whatever.
And, you know, some part of me,
I was like happy they were doing it,
but on the other hand, I was like,
why are you doing this for us, man?
Like, what kind of loser is hanging out
with a bunch of high schoolers?
And I don't want to be like the weird old guy
at the high school party when I'm that age.
And so, you know, a variety of factors led me to
just enlist right away.
I barely graduated high school.
I mean, I was smart.
And that's the other point that I try to make in the book
is that a lot of people want to blame the school system
or that there's something wrong with teachers
or we aren't paying them enough.
And maybe some of those things are true,
but teachers aren't dumb.
Like most teachers get into that profession because they care about kids and they want them to
do well.
And they're usually pretty observant about which kids are curious and academically inclined.
And my teachers could see that in me, but I just had no motivation or desire to do well
in school.
It just wasn't there for me.
And so my teachers were just continually frustrated
by me. And so, yeah, I enlist, I get out of there, basic training, I get stationed, I
spend some time overseas and sort of have that structure around me. A couple of days
ago I spoke with a mutual friend of ours, Polina Pompliano, and she asked me this question
of, when I read your book and I read about what you were like when you were a teenager, when you
were in high school, and then I meet you now, like it just doesn't, like there's a disconnect,
I don't understand it. And I explained that I was in the Air Force for eight years, like that's a
long time. Like I was in from 17 to 25. And you know, the book I kind of like gloss over because
it's kind of mind-numbing and boring,
but it's like, make your bed, make sure your uniform is perfect.
It's Jordan Peterson bootcamp.
Exactly. It is kind of like that, especially for the first six months to a year when you're in
training, it's like you're not a person. You're just like a cog in this machine of just like
cleaning and being meticulous about every little aspect of your existence.
And I hated it. I hated every second of it. But it was important for me to go through that,
to like learn the skills that I kind of lacked when I was growing up of just like,
here's how to be an adult, here's how to take care of yourself, here's how to dress properly,
and like even basic things, right?
What were the most surprising,
I think this would be a nice framing actually,
as you move up through the cacophosphere
of different social strata,
what were the most surprising realizations
going from Rob 1.0 to Rob 2.0,
which is I guess from teenager to being in the air force.
What were the things for you like, oh my God, like that's an expectation or a social convention
or that's a way of operating or it's a belief or whatever?
I mean, I think probably one of the bigger ones was like learning the distinction between
like self-discipline and motivation because I lacked,
I really lacked both when I was a teenager.
You know, I didn't feel motivated to do well,
but I also had, I had no external discipline around me really.
I mean, I had it in sort of fits and starts
in different periods.
It was just a very sort of chaotic early life,
but I had no self-discipline, certainly.
Like I couldn't impose on myself.
It just, you know, I didn't have the tools to do that.
But then in the military, I learned it that, you know, at first it was imposed from on high
that this is how you will do things.
And then it gets drilled into you.
And then you just learn on your own, like, oh, this is how you get things done is motivation is,
you know, so they're the distinction.
The motivation is just a feeling.
It's like, do I want to do this or not?
And if I don't want to do it, I lack the motivation and I'm just not going to do it. Whereas self-discipline is, I'm going to do
this regardless of how I feel. And so, you know, for some people, it may make sense in the context
of like going to the gym, that I don't feel like going to the gym today, but self-discipline is,
it doesn't matter how you feel. Like, oh, you have a feeling who cares? Like, what are your
actions? What are you actually going to do now? Ignore those feelings and do what you've set out to do.
And so it was like that for my work, for things like, I mean, even showing up to work on time.
I mean, it's kind of sad, but I was one of the better workers at my jobs in high school.
And even then I was like not on time, half the time, like it didn't matter.
I didn't feel like it.
And then the military was if you don't show up to work on time, you get court-martialed
and you go to military prison.
That's the life.
And once I learned to operate by those standards and those regulations, those policies, that
it dawned on me that actually, you know, Jaco has this phrase, discipline equals freedom,
that once you sort of outsource all of your decisions to this sort of regimented system, then suddenly like life gets better and you do have more
freedom, you have the freedom to think about other things or to direct your attention to
certain projects or goals or ideas and you don't have to live your life in this constant
state of chaos of, oh, I don't have any money now, you know, like that, you just, you know,
set the system so that your money goes here
and this is what you're going to do when you go to work at this time and this is when
you leave and this is what's...
And having that regimented system was really important for me.
And now I just...
I do it, it's second nature to me, but it took eight years to get there.
So, yeah, I think those kinds of things.
Discipline was the big one.
What do people who didn't grow up in poverty not know about what it's like to grow up in
poverty?
I mean, I think poverty is...
It's an interesting question because I think a lot of people actually attempt to...
They attempt to imagine it. I know a lot of people actually who didn't grow up poor,
but who at least try to imagine what it would have been like to be poor.
And I think like the imagination probably isn't too far off from the reality that there are certain things that you want,
but maybe you can't get, or if you want a toy or a certain food or a certain
thing that, you know, I think poverty now for at least in sort of developed first world
countries, very few people are actually starving in the street, but it's more like, you know,
I want to get, you know, maybe it's like a special occasion and I want to rent a video
game at Blockbuster, but that's $6 and we're
only going to let you rent a movie because it's $3.
Those kinds of weird small things, and you can only go on a special occasion for your
birthday or something.
It's not like a weekly occurrence.
The other thing is the social environment is something people don't think about as well, that what family
life and communities look like in poor and working class areas now are much different
than they used to look like.
I cite this statistic in my book about how in the 1960s, 95% of children in the US, regardless of social class, were raised by both of their birth parents.
And then by 2005, for the upper class, it had dropped to 85%.
So there was a slight dip, but by and large, that's the norm still.
Whereas for working-class families in the US, working-class children, it dropped from 95% to 30%.
And that was 2005.
My guess is it's dropped a little bit further than that now.
And so just to give a sort of a glimpse into this,
I mean, there was,
I had five close friends growing up in high school.
And so there was me sort of raised in foster homes
and adopted, but there were divorces
and other kinds of drama.
I had two friends raised by single moms,
one friend raised by a single dad,
I had another friend who was raised by his grandma
because his dad was in prison
and his mom was addicted to drugs.
And that's kind of like the normal situation
when you go to like a, if you go to a high school
in one of these areas and just start asking people
about their parents or their families,
they'll start describing about dads in prison
or moms in drugs or, you know, I'm staying with my aunt right now because my mom is
in rehab or whatever. Very chaotic. Yeah, it's just total, yeah, it's just totally chaotic and
disorderly. And this is a point that I've made in my writing is that, you know, childhood poverty
is not, and again, this is in the context of the US and first world
countries that childhood poverty is not really very strong predictor of harmful or detrimental
outcomes later in life. The correlation is either very weak or not significant at all
between growing up poor and growing up to commit crimes or self-defeating behaviors, harm, violence,
drug addiction, unemployment, all of these kinds of social pathologies. There's a very sort of
tenuous connection there. But for childhood instability and those undesirable outcomes,
there's a strong and consistent correlation there. And so childhood instability is measured by things like, you know, were you raised by
both of your birth parents?
Was there a divorce?
How many different adults moved in and out of your home?
How frequently did you relocate?
Basically how much day-to-day disorder was there in your life?
How much uncertainty was there?
And that actually does seem to have a very strong effect on childhood
development, on their expectations, on their goals for themselves. And what's interesting
is that when researchers control for childhood family income, the link remains strong, it
remains significant between instability and outcomes. And so one way to think about this
is, if there's a rich family, but there's a lot of drama and chaos and divorce
and addiction and domestic issues, a child raised in that environment is much more likely
to have detrimental outcomes, more likely to commit crimes or become addicted to substances
or just have children out of wedlock or multiple with multiple partners, versus a child who is raised by two very low income parents who are married,
who are very focused on creating a stable and secure life for their kids. And you can kind of
see this, I think, with like immigrant families and low income families that haven't really been
quite afflicted by a lot of the pathologies that have occurred in the
US.
And so I think that's important to remember too, it's that yes, there's this poverty component,
but there's also just this kind of, sometimes I wonder if poverty is even the right word
for the way that I grew up.
I think squalor is probably a more accurate term is like, you know, there was a bit of
that material impoverishment, but it was more just people like living in a very kind of ugly
and almost like masochistic way of just, you know, careless
and impulsive and, you know, sort of drug-addled.
What's the mechanism that you think is causing that to happen?
What is it about the so universal that this unstable, disorganized,
upbringing regardless of class or material wealth seems to have such negative impacts
predictively down, what do you think is the mechanism there?
I mean, you know, probably some of it would be genetics,
but I'm not sold that it's 100%
People that are quick to anger, externalizing behavior as parents give the raw materials
of externalizing behavior to kids, right?
Yeah, and I think that's really good.
I think that's like one piece of it, but I think that it
Robert Plummer and Rince Supreme.
Yeah, exactly.
And I think, yeah, that would be the Robert Plummer answer.
But I do think that that can't explain 100% of it because, for example, if you just look
at white Americans over time, like all of the same things have occurred across social classes
that actually 50, 60 years ago, I mean, I'll give you an example just for my adoptive family. So my adoptive family are basically white working class
people on my mother's side.
And so my grandparents, they grew up basically
during the Great Depression.
And they got married.
My grandfather and my grand, they
would tell me this story about how my grandfather asked
my grandmother to marry him and I think he was 18 or 19 and she was like 17 and she,
you know, they were just like two, the only two young people in this town and you know,
and she was like, I'll marry you, but you have to stop smoking, stop drinking, stop gambling.
And he was like done and done.
They got married and they had a 60 plus-
Deal, let's have sex.
Yeah, exactly. Well, yeah, and then they had, how many, married and they had a 60 let's have sex
Yeah, and then they had how many I think they had four or five kids. Yeah, yeah, and and they were
Married for 60 plus years no issues. I'm sure they had issues But like you know what I mean, and then they had four kids all four kids divorced
and
You know, I just you know, they they married, they did get married, but then they
ended up getting divorced.
You know, some of them had, you know, kids, step kids, that kind of thing.
Now I'm a member of the next generation and I'm seeing my cousins and it's like, it's
not even marriage.
It's just like, oh, like they hooked up and had a kid, but he hasn't spoken to his kid
in, you know, three years.
And, you know, so that's what it looks like now.
And I don't think the genetics in this family lineage changed much.
It was the social environment, it's the incentives, it's the denigration of marriage.
People will point to economic factors, but my grandparents were very, they were probably
poorer than, they're definitely poorer than my cousins now.
They could not afford the things that my same age 30-year-old cousins could afford.
It wasn't an economic issue. I think a lot of it was just cultural. What are your
expectations? I think a lot of it has to do with a lot of the stuff that you and I have
talked about and you speak about on your podcast around incentives around sex and romance and
dating and just, yeah, in the 1940s, 1940s, 1950s, my grandparents generation, it was
like, you know, if you wanted to have
sex, you had to like live a certain kind of life.
We're gonna ring on it, baby.
Exactly.
And that was just the reality then.
And now it's completely different.
And I've presented this thought experiment before.
I think I posted this on, back when it was still called Twitter, which was, if you traveled
back to 1945, just got in a time machine and walked out in the post-war era, and you said, and very soon, I think
it was 1960 when the birth control pill was invented.
If you say very soon, it's going to be this magical technology, the birth control pill.
So contraceptives will be widely available.
Abortion will be more accessible, certainly than it is now.
So you'll have all of these reproductive options before you.
Do you think in the future there will be more children born out of wedlock or fewer? Do you
think that there will be more abortions or fewer? Do you think there will be more children raised in
foster homes or orphanages living in chaos and
squalor? More or less. And I think, you know, almost everyone that you speak to in 1945, you
present this survey, I think almost every one of them would say less, they would say fewer. And then,
you know, but that's not the case. It was very much the opposite of that, that I think even
these technologies and, you these technologies and the culture
and everything sort of went in a very different direction than I think people had predicted.
Mary Eberstadt came on the show and Adam and Eve and the Pill revisited a new version of
her old book.
Fantastic.
Just so great.
And it's true, man.
Like, you know, we look back and and it's kind of cool in the red pill
manasphere, even in the EP world, you know, the social psychology world, for people to
almost laugh, snigger at how rudimentary the thinking was in the 1960s that introducing
birth control would result in better outcomes in terms of
abortion, better outcomes in terms of out of wedlock births.
But who then would have been able to predict that that was what was going to happen?
You're talking like a fourth order effect, right?
Okay, so you're going to decrease shotgun weddings because the onus is going to go from
the male that accidentally impregnated to the woman who quote unquote chose, right? It went from a man's mistake to a woman's option.
And you go, okay, right. And then what's going to happen to that? And what's going to happen to
that? But it's like, it's so far down the line. I was talking to Scott Galloway. And he was talking
about the predictive power of stuff in the past. And he was saying, he'd come through some research about the Great Depression and had
looked for anybody.
Anyone predict this?
It's like the year before the Great Depression in the 20s, no one, nothing, not a Cassandra
insight.
And yet in retrospect, you go, how could no one have seen this coming?
Hindsight is a wonderful thing with regards to that.
One question I've got that I think is kind of interesting is to squalor your
word, uh, up until the age of 16, 17, 17, until the age of 17, that should set a
pretty low hedonic threshold, right?
That you're in a nice air conditioned room
and your jeans fit and don't have holes in.
And you're not worrying about whether or not
you can pay for the Uber to get from here to the airport.
How have you found your ability
to hedonically adapt over time?
Like, can you recall that as an anchor for your quality of life, or does it almost seem
like it's someone else that lived that? That's an interesting question. I guess it's a bit of both.
So day to day, I think, I don't really reflect in that way. You just sort of live your life.
But when I reflect back and when I think about
it and I realize, you know, there are those moments where like, wow, like I can do this
thing that I couldn't have done, you know, even after I was in the middle, I mean, I
think the pay structures probably changed a bit when I enlisted in 2007. I was, you
know, I think I was making like $1,200 a month was the pay. And so I couldn't afford
a belt, you know, like, It was like small little things like that.
Once I moved off base, I got this house with my friends, but you have to pay like first
something.
It's so funny now, it doesn't matter to me because I have money, but back then it was
like panicking.
I was like, you have to pay the first month and the last month's rent up front.
And then it's like a security deposit.
And then it's this and then you have to, and then like gas to commute back and,
and all of these kinds of things and calculating all of this.
And it's like, Oh, well, I guess I can't wear a belt for a couple of weeks and
come on next paycheck.
It's like that.
It sucks.
And, uh, and so, you know, so there are times like that where I'm like, Oh,
I could just buy this without thinking about it.
And that, that part is nice.
Um, so I think it is that kind of, you know, like happiness researchers
will do this. What is it like, they have terms for this, it's like life satisfaction versus
I think they may just call it happiness where like happiness is like your your actual affective
state in the moment day to day, how much positive versus negative emotion are you experienced
subjectively throughout the day
or the week or whatever.
And then there's the life satisfaction component,
which is basically when you step back
and view your life as a whole, how satisfied are you?
And those two things are correlated,
but they're not quite the same in some ways.
I think parents often report much lower levels of happiness
but higher levels of life satisfaction.
Yeah, yeah, yes.
And I think in that regard, it's like, you know,
my happiness, I don't know if it's
actually changed much.
Maybe there is a bit of that hedonic adaptation where, you know, 15 years ago it was like,
oh, I can, you know, I can go to Wendy's, cool, like I'm happy.
Whereas now it's, you know, something else.
But ultimately that hasn't changed.
But the life satisfaction, I'm sure, is much higher that like, oh, I've had a few accomplishments
and I can afford things and I don't have to think about money as much anymore.
And so, yeah, I think there is that.
And yeah, and also like reminiscing too,
like when I talked to my sister
or some of my old friends from high school
and just sort of thinking about those days,
it's like, I do feel a bit better now
about my life compared to the ones.
Yeah, I was talking to a friend
and they were asking me stuff about my childhood.
And my memory is really patchy from my childhood.
It's not fantastic, especially not sort of pre-ten.
And I said, look, like what do you remember?
I said, well, I remember a good bit because of my sister, because we'll prompt each other
about, oh, do you remember that?
Oh my God.
Yeah, we did do that thing. And we were in that car or we got stuck in the motor or whatever. Right?
And yeah, there's a degree where I wonder how much is just one good chat GPT prompt away
from me opening out into this really beautiful answer about some insight or whatever,
some experience that I had as a kid. But yeah, George Mack, my friend, once a month lies in bed before he wakes up for 10 minutes
and imagines what it would be like to live with no arms or legs.
That's one of his favorite meditations among a bunch of other weird ones.
So he's trying to dial up contrast as much as possible.
Think about all of the challenges that I would have to face.
Think about what this day is going to entail.
Think about all of the things that would be difficult for me. Think about what this day is going to entail. Think about all of the things that would be difficult for me.
Think about how grateful I would be if only I could just wash my own back.
If only I could brush my own teeth.
If only I could do these things.
So what he's trying to do is give himself gratitude for the things that he takes for granted that are very normal.
Now, the interesting thing with your example is that you don't need to imagine what it
would be like to live in squalor because you did.
But the way that our sense of self works, what is it?
Every seven years, every cell in your body has turned over.
So there isn't even, you're like the two ship of theses, three ship of theses is away from
the person that you were then. And even for me, now being in Austin for two years,
I went back home for Christmas.
And it's like, it's kind of like a fever dream.
I'm being back in this place that I know so well,
but I'm different, but I'm not.
And then I find triggers,
environmental triggers causing me to fall back into other
different ways of thinking and stuff like that.
So I was interested in whether or not basically you have been able to lock
in a degree of gratitude, like relativistic gratitude, I suppose,
based on where you came from to where you are now.
But it's a permanent, a permanent battle.
Like in some regards from a poverty perspective, like you were a guy who was
born with no arms or legs and then grew them.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, yeah, those, I think that, yeah, that's, that's right.
Where I were, if I think about what it was like back then and I compare it to now,
of course, like things are much better for me.
And yeah, I mean, it's, it would be, it would be, I think,
shameful to be anything other than completely grateful and, you know,
just full of gratitude for a direct-
I'm proud as well, I would like to think.
Yeah, I mean, that's a weird one.
Like, I think when, that's one of the things that,
in the book I point this out, that like,
when you don't really grow up with parents
and you don't really, I mean,
because I grew up in foster homes before,
I think like that critic,
there's like the developmental window
where if you don't really receive positive feedback, like I think I just like, I receive compliments in a very
weird way where it's like very hard for me to accept it.
It's a skill.
It's a real skill, man.
Yeah.
Who is it that I gave someone a compliment?
Fuck, I can't remember who it was.
I gave somebody a compliment and I've never seen any.
I wish I could remember who it was,
but it would probably be a good idea
that I couldn't call them out in any case.
Dude, it's like the worst way
that I've ever seen anyone take a compliment.
Just, you know, you say this thing
that you think is a nice gift that you're giving somebody.
And even giving compliments is a skill that I've had to learn
because I'm doing something that's nice for somebody else
is a nice thing to do.
Gwinda, it was fucking Gwinda.
It was on an episode that I did recently.
Okay.
And, uh, I was like, dude, I fucking adore your writing.
I adore your sub stack.
You've got two bucks coming out.
I can't wait to read them.
I'm fired up every single time I speak to you on the podcast.
I love it.
It's like a, it's a fugue state we drop into for two hours.
It's brilliant.
And I just saw his face.
People can go watch the episode.
I want to watch it now.
It's very charming.
Like it's very charming because obviously he holds himself
to a high standard and stuff like that.
But you see this guy go like, thanks.
Like it's very charming.
Well, the other day I had this interaction
with one of my friends' mothers and you know,
she was like very high energy and she was like,
oh, you know, Rob, I love your writing and she was like, Oh, you know, Rob,
I love your writing. And now it's like, I love your sub stack. And I've watched you
on, you know, what modern wisdom is like, it's so great. And at first I was like, you
know, oh, that's nice. Thank you. You know, trying to like change the subject. I just
like, I feel like all these compliments and I just feel uncomfortable. I'm like, that's
really nice of you. Thank you so much. And she's like, no, really, she's like, did you
really get a PhD from Cambridge? Because that's amazing. And then like, I started to walk away feeling
like, damn, I feel pretty good about myself actually. Like, can I have you hang around
all the time? Eventually I was like, you know, I was suddenly getting this like really positive
mom energy. And I was like, this is great. Like actually, but it took a second, right? At first,
I was like, you know, just fell into that sort of default, like, oh, very kind of you to say,
thank you so much. And then she kept going with it and I'm like, wow, this is a really nice
sleeve.
That's the amount.
You're like a kind of the equivalent of a really obesity overweight person who
can't just go in the gym and do a little bit.
It's like, Hey, we've got to shift 250 pounds.
You need to stay on that treadmill for another hour, mister.
And then you finish and you're like, oh, wow.
Like, yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
There's like a crushing weight of compliments that you need.
But that's something I feel better. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. There's like a crushing weight of compliments that you need. But that's something I'd love to...
I've got...
Who wrote No More Mr. Nice Guy?
Robert Glover.
Thank you.
I've got Dr. Robert Glover coming on the show soon.
I'm very excited to speak to him.
And I'd love to talk about the skill of both accepting and giving compliments.
I think that that's a really underrated skill.
The ability to give an earnest compliment
and to graciously but honestly receive it.
Skill that no one really ever talks about.
That is interesting.
Yeah, I think from, at least my impression
is it's actually easier to deliver a compliment
than to receive it. Way easier.
Because you can be sincere about it.
Like you can honestly show your appreciation
if you enjoy something to tell someone.
But yeah, I've, yes, seen, this seems to be a common pattern that people have difficulty
with, with receiving them more so with guys maybe, um, than, than girls, although even then.
That's an interesting one.
Cause with women for sure, they, they hide ambition.
Uh, they downplay success and stuff
like that. Certainly, female to female communication, I think there is more
opaqueness and more fuckery that goes on with regards to that. If a guy thinks
that you've done something shit, they go, dude, that was lame. Whereas it might be
couched in some other sort of language from a woman. Yeah, that'd be interesting.
I'd love someone to look at
SINCIA vs. INSINCIA compliments
from comparing men and women.
That'd be a fascinating study.
This morning I was prepping a newsletter.
It'll go out tomorrow.
I do like a three interesting findings.
Everyone needs to go to Rob's sub-stack and subscribe.
It's outstanding.
Thank you, man.
And I shamelessly repurpose at least one thing
every like couple of weeks.
You know, I think like, well, the findings deserved as wide an audience as possible,
but this was an interesting one.
It'll go out where, so this was a study from 1988.
I'd be curious to see, like, I don't, I couldn't find anything more recent,
but essentially they broke down by gender, the domain of, of, of where people
deliver their compliments.
And so for women, it was,
when women compliment women versus when men compliment men,
what are they complimenting?
For women, it was mostly appearance.
It was like something like 60% of the compliments
were about appearance.
And then it was like 15% about possessions
and 10% about accomplishments and that kind of thing.
Whereas, so it was mostly appearance based for women
when they're complimenting one another.
Whereas for men, it was mostly based on accomplishments.
Most of their compliments to one another
were about accomplishments.
And so one thing that I would wonder is like,
maybe it's, I wonder if it's kind of easier
or more difficult depending on,
so I would imagine like for women when
they receive compliments about their appearance because it seems to be the
most common domain that they would receive those quite easily because
they're used to it whereas for accomplishments that makes them feel
uncomfortable in some way.
And if you're a guy, if I go to you and I'm like dude you're looking buff.
Tell me about how good my last news letter was.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I wonder if like we would feel more uncomfortable when it's something other than the physical
target.
That's so fascinating.
And yet again, it shows just how people's behavior zeroes in on the most salient parts
of each sex's characteristics.
So women are complimenting the most important thing to the opposite sex. Men are complimenting the most important thing to the opposite sex.
The same thing happens with derogation as well.
You know, if there's an argument between a guy and a woman on the internet,
the woman's gonna say he's got small dick energy and the guy's gonna call her a slag.
Right, that's it.
It's like, I'm gonna derogate your chastity, I'm gonna derogate your sexual prowess.
I'm going to say that you're not as competent or as rich or as good looking or as successful
as you think you are.
And I'm going to say that you're like fatter old or uglier than you are.
Why?
Well, those are the most important things that you have with regards to social currency.
And these are the same people who will throw these sorts of insults around, like Greta
Tumberg accused Andrew Tate of having small dick energy.
Like, I think it's the third most liked tweet of all time or something like that. I think she's, I think she's in the top 10 twice.
And I think Tate features in the top 10 twice or three times, and at least maybe one or two of
those are his interactions with Greta Thunberg. So kind of, I don't know, like,
he's like the Michael Jackson to her Janet Jackson
or something like,
it's a very, very successful one they get together.
Yeah, that is interesting.
Yeah, like we're, I think that, yeah,
the same people who would probably endorse
like some form of gender,
blank slate egalitarianism or deny
that there are any sort of biologically based
sex differences will still sort of target those areas of insecurity.
The gloves come off, man. It's the same as the Harvard Extension School thing, right? Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah, so yeah, that's, yeah. So if, um, yeah, if you're, you know, a very progressive person, but then a man is annoying you online, you'll immediately start telling him that he's, you know, a virgin or he's, you know, where, yeah.
Yeah, exactly. Fucking incel. Like, oh, okay.
Yeah, inc know, exactly fucking incel. Like, oh, okay. Well, if you throw that debate around, speaking of that, Alexander Dates, like, just put a new
study out. Did you see this one? He hasn't released the details, but he's capturing the data at the
moment on it through a Google form. It's so funny. But videos up asking participants to rank the attractiveness of different red pill
influences.
Okay.
So there's the guys from Fresh and Fit who else is in there?
I don't know.
There's like a bunch of other people that are in there and it's got the replies are so
funny.
I gotta look at it.
So it's on Twitter.
Like these, these, correct.
Him mining for the data is on Twitter.
The results aren't, he's, he's correct. He only put it out yesterday, I think. I gotta look at it. So it's on Twitter. Like these, these correct him mining for the data is on Twitter. The results aren't he's correct.
He only put it out yesterday, I think I got to look at this hilarious.
I did. I have to see on there.
I'm not, I'm not. And he's not.
He went like more kind of like another big names within that world or whatever.
But, um, he is Alex has an ability.
He is Alex has an ability. I don't think I've ever seen you get into a spat on Twitter.
I don't think I have.
I don't think you've ever had a back and forth,
despite having like hundreds of thousands of people that follow you.
Gwinda likes to kind of, he's more like a hitman.
So he'll sit up on a ridge and look out and then he'll like fire something. And it's like AOC. It'll be like a single reply to AOC with 500 likes from him. And then nothing. He won't tweet for another week.
Honestly, he pops out of the wilderness looks and he's like, adjust the site, fires, and then leaves.
But I mean, Alexander goes in with incels, incelco, that account that I think is the admin of
the incels.co thing, he's back and forth with like anyone, like egg and non accounts, like if he sees
and you've got this essay and it's really well written, but his capacity, he's kind
of like the destiny of dating research.
You know, he's just got this predisposition that's very good for being able to put up
for anyone that doesn't know who we're talking about.
He's been on the show, Alexander Datesyke.
I think it's like at Alex Datesyke on Twitter.
Just look, whatever day this goes out on, look at who he's going tweets and replies
and have a look at how many people he's arguing with.
And I promise you, they'll just be mountains, like tons and tons and tons and it's no one,
it's nobody. And then sometimes it's a somebody, but...
Yeah. I think he's performing a much needed service because I don't have the patience for that.
I think like professors and researchers and podcasts, like just people who have like a
million things to do. And I think like, but he's, he's doing it very well, and he's building an audience
this way. And I think, you know, it's, it's, he's channeling his, his knowledge and his
research for productive ends. And, you know, I think it, someone should be engaging with
a lot of these like black pills, you know, it's a fucking high price.
Yeah. Yeah.
Do you see that we got lumped into a, we got given a name.
Oh, we did.
It's me, you, William Costello, and Alexander Datesyke,
and it's the academic manosphere.
Okay, good company.
I like it.
I think that's a pretty good-
I was in there?
Yeah, I think so.
Okay.
I think you were.
It was a long time ago on this day.
It was like maybe months ago, and I forgot to send it to you.
But yeah, the academic manosphere types,
it was used as a slur.
But I was like, yo, if you want this to be a slur, make it less cool of a name.
Like it's such fucking dope.
I want to be a part of the academic minus fear.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I got, I got lumped in a couple of years ago with it was some like, you know,
like someone was like trying to create like a league of the IDW.
This was back when the IDW was still.
I think it was still a thing or it was kind of on the way down.
It was like 2020, 2021.
Um, and yeah, it was like in the minor leagues.
It was like, you know, they're heavy hitters, you know, Eric Weinstein,
you're the third string QB.
And then it was, and it go back then, I don't know what I had,
like 10,000 followers or something.
And it was like, that would have been probably after your university
of Austin thing, maybe or around about that time.
It was before then even it was like, you know, I think you and I had just met and it was like still kind of early
days.
And I was looking at this and I'm like, I don't want to, you know, like, yeah, I like
some of the people who are, were whatever.
I don't know if it's not really still a thing anymore, but I like some of those people.
Like I'm not really in this IDW thing.
Like I thought it was kind of, yeah.
So talking about you moving into the real upper stratosphere, troposphere of class,
moving through your time in the Air Force, what about when you got to Yale first and then Cambridge?
What was some of the conventions that really stood out to you?
Because I think this has informed a lot of your ability to sit back and look at
these dynamics and go, oh, isn't that interesting because you have an anchoring bias to be able
to compare it to. You're like, oh, I saw this thing, and then I saw this, and then I saw that.
So I'm actually able to observe these dynamics for what they are rather than kind of, I get
to see code rather than matrix as opposed to have only ever grown up inside of the matrix. Oh, I see. Yeah, yeah.
I mean, so yeah, I arrived on campus 2015 as a mature student.
And it was so...
But Asians are looking like a normal age student.
I think I had the beard back then.
So I had like a full beard.
So this is like a very common thing with vets where like, because you have to shave every
day and they like inspect you to make sure it's like, it better be like this morning you shave,
not last night kind of thing.
And so as soon as I got on like, you know,
fuck I'm going to be here.
Not shave after six months.
I didn't work out.
I think I gained like 20 pounds.
The first semester was bad where I was like,
I was like, I don't have to work out anymore.
I don't have to shave.
Yeah, it was really nice.
And then like, I don't, I like looked in the mirror
like six months in and I was like, I gotta fake this.
This is horrible. But the first six months it was glorious.
Yeah.
And so, but yeah, I looked older, I was older and you know, the students, some of them would
crack jokes about 21 Jump Street, you know, like that kind of thing.
And yeah, it was, I think the first couple of months or so, nothing really unusual. But then I saw this very strange, you know, I mentioned before, like, witness the kind
of birth of this new politically correct movement where a professor had written an email essentially
defending freedom of expression on campus.
Later became known as the Yale Halloween costume controversy on campus where this
was October.
The Yale administration released this email basically telling the students to not engage
in any cultural appropriation, don't wear costumes that would be offensive to these
groups.
And then one of the faculty members on campus basically wrote an email just to her students
in her residential college saying like
Do we really need the administration interfering in our lives? Like you're all adults
I trust that if you wear things that maybe you don't other people don't like you guys can just work it out amongst yourselves
essentially defending freedom of expression and in response
Hundreds of students marched around campus calling for her to be fired. And later for her husband, Nicholas Christakis, to be fired, saying that she was racist,
she was defending cultural appropriation.
These students climbed, they didn't feel safe on campus.
And they were using this kind of language,
which I think like now all of this stuff
is kind of spilled out of the universities
and we're all kind of familiar
with all this sort of victimhood stuff.
But back then I was just completely like flummoxed
that you know, it was like that we're in danger, they caused
us pain, suffering, we're under immense harm. This is emblematic of broader systemic forces
that are working against. And I'm looking at these students and I know for a fact a
lot of them were the sons and daughters of millionaires. I remember asking one young female student,
basically like, can you explain like,
why is this offensive?
I don't understand.
And she basically told me I was too privileged
to understand why, you know,
why Erica Christakis' email was offensive.
Wow.
And, you know, she was like some white girl
who like went to private boarding school,
that like grew up in a rich neighborhood, but she was an activist and whatever.
And so she was like kind of the, is it the Titiana McGrath, like that archetype,
except like, you know, went to Yale and everything.
And so, and that was like an interesting thing too, was like on campus,
the whole identity politics
idea was that if you are a member of these certain sociological categories, then therefore
you are conferred legitimacy to opine on all of the social ills of the world and how to fix them
and so on. But then the students also placed a great deal of importance on lived experience,
you know, and if you live through something in your life, then therefore you're able to speak about
certain things, you're an authority on those matters.
But those two things seem to be, to me, contradictory that, does it matter what you live through
in your life or does it just matter what category you belong to? Isn't it interesting that you had 17 year squalor legitimacy when it comes to lived
experience, but the number one thing which is ignored is class.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly.
And it was, I mean, yeah, because there are so few people who had my kind of background
on campus and because so few students and graduates of these kinds of universities ever encounter it, it just isn't on their radar that they
don't even think about.
I mean, what's really interesting was that Yale is located in New Haven, which is a really
low income kind of blue collar town.
But they call it the Yale bubble where the students would only stick around in this very
sort of enclosed area.
But I lived off campus in an apartment downtown.
And so I would walk through a lot of poverty, a lot of squalor, a lot of addiction. And
having 20 minutes earlier heard some student talk about how they were oppressed, and then I'd see
real poverty and real suffering. And it was just very difficult for me to sort of reconcile those things.
And eventually, like, at first I tried to be sympathetic and tried to understand these,
you know, these grievances and the students and the graduates and the faculty and all
these, you know.
And then eventually I was like, these people have, you know, they just completely don't
understand.
They have no connection with it whatsoever.
And some of it I think is legitimately malicious and duplicitous.
I would see, for example, people claim that investment banks were emblematic of capitalist
oppression and say that these are just horrible entities.
And then those same people would be at a recruitment session for Goldman Sachs like
two weeks later. And I think like, you know, that to be was like, that was a calculated
move. Like, and what I mean by that is like, I want to work for them. Yeah, like if they
can basically eliminate their rivals for these prestigious internships, then all the better
for them. And so I think some of it was tactical and calculated. But I think for a lot of people,
it's just, you know,
their hearts are in the right place,
or they're not really thinking that much about it.
And so, yeah, this was, yeah, it was very strange.
And then, and then the other thing is, so this is funny,
I never knew my father growing up,
and I didn't know who he was or anything about him.
And it was only recently, I took a 23 in me and got the results and found that my father
was Mexican. And I went through, I called up our mutual friend, Rizib Khan, I was like,
hey, can you look at this with me and like help explain? He's like, yeah, your dad was like,
you know, Mexican, he was like, indigenous from North America with some Spanish
ancestry is like, that's like a perfect, he's like, you grew up in LA, man, like, what did you
expect? And I was like, okay, so my dad was Mexican. But so when I was at Yale, before I had this
information, I was hanging out in a dorm room with some students. And it was a friend of mine,
who was a Mexican guy. And, you know, he was not like a, you know, he wasn't an activist. He wasn't
like, woke or whatever. But I took a sombrero off the wall and put it on my head. And he was joking
around, but he said something like, Hey, you know, that's culture appropriation.
You can't wear that sombrero.
I was like, oh, my bad, you know, just joking around.
And then once I got these results back,
I was like, wait a minute, I'm allowed to wear that sombrero.
I could wear that sombrero.
I'm allowed to wear sombrero.
Get me a poncho, get me some fajitas.
And then the next that I had, yeah,
but the next that I had was like,
this just shows how stupid the whole thing
is in the first place, right?
Like someone from my background who didn't know my father who could have been like I could have believed like if I had
Believed in the cultural appropriation thing
I could have bought into it and now what am I supposed to think now that I have these DNA test results and then I you know
Just like the whole idea of like breaking people down into like these ethnic categories and they are or are not allowed to partake
in this activity or that or the other.
Like when there are people out there
who actually don't know who their fathers are
or don't know, they don't even know
what cultural appropriation means,
I just think like our attention and our resources
and our time are spent on such frivolous nonsense.
But is it the tyranny of small differences,
what's that thing? Yeah, the narcissism of small differences.
Narcissism of small differences, that's it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The smaller the differences between people,
the bigger that they're blown up to be.
When you have this relatively homogenous group of people
at Yale, it's all to do with,
you can't speak to her like that.
It's like, why?
Like she's exactly the same as you,
just that one grandmother's half African American
or something.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And everyone is from like the top,
probably the top decile of income.
I mean, at Yale, there are more students
from the top 1% of the income scale
than from the entire bottom 60%.
Like almost everybody is either, I mean, and like, yeah,
this is an interesting point,
the narcissism of small differences where a lot of the anger I felt was, it was like
between like someone at the 90th percentile income who they were angry at that 99th percentile,
right?
Like, you know, whatever, like someone from a family of whatever doctors and lawyers who
are sort of upper middle class who are angry that the children of billionaires get to do something a little more expensive or a little bit more, you know, they
get to go on a more expensive vacation or, you know, like all of that was very much confined with
people who are extremely affluent and well to do. And then there were, you know, a handful of people
like me. I mean, I'm the only one who had like the kind of life that I had, but I knew some people
from more kind of blue collar backgrounds. The underclass bona fides. Yeah, exactly. Who are really just kind of like
lower middle class blue collar, but not not like, I mean, it's the thing is like the way that the
system works is, I think we might have talked about this last time about just how few people,
like only less than 3% of foster kids graduate from university, less than 3%. And people who are from the bottom income quintile, it's 11%.
And so really, you're four times more likely to graduate from college if you're poor than
if you live through the foster system.
I mean, that's just how the odds are so stacked against you.
And so, yeah, I mean, even the people I knew who, so I think I was one of like eight veterans
on campus.
People think of the military as like, oh, kind of like people who maybe didn't
go to college or people who had maybe sort of a more hard scrabble life, which is maybe
to some extent true compared to people who go to expensive colleges.
But I was, so I was one of eight military vets on campus.
But even when I would interact with the other vets and listed vets in my cohort.
So there were eight in my cohort.
And I would speak with them.
I was like, oh, like basically all of them
were raised by two parents and like, you know,
had a mom and a dad who did prioritize education
and who, you know, kind of said good examples
and all of those things.
And I think, yeah, we focus a lot on,
I think the left focuses a lot on economics.
I think certain strands of the right
will focus on behavioral genetics,
but there is this sort of cultural component here too
that people don't really seem to want to touch.
At some point, I will write this post up about sort of
the limitations of sort of overextending the findings
of behavioral genetics.
I think like it's an important thing to know
and to understand and to be fluent in, but also to not discount the role of good habits,
customs, good behaviors. I wrote this post, nobody's a prisoner of their IQ. And I think that's an
important piece too, that it's true that the guys I grew up with, regardless of their parenting or
It's true that the guys I grew up with, regardless of their parenting or whatever their economic conditions were, they probably weren't going to be in a position to go to a very expensive,
you know, selective university.
But I think if they had been maybe taught different values and inculcated different
habits that, you know, two of them wouldn't have gone
to prison, one of them was shot to death, friends working sort of menial low-income jobs.
I mean, that's the sort of typical outcome of people in that community.
And I don't think like maybe we can't necessarily raise the ceiling for some people.
We can definitely raise the floor, I think.
Yeah.
And so one of the last episodes I did in this room was with destiny. And he prompted this idea that I named two step potential theory, which is a
blending of individual agency with real world limitations. Your efforts have tons
of control over your outcome within the range that your world's limitations will
allow. Behavioral genetics teaches us that on average around 50% of everything
that we are psychologically is inherited from our parents boo 50% of our outcomes are limited by our genetics. Yes, but that also means that 50%
of them are up to you. She's great. This is another reason to not only compare yourself
to who you were yesterday, not to who someone else is today, but it's also a reason to try
lots of things until you find the intersection of something that you love and something that
you're good at. And yeah, it's like, you can imagine that you
have a bracket within which your potential sits. And that bracket is determined very heavily
by outside forces. It's genetic predisposition, it's life circumstances, it's nutrition,
it's upbringing, it's fucking unconscious trauma, it's all the epigenetics, it's all
of that stuff. But your position
within that window is almost exclusively on you. Now, that window also determines your
ability to deploy your efforts, right? But that just moves the window, that doesn't move you
within the window. Yeah. Well, yeah, James Clear has this nice line in Atomic Habits about how
certain people become so preoccupied with their genetic limitations that they never try to actually
reach them. I love that quote.
Yeah, it's incredible, right?
And I think people understand this
at least in the context of physical fitness, right?
It's like, well, I'm never gonna look
like Arnold Schwarzenegger,
so I'm just not gonna go to the gym,
which is a completely misguided way to think about things.
But yeah, I like this line about behavioral genetics,
but then also there is individual agency involved,
and you do have some control over this.
I mean, I just wrote this post about Machiavelli and how in the Discourses on Livy he writes
about how, you know, he basically says, God doesn't want to do everything.
He's like, some of it is up to you.
You know, he was in a much more religious time than we are living in Italy in Catholic
Florence, and God doesn't want to do everything. So he was in a much more religious time than we are living in Italy in Catholic Florence
and God doesn't want to do everything.
But then he says, you know, basically 50% of your outcomes are due to fortune, 50% of
your outcomes are due to your own individual efforts, and fortune will favor you if you
take action, these kinds of things.
There's a political philosopher, Harvey Mansfield, who actually suggested that this transition
indicates that
Machiavelli may have been an atheist because at first he starts out saying,
God doesn't want to do everything. And then he starts saying, 50% is fortune and 50% is you.
Well, where does that leave room for God? And Machiavelli may have been sort of subtly indicating
to the reader that, you know, you can talk about God, you can think about God, but ultimately,
it's going to be luck and it's going to be you. And that's all you have.
Or if God his percentages wrong.
Yeah.
Exactly.
So one of the things I looked at your end of your review that you did and that actually
reminded me that I hadn't done mine as in the breakdown of what were the 10, I think
you did the 10 most read free articles and paid articles, which you'll still be up on
your website and people can go and check that out.
And that prompted me while I was back home in the UK that,
fuck, I haven't done mine for a lot of wisdom.
So thank you for that.
But the best red article that you had last year was one called How I Read.
And there's this great screenshot from Taleb in there.
Taleb says, the opposite of reading is not not reading,
but reading something like The New Yorker.
I love that line so much.
What do you think he means by that?
You know, Taleb is, so that, you know,
there's a screenshot from Twitter.
I think there's, you know,
there is the sort of Twitter Taleb,
and then there's the author Taleb.
There's different, you know,
there's different versions of him,
but I, the way that I interpreted that, you know,
the contankerous tweet from Taleb was that, you know,
if reading is defined as consuming useful, important,
timeless information, then reading the hot takes in legacy media institutions often colored
by bias, colored by the ideologies of our time, that that's actually the opposite of getting useful,
important timeless information.
You're getting sort of unuseful, unimportant,
timely, relevant maybe in the moment,
and then tomorrow people will forget all about it.
And so I think that's kind of what he meant here.
And to be fair, like I wrote in there
that I do enjoy reading The New Yorker sometimes,
but not as much as I enjoy that tweet.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
What's your advice for people who want to become better readers?
It's a habit.
I've been touching on this idea of discipline, of habit, of agency.
I think it's similar to a gym routine, where when you're starting out, it's difficult,
it's building it's difficult, it's, um, you know, sort of
building it into your schedule. But then once you get going, um, it becomes much easier to just sort
of set it and forget it that, you know, from these hours, from this time of day, I'm, I'm, you know,
I'm going to the gym and here's the workout and here's the routine. And now you don't have to
think about it anymore. That sort of discipline equals freedom idea. Um, And so I did that with reading. I've really been kind of on and off
readers since I was a kid. I taught myself how to read in the foster homes. And then reading became
this kind of like the soothing experience for me that I could sort of, you know, disconnect from
the world and learn about information and to say, yeah, Yeah, exactly. And so I would do that.
And so it's always been a sort of a companion for me.
But with, you know, everyone gets busy, everyone has a million things that they have to do,
they have work, they have obligations.
But for reading, yeah, it really does.
You really have to treat it like a gym routine or like a job or something, like an important
habit, set time aside every day.
And so this is what I was doing in grad school was, you know, first thing in the morning,
I'd have my cup of coffee and I try to read whatever, you know, five pages, 10 pages,
15 pages, whatever it is. If people don't really have the reading habit at all, I do like James
Clear's idea of like start from like the lowest unit of effort possible, like sentence. Yeah,
sentence. Yeah. Yes. I mean, it would be really weird if you started from the word level, but
yeah, sentence level or a paragraph level, you know, ideally you could get a page in,
you know, something substantive, and then build your way from there, whether it's a chapter,
whether it's a book, and so on. And I think, yeah, breaking it down in that way is helpful,
because, you know, I speak to some people who want to read and they're like, okay, I'm going to try
to finish this book this week, or I'm going to try to finish this book this month. And I think, like,
thinking in those terms isn't really helpful.
I think you have to break it down further of instead of a book a month, I'm going to
read three pages a day or 10 pages a day.
And then you'll finish the book when it gets finished.
The other thing is if a book is uninteresting to you or it's not holding your attention
to just let it go, you know, it's fine.
You don't have to read it just because you bought it or because you rented it from the
library or what have you.
It's okay.
Because everybody else says that it's good or because you read on Twitter that it's really
informative or you want to tell the people that you've read it that they've read it as
well.
Right.
And yeah, I mean, that's one of the things that I learned too was a lot of people, a
lot of the sort of chattering class people, they will not read the books that they claim
to have read, but they'll read reviews.
And so if you want to just know about a book, to participate in a conversation, just go
read three or four reviews online.
And that'll sort of give you the highlights of what people are talking about or what the
takeaways are that people care about from the book.
But if you really want to do a deep dive, if you really want to understand a book, then
yeah, you have to read the whole thing cover to cover.
But take it slow, do what you're comfortable with. If you want to skip around,
that's fine too, that if a particular chapter title sticks out at your, seems to be especially
provocative or interesting, start with that chapter first, and then you can go back. I would
recommend for most books, especially most older books, to actually read the preface, the author's note, the foreword, because for a lot of older texts,
I mentioned Machiavelli earlier, it does help that the prologues and all those kinds of
things, they will contextualize the book and explain to some degree, why is this book important,
why do people care about it, what's been the sort of commentary summary of this author's influence throughout the centuries? And so I do recommend reading that
and not just skipping to chapter one. And yeah, I mean, there are other things too that
you can read multiple books simultaneously, there's no rule in place. I think we learned
from school that one book at a time, you know, read this and hear the formula for how you read.
But actually you can do whatever you want, skip around, read two pages of this book, put it down,
you know, take a week off, read this other book for a while. I'll do that when I'm on vacation. I'll just start a new book. Even if I'm working on three other books back home,
I'll just pick up a new book off the shelf and go on vacation and that'll be my vacation book.
I do weird things like that and for me it's helpful.
And the other thing, it's helpful.
And the other thing is it's helpful to take notes to whether it's in the book itself.
People get mad at me sometimes on Twitter.
They're like, oh, you're defacing that book.
Like, oh, you're-
Fucking bought it.
Yeah.
It's my book.
Exactly, yeah.
It's not like I'm vandalized.
You know, there's a really good book
called How to Read a Book called Mortimer Adler, by Mortimer Adler.
He was a professor at the University of Chicago in the mid-late 20th century,
but he wrote this book basically explaining the different forms of reading, the different types
of reading. This is where I picked up a lot of this information about it. It's okay to skip around,
what are your goals for reading, break down the habit. But one of the points he's made is that no one missed, he makes this
analogy says no one mistakes the, what are they called in the composers of music, like
the sheet, the sheet music or something. No one confuses that for the melody itself, right?
It's like no one's, you know, it's not, the paper is not sacred.
The ideas on them are sacred. And most authors would be flattered if someone was so invested in
the book and the topic that they're in. They added their own fucking thing.
Yeah, and the marginalia and like, yeah, I mean, it's, it's, you see this with like, if you visit
museums, you know, Cambridge, they have like Darwin's notes or his scribblings of other people's texts.
And you can see like he was reading and he was making notes.
He was doing this in a time where it was actually harder to get books than it is now.
So engage with the book.
Try to understand what the points are in the book.
This is something that I used to do.
Even though I was a reader, I didn't really try
to understand what the book was about before I started it.
It was like, oh, here's an interesting title and I'd read the back of it and it would be,
oh, it's about X, Y, Z.
And I'll just start reading it and sort of fumble my way through rather than think about,
okay, where's this author coming from?
What point is he trying to make?
Why is this book important?
Try to take that sort of metal level perspective as well
so that you can really understand where he's coming from
and break down the points.
If you really want to,
especially for more modern social science books,
one thing you can do is essentially just read
the first and last chapter
or the preface in the last chapter,
because that's just the way,
that's just the style of reading or the style of writing now where publishers want you to just basically summarize the idea at the
beginning and the end for busy people, for tired people.
What's this book about?
What are you going to talk about?
And then at the end say, here's what I talked about.
And that'll sort of give you maybe 50%.
What a funny hack.
That's so funny.
What about revisiting things? Because your recall seems to be quite impressive, which is something that people want.
They want to, reading something and then not being able to recall what you read is kind
of in some ways like not having read it at all.
Yeah.
Well, I think taking notes, highlighting, and then what I'll do is like, you know, I'll
have like a Google doc or some kind of note taking app where I'll like cut and paste
if it's like Kindle version or if it's the paper version, I'll, sometimes I'll just post
it on Twitter.
And then that'll be like the search function where I can find it later.
Or I can, yeah, I'll just like,
But I hope that you don't get deleted from Twitter.
I know that would be.
It's not the access to the audience.
It's my own archive of my notes.
Exactly. God damn it. That would be, that would be. It's not the access to the audience, it's my own archive of my notes. Exactly.
God damn it.
That would be rough.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so, yeah, so I think sharing it in that way, and that's actually how my Twitter started,
was me just sharing notes and things I was reading.
That's like how the initial sort of growth occurred was, you know, I was in, I think
it was an undergrad when I started it in 2017, posting my notes online and my highlights
and underlines.
And so, yeah, I think like pinpointing the interesting points, doing like a very brief
summary, even it's literally one sentence, preferably a paragraph.
If you finish a book, like what did you get from this book?
What are two or three things that you remember right now having just finished Reddit?
Because if you have just finished reading a book, the most important or
interesting or provocative points will be at the top of your mind.
Just try to paraphrase it.
Don't even go back to the book and say, well, what did he actually say?
Try to say, what did I remember?
Type it out, try to use that forced recall.
And that'll help to sort of get it into long term memory.
And then every once in a while,
like if I'm flying on a plane,
or if I'm, you know, waiting in line or something,
usually I'll read a book,
but sometimes I'll actually just revisit my notes
and say, you know, what did that book say?
Or what was that point?
And do like a control F if I just want to read about
whatever, mating psychology or what have you,
I'll just do the control F.
And okay, here are my notes on mating psychology
from David Busse or this book or that book. and that'll help me to just sort of connect the dots
and also help to provide material for my sub-stack.
Which is most important, obviously.
Right.
Rob, I appreciate the hell out of you.
It's very good to speak to you again.
I'm so happy that this book's finally out.
It's taken forever.
Yeah, it's been five years plus, yeah, in the making.
Yeah, that this has been going and then it's been ready to be published for a good while as well
And you've been sort of held at the starting line
So where should people go? They want to check out the book that substacked the everything else?
Yeah, they can get my book troubled a memoir foster care family in social class. That's you know, wherever wherever books are sold and
Yeah, follow me on Twitter at Rob. Get Henderson substack Rob. Getkehenderson.com. Hell yeah. Thanks, Rob.
Thank you, Chris.