Offline with Jon Favreau - How To Change Alt Right Minds, with ContraPoints
Episode Date: August 28, 2022For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast. ...
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it's sort of a face-to-face interpersonal connection
that makes people feel like, I don't know,
you're talking to them on some kind of human level.
And I think for people who, I don't know,
majored in economics or philosophy or political science,
this is a little bit infuriating
because I think it's really an academic bias
that assumes that like a reason is this thing
that has this kind of special, unique place.
And democracy, whereas I do think that anyway, I mean,
if you're making campaign videos, you're tweeting for all politicians,
you'd know that this is not about reason.
Like there has to be some room for reason, right?
Otherwise it's literally just some kind of, I don't know, sick, like.
Then it's just vibes.
Yeah, it's vibes. It's, it's, it's vibes and,'s vibes and violence, like at the end of the day.
I'm Jon Favreau.
Welcome to Offline.
Hey, everyone.
My guest today is self-described YouTuber and ex-philosopher Natalie Nguyen, better
known as ContraPoints.
I'm sure many of you are already huge fans, and you should all know that Natalie was as
insightful and entertaining as you might guess. For the rest of you who are hearing about ContraPoints for the first time,
stick with us. You are in for a treat. ContraPoints is one of YouTube's most thoughtful,
effective political commentators. The Verge has called her an elegant, whip-smart middle finger
to the swamps of the internet. Vice has called her the opposite of the internet. She's earned these accolades
because of her carefully produced, very long video essays, where she's usually moodily lit,
dressed in some kind of Victorian costume, and delivering a smart, compelling, self-deprecating
exploration of some controversial issue. Cancel culture, transphobia, Jordan Peterson, voting,
justice, incels. Natalie's videos are treatises to
understanding some of the internet's most heated debates. But what makes Natalie unique among the
internet's political commentators is her uncanny ability to attract viewers with reactionary,
right-wing politics and actually change their minds. Her approach is empathetic, slow, nuanced,
everything the internet isn't.
And it works. In the comments beneath any of her videos, you'll see people saying she changed their
mind. And I don't know too many other places where I see that today. All of this is to say I was very
excited to talk to Natalie. I was curious to hear her thoughts on style versus reasoning and the
work of political persuasion, how, in her words, the internet became fascist
in 2017, and what she can teach all of us about what it takes to actually change people's
minds in an era dominated by online debate.
We talked about all of that and so much more, including cancel culture, political organizing,
why the left is bad at persuasion, and why it's so hard for all of us to talk about climate
change.
As always, if you have comments, questions, or complaints, feel free to reach out to us at offline at crooked.com.
And please do rate, review, and share the show.
Here's Natalie Wynn, also known as ContraPoints.
Natalie Wynn, welcome to Offline.
Thank you. So we spend a lot of time on this show complaining about all the ways that the internet is breaking our brains.
Oh, yes.
The quick dopamine hits, the short attention spans, you know, the debates that lack context and nuance and the abundance of humorless scolds out there that are outraged about everything all the time.
You are this wildly successful YouTuber known for these incredibly thoughtful, entertaining,
funny, long videos about some fairly controversial topics that rack up millions of views,
all of which led Vice to call you the opposite of the internet.
What do you think of that characterization?
Well, I don't know that I'm the, I mean, if I'm the opposite of the internet. What do you think of that characterization? Well, I don't know that I'm the, I mean,
if I'm the opposite of the internet,
then I'm an opposite that's contained deeply within it.
You know, in some kind of metaphysical way where like every man contains a woman
and every woman contains a man.
Like, because I don't think that what I do
can be separated from the fact that it
completely evolved online um so i guess in one sense i am dissenting against the way politics
is usually done on the internet but also i think that what i do is kind of inherently linked with
uh my experiences online well so you've called called yourself an ex-philosopher.
Yes.
Why the ex?
Just to go back a little bit before you started making these YouTube videos.
Well, I was getting a PhD in philosophy.
That was one of my previous career attempts.
And so I was at Northwestern in a PhD program. And I think
what it came down to is being an academic just doesn't agree with me. It's not a personality fit.
I mean, I respect academics. I think that the world needs to have academics. But to do that,
you sort of need to be able to sort of focus your attention on one issue for five years. And
that's, I mean, that's ultimately what writing a dissertation is. That's how you get a PhD.
So that to me was the problem. I realized that I'm kind of more of a, I don't know about more
of a big picture person. I also kind of think I have a very short attention a, I don't know if I'm more of a big picture person.
I also kind of think I have a very short attention span, which, you know, I guess you might not guess considering that I make videos that are 90 minutes long.
But I think that to me, I just don't have that thing that makes you want to study one
species of bacteria for five years or write about the same,
like three paragraphs of Heidegger or whatever.
Like I just,
I just can't do it.
I don't know.
I like YouTube.
I like the frenetic pace of it.
I like being entertained.
So there's a kind of hedonistic thing about me.
I think that makes me sort of like,
yes, I'm interested in politics.
I'm interested in philosophy.
I'm interested in ideas,
but I also want to be entertained. Like, yes, I'm interested in politics. I'm interested in philosophy. I'm interested in ideas.
But I also want to be entertained.
And I'm easily bored.
So that to me is why YouTube is appealing.
I always felt like the further you get into academia too, the further removed you are from the real world of human beings.
And it becomes, especially if you're like writing a dissertation like that, it feels a little lonely. It's like you're just sort of by yourself with all of these words and you kind of lose touch with actually what's going on in the real world. So what led you to start
making these YouTube videos in the first place? And for people listening who aren't familiar with
your videos, like, could you give an example of a few of the topics you've covered and why you
picked them? Yeah, let's see. Over the years, I've covered incels. I've covered J.K. Rowling's anti-trans comments. I've covered
the entire concept of envy as just a kind of a social psychology of the internet kind of
phenomenon. I started out more interested in kind of the far right and the way that it was operating
online uh specifically these kind of um alt right this was 2016 when i really got started so
like the early stages of trumpism on the internet and if it was called the manosphere which is a
term i haven't heard in years but basically basically it was this kind of loose network of influencers who were doing,
I guess the sort of 2022 reference point would be Andrew Tate,
sort of deeply misogynistic dating advice and gender politics.
It was very, it was, I mean, it's still popular now,
but it was a big was, I mean, it's still popular now. But it was, it was,
it was a big deal on, on YouTube in 2016. So I guess the way it looks to me at the time was that
I felt that these guys were kind of winning. Like they seemed, at least on the online space.
I think at the time I felt that, you know, people in academia were so disconnected from like what people actually thought.
And I thought at the time the Internet was a better reflection of that.
Now I'm kind of not so sure about that.
But I do think that, you know, maybe it's not what the average person thinks, what you see online, but it is what millions of people think.
And millions is something yeah i mean i've heard you jokingly describe your
youtube channel as you talking about how the internet became fascist in 2017 yeah um how how
did the internet become fascist in 2017 yeah it's a great question i mean i think what happened is
you have so there's this dynamic with the internet as a forum for ideas where I think people who feel that their thoughts are sort of
suppressed, not represented, unspeakable even in sort of more conventional media or even in kind of
public spaces will kind of assemble online to discuss them. So I watched this happen
in the late 2000s with atheism there were all these people
online writing about atheism making youtube videos about atheism and a lot of the time what you had
is like a lot of people who had very religious upbringings sometimes they were the only atheist
and their small town or whatever but online this kind of like marginalized like fringe
um sort of belief system uh of course atheism isn fringe sort of belief system.
Of course, atheism isn't really a belief system.
So that's why that community didn't last.
But, you know, like I think I've watched similar things happen with,
you know, the trans community on the internet. We're being trans, this is like fringe, marginal,
isolating experience for most people offline.
But online, you can create a kind of pseudo community around it.
Well, I think that's happened with people
with sort of a variety of reactionary ideas.
A backlash to the Obama administration,
feelings about race that seemed unsayable
to a lot of white people, but they were thinking it.
Feelings about gender, about sexuality,
that, you know i guess in
2017 me too has gone too far and like this is kind of this terribly oppressive thing to men
um all this kind of i think there was there was millions of people who felt that they weren't
allowed to say what they were thinking and reactionary internet influencers kind of gave them a voice for better
or worse, mostly for worse. What I've always wondered is, you know, is it something about
the structure of the internet that incentivizes reactionary politics? Or does the internet just
give people with reactionary politics plenty of space to find each other? Yeah, that's a good question. I don't have
a definitive answer. I think that it's both. I think that, yes, there's the dynamic I just
described where people who have kind of beliefs that are sort of considered more marginal in,
you know, whatever their community happens to be, will form a pseudo community online.
I also think that because it's kind of an attention economy,
that extreme and controversial viewpoints
can generate a lot of attention.
Where if people are saying something
that a lot of people find outrageous,
well, everyone wants to talk about that outrageous thing.
We're all dunking at it on Twitter.
We're all making videos about it on YouTube.
It generates attention.
This is how Trump got big, the snowballing of negative attention
and also people feeling that Trump sort of speaks for their sort of instinctual feelings in some horrible way.
Yeah.
I mean, how much do you think the YouTube algorithm is responsible for sending people down these rabbit holes?
It's, again, a little difficult to say. No one seems to fully understand how the YouTube algorithm works. It was widely blamed, I will say, but a lot of journalists blamed YouTube for what happened. And I think there's certainly some truth to the idea that the algorithm led people into extreme right-wing politics.
I mean, I sort of watched this happen myself to some extent.
You would start out watching a video that would be called something like Feminist Cringe Compilation.
And it would be this video, you know, 10 minutes,
all these different cell phone videos of like blue-haired campus activists
embarrassing themselves in public or whatever.
And this apparently is very cathartic to some people to watch.
So you would watch that and then the next video would be someone sort of talking about how feminism is cancer and then the next one after that would be about how you know look at how the
demographics of western countries are changing like white people are going to be a minority soon
and then the one after that would be how the jews are replacing white people right so wow we got there yeah there was a kind of
there'd be this kind of like escalation and i don't know i there there was sort of like um
these sort of networks of influencers where some of them were just kind of politically incorrect
comedy kind of people who didn't really seem to have that deep an
ideological attachment to any of this but who sort of wanted to be able to make they wanted to say
racial slurs you know that's kind of the extent of their politics was they don't like being scolded
they don't like being told what to do and then you had these other people who were reading like
you know fascist philosophers in the 1930s and who had like a deeply entrenched ideological system that they were sort of using this moment to exploit.
Well, it seems like you sort of saw 2016 coming in a way. You've said that the 2016 election confirmed that people were voting the same way they were leaving YouTube comments.
I found that interesting because I had Jennifer Senior on to talk about her piece on Steve Bannon like a month ago. And she was talking about how Steve Bannon's evil genius was basically weaponizing the comment section of Breitbart
to sort of build the MAGA movement.
How do you think that's related, the comment section in YouTube, to actual voting in 2016?
Well, I do think that to a lot of people, the internet has forced a more realistic idea
about what the average person thinks um or at least what a
certain subset of people think like i remember in 2015 2016 people would just very commonly assert
that racism that's just it just doesn't exist anymore right like sure it was it was we elected
obama and everything's fixed right it was a problem in the 1960s but like we're over that obama won
like why are you talking about racism?
You're just trying to create this division that's just not there.
I don't hear anyone say that anymore.
It seems like we all kind of recognize that, oh,
racism is this massive force that is a hugely influential thing
in American politics.
And I feel that, you know, I do feel I was right about it.
Like when you see hundreds or thousands of racist comments on every single thing about Black Lives Matter or about, you know that i do feel i was right about it like when when you see hundreds of thousands of racist
comments on every single thing about black lives matter or about you know whatever it was in the
2010s the ferguson uprising freddie gray and baltimore like i don't know that's not just people
saying offensive things because you know they're. Like people on some level are describing how they actually feel.
And if they'll comment that when no one's looking,
they're probably also going to vote based on those feelings as well.
So you come along and decide that you're going to create these videos
with the hope that they persuade people to think differently
about a range of political and cultural issues.
Persuasion seems like a rare goal
of debate these days, especially on the internet. I feel like it's even more rarely achieved. But
you've heard from alt-right people who've said that your videos have dragged them out of their
rabbit holes and changed their mind. Can you talk a little bit about how you settled on your approach and your style in these videos?
Well, to me, I suppose, first of all, I don't consider what I do to be debate.
And that's, I think, an important part of the reason this works.
Because in debate, it's true, your goal can't really be to persuade, certainly not the person you're talking to.
Because debate is, it's like sports.
Like the point is to win.
Trying to win. Yeah, it's like sports. Like the point is to try to win.
Yeah.
It's like this dominant dominance kind of competition.
But so I guess sometimes I,
what I do in videos,
especially,
you know,
videos from the,
that era,
it's a kind of pseudo debate,
I guess,
where I respond to a figure like Jordan Peterson.
Right.
And I guess to me, persuasion is an emotional
thing. It's really, I don't know, I guess I'm interested in the psychology of persuasion. And
I just think the importance of reason has been grossly overstated when it comes to how people
change their minds. I think a lot of times it has to do with a personality, sensibility, making people feel like you kind of see where they're coming from on some level is kind of this, I feel like, entry point.
You kind of have to get people to lower their defenses before they're even open to reasons.
And that is something that has more to do with style than substance. So I guess to me, it's about, you know,
I don't know, if you want to convince
Jordan Peterson fans or whatever,
I don't know, you have to be in some way
non-threatening to them,
which is, I guess to me,
I used to try to sort of achieve this
with self-deprecation or, you know,
like I'm trying to communicate to the
viewer i don't think i'm better than you like i'm not here to scold you like you're allowed to think
that i'm trash or whatever like but also like you know i think then that sort of opens them up to
your way of looking um as you say like okay maybe this psychology professor who insists that
trans people wanting to be called by pronouns
is not the same thing as Maoism. Like, you know, you can sort of get them to see that that's
somewhat of an exaggerated claim. I mean, but that is just back to sort of the opposite of
the internet. That is just so different from how most conversation and most political conversation plays out today. I actually
feel like, you know, the response to Trump and Trumpism over the last several years has been so
focused on like, we're going to fact check the right, or we're going to find the truth, or the
media must actually tell the truth, or journalists have to do their jobs and it's all about truth and reason. And I think what you're
saying is that it's much more about emotion and sort of understanding where people come from.
It sounds like what you're saying is it's about empathy in some sort of way.
Yeah, I think that empathy is helpful and that you sort of have to know,
you sort of have to be able to guess how people are feeling in order to resonate on a frequency that, that, that, that they're going to pick up.
I think that that's a skill that's sort of not really part of,
I mean,
it's certainly not very much part of a Western philosophical tradition and any
kind of idea of debate that comes from that. Like it's not, you know,
there's this idea in like plato's
dialogues for example where like you know i guess even plato kind of figured it out because
socrates they do kill him um right but but i feel like the conclusion of socrates being uh
sentenced to death is like oh this retreat from democracy as this awful thing and oh we need to
create this um you know this academy where we only let in people who are sort of, who have studied trigonometry
and who are open to reasoning and they'll see the truth. Well, I don't think even that will work.
I think to me, I guess I have a more like psychoanalytic view of reasoning. Like, I don't
know, I feel that a lot of it's kind of unconscious and
it's motivated by anxiety and identity as opposed to being a kind of process of like reasoning to
conclusions from premises well and and it does seem like if you want i mean to your point about
democracy democracy is necessarily messy and sort of requires the ability to persuade one another.
Like without the ability to persuade, can you even have democracy?
Yeah, well, that's kind of this big scary question, right?
Because I think that part of the reluctance, I think, especially for liberals to acknowledge what I'm saying here is that a lot of our ideas about how
democracy works are supposed to be founded on the idea that it's possible to have public discourse
where reason to some extent prevails and where the better arguments do defeat the weaker. And where it's possible to reach some kind of rational consensus.
And I guess I am kind of questioning that.
What that means for democracy, I'm not going to pretend I have an easy answer to.
But I do think what's hopeful about what you do is, look, I mean, I got into politics because I thought that like you could persuade people to think differently.
And I was a speechwriter for Barack Obama because I thought like not just through facts and reason, but through emotion and by telling, you know, the story of America at its best, not just at its worst, that we could like move people. But I think that sort of like
over time, it feels like the left hasn't quite figured out how to persuade effectively. And yet
I see, you know, with some of these videos you've done, if you can reach people who have been alt
right and who believed some of these reactionary politics, and then they say after watching some
of your videos, oh, I actually think differently now. And you've
actually pulled me out of this rabbit hole. That to me seems incredibly hopeful. And if we could
somehow figure out how to do that, maybe we'd be in a better place.
Yeah, there is a kind of silver lining, I guess, in that it is possible to change people's minds.
Right. So I have to believe that. I feel like if we if we can't believe that, then we then we are sort of lost. Right. If we if we don't believe that we can change people's.
I do believe that. I mean, actually, some of the people who I think have the most realistic view of this are like campaign field organizers.
I mean, I like I used to work on the Obama campaign, like at the lowest possible level knocking on doors and things um and yeah
what the field organizers would tell us was like look don't overwhelm people with a bunch of facts
and and and intricate policy discussion like tell a story that that will they'll connect with
emotionally oh my aunt or whoever had cancer and like couldn't uh you know she but the affordable
care act like she was able to get you know this this
kind of thing like it's sort of a face-to-face connect interpersonal connection that makes
people feel like i don't know you're talking to them on some kind of human level um and i think
for people who i don't know majored in economics or philosophy or or political science this is a
little bit infuriating because i think it's really
it's really an academic bias that assumes that like a reason is this thing that you know has
this kind of special unique place and democracy whereas i do think that anyway i mean if you're
making campaign videos you're tweeting for all politicians you know that this is not about reason like um so uh i i guess
there is some there has to be some room for reason right otherwise it's literally just
some kind of i don't know sick like then it's just vibes yeah it's vibes it's it's vibes and
and violence like at the end at the end of the day um so that's a little scary, but I think that, I don't know,
I think it's probably possible to incorporate
the kind of more irrational part of persuasion
and of political identity formation
and to engage that for what we decided,
whatever we decide are good ends.
I mean, you mentioned this, but I think humor plays a very important role here as well.
And, you know, in your videos, you don't take yourself too seriously.
You engage in a lot of self-deprecating humor.
It does feel today that politics and political conversation and debate has like been sort of sapped of all humor
like and it's like that there's sort of look for good reason there are a lot of sort of moralistic
tones taken by a lot of people because there are big sort of moral issues at stake here but how do
you think about like humor as an effective tool for persuasion well humor is uh i guess pleasure it's pleasurable
people like to laugh and i think that uh you know people kind of have a tendency to chase what feels
good so being funny is inviting it encourages people to come it encourages people to stay and i think that uh you know the opposite
is true of sermonizing uh people except for people who who are very guilty and who have a kind of
masochistic like wish to be scolded which is also a thing but i think that if you're not you're not
engaging with guilty people um you know then humor is my much more inviting kind of
stylistic choice, right?
Because I think that when I'm going through a video script, I'm thinking like, could someone
who doesn't really agree with me watch this or listen to it and feel like they basically
could get along with me despite the disagreement?
Even if that's an illusion and
like we totally wouldn't get along at all i do think that like i don't know if you can create a
you know when you're creating a video script you're creating a persona and creating a persona
that people find sort of approachable and uh not you know so threatening and scary as someone who's saying you're a horrible person, you know.
I mean, I think that probably this is important when it comes to things like,
you know, climate change too, where like, no, you know, no one wants to talk about climate
change because it's just, it just seems to be a promise of misery with like no, I don't know,
I feel that that sort of suppresses
like engagement with with the topic i certainly think it does for me so if someone could find a
way to talk about that without making everyone just feel depressed and hopeless i mean i thought
you did a great job of that and uh in in your climate video but we've we've wrestled with that
here quite a bit too because i do think the problem with talking about climate change is you have sort of like the things you have to all sacrifice now to avoid existential, you know,
elimination later on. Like it becomes so heavy that now when I see stories about how bad things
are getting, like you don't want to click on those stories after a while because you're like, oh,
because everything seems hopeless and awful
and it seems too big to solve.
Like, I don't know if I want to engage in that.
I just, I believe it, but I'm like afraid of it.
Oh, I'm exactly the same way.
Like I don't want any climate change news
because it's like, it's not really,
I'm not going to help anything as a result of reading this.
And it's just going to make me feel more powerless more helpless and
sort of you know i which i think it is like such a i think helplessness is like such a devastating
feeling when it comes to politics because it just completely saps people any kind of will to action
well i always think about this in terms of i I talk about this with our team all the time.
It's like, look, there's politics ends up being for better or for worse and often for worse,
sort of you're trying to get people to join your team.
And do you want to join a team that is sort of like overly moralistic and scolding and
everything seems miserable all the time?
Or do you want to join a team that like recognizes
that there are very serious existential challenges,
but like wants to sort of address them
and fight them in a joyful struggle, right?
And like, come be on our team
and we'll take ourselves seriously
and we'll laugh a little bit about it.
And we'll have fun along the way and it'll be hard.
And, you know, we have some real enemies here,
but like, we're going to have fun doing it.
Like, I just think that's a better approach for politics.
And it doesn't seem like that's what we have right now.
Yeah, I certainly agree.
I think that's definitely the approach that works for me as the team that I want to be
part of.
I think we have to recognize that a lot of times there's these conflicts of personality
masquerading as other kinds of more substantive conflicts. And I think there's different personalities
who will kind of be attracted to different political styles
or different rhetorical styles.
So I think that it's kind of important to recognize
that within one movement, say a progressive coalition,
you're going to have different sort of subgroups
that cater to the different personality types. And I say that because I think as hard as for people like me
to believe, I think some people actually do like the misery and they actually do like being scolded
and they like being told that the apocalypse is coming. I don't know. I think either it sort of validates,
it gives them a sort of rationalization
for some kind of subjective feeling of doom
or some kind of, you know,
they like being chastised because they feel guilty
or they are very angry about things going on in their life
and they want to be able to sort of, you know,
moralistically vent that anger.
So those people will be attracted to that kind of style. But I do think that, you know, moralistically vent that anger. So those people will be attracted
to that kind of style. But I do think that, you know, if that's the only thing on offer,
most people will be terribly put off by it, even if they want to support the issue.
One of your more popular videos is about cancel culture, including your personal experiences with it.
You've described yourself as a conscientious objector in the cancel culture wars.
You just don't want to participate, don't want to call anyone out.
Why is that? How did you come to that conclusion?
Well, I think I kind of realized that most of these call-out posts on the internet, they don't have a good effect.
It's incredibly divisive.
I think it's also, I guess I got this sense that for a lot of people,
watching the downfall of someone is its own form of entertainment.
And the minute you call someone out, it's sort of out of your control
um i think my my views on this have really sort of evolved a bit since i made that video because
i made a video on canceling when i was like very much in the heat of it myself um and it's hard
to step out of that when you're when you be cut when you get the heat yeah yeah well i think i think at the time
that i made that video also like i was really not doing very well at all i think that canceling um
you know it can have a pretty serious effect on someone who's not doing well otherwise
and to someone who's sort of mentally together and has a support network it's not a big deal at all
um it really depends on the circumstances but that's i guess that that is part
of the argument i was making that to a more marginalized person uh you know social media
shaming or ostracism poses a much more serious threat it's not that i'm a conscientious objector
from dunking on people on twitter because i noticed i haven't stopped doing that but i do i
do think i'm cautious about who I'm doing it to.
And I try not to kick people when they're down unless they truly deserve it.
Yeah.
I mean, during that video, I thought you gave one of the best, most anti-internet observations I've ever heard about why we should think twice before calling out or canceling. You said, sometimes people who seem ignorant or hateful
just need to be given a nonjudgmental space to learn and grow and think, and to just condemn
them as hopeless bigots actually prevents that growth from happening. So I feel like that kind
of growth should be a fundamental goal of progressive politics. And yet, I also think
the left has had a harder time in recent years giving
people that non-judgmental space do you agree and and if so why do you think that is well i think
that social media just inherently can't be that space because right it's such like a public like
reactive um thing where you what you really need is a kind of off stage to work this kind of stuff out.
And as long as people are on stage, they're going to perform their own correct,
you know, their own victory, their own correctness. Like it's like,
it's like debate basically. And so, you know,
once you have a public figure, for example, like, I don't know,
I'm thinking about JK Rowling again.
Like, so, and in retrospect, it's difficult to say, like, how committed to her sort of anti-trans position she was from the beginning and how much she sort of developed as she, you know, got a very, I'm sure, vicious backlash on social media. I think that when someone's a public figure of that size,
it's honestly very difficult to get that kind of offstage space for them. And it's something
they kind of have to do on their own. We sort of can't do it for them. I think it's something that
I like to hope that I will do. I don't know. I understand how much it hurts and how it's something that I like to hope that I will do. Like, I don't know. I understand how much it hurts and how it's,
it's humiliating to be canceled or to be shamed on social media.
You,
your impulse is certainly to come out and defend yourself even harder and to
double down and to show how right you were,
which,
which proves how wrong all the people who said all those nasty things were.
But I think that I've watched this dynamic play out enough that I will try.
I try sort of try to create.
It's been a while since I've actually caused any real controversy in part because I've gotten more cautious about how I tweet.
But I think that I don't know.
There's been a couple of times in the last couple of years when I did sort of see what was happening and and, you know, not make a conscious decision.
I'm not going to lash out at the people who are coming for me because I don't want to get in terms of like the J.K. Rowling's of the world as much people who are like in, you know, more privileged, powerful positions. I think about what it does or what it means for sort of the quality of our
conversation and the ability of people to sort of talk to each other and learn from one another and
grow in a way where you can make mistakes along the way and still be allowed that space to learn
and grow and become a better person. And one of, I think, the consequences of seeing some of the more powerful
people in the world be canceled or be called out is that you're much more cautious of what you tweet
and what you say and how you form an argument. And look, I think some of that's great because
you don't want to say ignorant, dumb things that hurt people. But it's also, I sometimes wonder
what that does to the to the overall
conversation and public conversation yeah i definitely think there's a danger that
you create this kind of superficial consensus through terror where people you know they agree
with whatever your talking points are because they feel like they have to but inside they're
kind of thinking this is nonsense like i'm just saying this to not you know cause trouble but i think
that that's an inherently fragile situation because the minute someone comes out and says
look we aren't we all thinking that you know xyz um you know horrible bigoted thing well there's
all these people who've been quietly, you know, staying in their place
who suddenly are going to face a real temptation
to go along with this person
who is in fact saying what they've been thinking.
So I do think that, you know,
people who want to do this type of,
you know, public persuasion work,
it is helpful to try to address like the thoughts
that a lot of people probably sincerely have. So I think I did, I did, I didn't end up doing a video
on JK Rowling. And I think for the sake of that video, I kind of pretended that I thought she was
more sincere than I in fact think that she is in part because I'm not making this video to convince JK
Rowling I'm making this video because I think that probably most people do I want to say most
I think I do I think that probably a majority of people secretly kind of think she's right
or not so secretly at all and so to those people I guess I want them to be able to watch this video
and feel like I'm taking their thoughts seriously. you'll have a lot of liberals be like, you see those people at the Trump rally, like we're never going to reach them. And my answer is like, probably for 90% of them,
correct. You're not going to reach them. But there's a bunch of people who voted for Donald
Trump, who previously voted for Barack Obama twice, and voted for Donald Trump. And by the
way, guess what, we got them back. And some of them voted for Joe Biden, because voters are weird
and complicated, because they're human. And if we think that we can't reach them or they're not worth reaching
or that they're all just like hopelessly racist and bigoted,
then like we might be right about a lot of them.
But if we're trying to like build a productive, peaceful society,
we kind of need to reach them and get them on our side, right?
Yeah, I think it's easy to kind of stereotype, for example a trump voter as as someone who is just ride or die who's who is never you know because
i think those are in some ways the loudest trump supporters are the people who are not very
persuadable um and so it's easy to think that that's what we're dealing with here that everyone's
like that but in fact there's probably a very wide variety of
i mean there definitely is a very wide variety of people who are voting trump for a wide variety of
reasons and there's certainly a subset of those people who you know are open to outreach who are
open to some doing something different especially in four years you know right yeah what topics and debates are interesting you
right now in your uh public persuasion work well i am i guess i'm kind of taking a bit of a break
from like politics in the most literal sense um i i guess what i'm really interested in lately is
psychology um and to me like politics is a very interesting way to look at psychology
so i did this video about envy where i feel like what caught my attention is the way a lot of
you know especially social media kinds of debates the especially those like adjacent to sort of the
cancel culture conversations.
Oh,
isn't it horrible that Kim Kardashian had this big birthday party or whatever?
Like it's all about optics and it's all about the kind of feelings that
other people's posts evoke.
And I guess like,
I noticed that envy seemed to play a big role in a lot of these.
No one ever says the word envy is how I felt.
And it just seems to me to be this unobserved force acting on so many of the dynamics.
Not just cancel culture type things, but even more elaborate things like i think when it comes to the sort of gender politics um wars that people get into so much of it has to do with um you know these feelings of envy between men and women or feelings of envy about trans people or feelings
are in the other direction you know people who are sort of marginalized can
be develop a politics of resentment that while maybe understandable is self-defeating in the end
because it's this it's just this kind of negativity that focuses on how unfair it is that this person
has it easier than you and and sort of endlessly picking at that wound
in a way that doesn't really,
that it's not really sort of,
it doesn't lend itself to progressive action
because it's so negative.
Do you think the internet has made that worse
because it's just in our face all the time?
Whether it's what a celebrity does or has, what whether it's what a celebrity does or has or
whether it's what someone that we know some vacation they went on on instagram like do you
think that the internet has made this worse i think that social media is bad for social cohesion
um in part because it may it puts everyone's lives in front of everyone's faces and makes
it really easy to to compare ourselves to other people um and i think
that that does sort of make it more difficult for people to get along because it's not just like uh
i have to i have to i feel that i have to speak carefully because i've kind of learned that when
you talk about envy and politics everyone thinks that what you're saying is oh so you're saying
that anyone who wants a more equal society is just envious of the rich.
That's really not what I'm saying. I'm really not saying that. I'm saying that,
I guess one of the points that I tried to make in this video is that a lot of times it's the
smallest differences that seem to generate a lot of envy, right? So it's like people who you sort
of identify with are people who you
consider close to yourself. So that's who you're sort of most likely to fixate on in terms of envy.
And I think that it's not really Kim Kardashian at the end of the day who the envy is really
causing damage for. So I don't know. That's something that definitely caught my interest.
I'm kind of working on a project now that's about sex and power.
So that's...
Well, that's...
I mean, look, I just want everyone listening who has not seen a ContraPoints video,
do yourself a favor and check one out.
The other thing, too, is they are...
I would have thought that
in this age of internet where like all of our attention spans are shorter and shorter and
shorter that uh a 30 or 60 or 90 minute youtube video like would not be the kind that a lot of
people would watch and yet here you are with these like long videos with millions and millions of
views what do you make of that that you people with in like long videos with millions and millions of views.
What do you make of that?
That people with in a short attention span sort of world, people are sitting down with these long videos.
It definitely is something that surprised me, too.
I think, you know, when I first started dabbling around on YouTube in the 2010s, the advice
everyone was given was like, oh, keep it under five minutes like no one's going to watch
long videos. And on YouTube, the opposite has happened, you know,
where I think especially in the pandemic,
people were spending more time online.
There's this desire for like really long form content.
I think part of it is people are, you know,
people are putting it on while they're doing laundry,
while they're going to bed, while they're cooking,
while they're driving.
It's sort of similar to podcast content in that way.
Yeah, that's right.
And I think that, you know, a lot of, I guess I think that probably a lot of people who
are watching long-form content aren't staring at the screen wrapped the entire time, you
know, as much as i hate to hate to admit it um but i think that um things like am talk
radio are unfortunately i guess the predecessor but uh i think one thing that's exciting is that
i think a lot of political youtube um long-form content or a lot of podcasts are much much better
than talk radio ever was yeah you can get you can get, you can get into, I mean, yeah, it's,
they tend to be smarter and then a little bit more nuanced than your,
your typical talk radio.
Yeah.
I mean, I guess there was that, you know, NPR and that's not new,
but I think it's that type of content.
Yeah.
Last question.
I ask all of our guests, what's your favorite way to unplug?
Oh, to unplug.
Well, I play the piano. I was a music student a long time ago
and then sort of sort of gave up on it but during the pandemic i i bought a piano and started playing
again oh good that's super helpful to me when you know you have to be able to especially if you're
going to do this like professionally like if you can't put down twitter you're gonna
go crazy and i feel like i've seen like i'm quoting a poem but like the best minds in my
generation like i feel like i've seen destroyed by twitter like it's uh same it's it's a scary
thing to watch happen to other people and you're like oh god that was almost me like uh in my case
at least i think that um so yeah i if things are getting too hot
i go play the piano i play piano as well and i don't get to play nearly as much as i'd like to
but even if you sit down and play a song or two for like 10-15 minutes it still just puts your
mind in a different place it's nice and and your hands are on the piano so they can't be on the
phone yes it's that's very important is that you cannot be doing the two things at once and i don't know it's a nice combination of like you're you're it's
physical you're moving and you're also sort of engaging your mind i don't know it's important
to have an activity like that natalie win thank you so much for for joining offline uh the uh
your youtube is contra points everyone go check out a video uh they are fantastic and persuasive
and entertaining,
and I'm glad you're doing that work.
So thank you.
Thank you so much.
Offline is a Crooked Media production.
It's written and hosted by me, Jon Favreau.
It's produced by Austin Fisher.
Andrew Chadwick is our audio editor. Kyle Seglin and Charlotte Landis, sound engineer of the show. Jordan Katz and Kenny
Siegel take care of our music. Thanks to Tanya Sominator, Michael Martinez, Andy Gardner-Bernstein,
Ari Schwartz, Andy Taft, and Sandy Gerard for production support. And to our digital team,
Elijah Cohn, Nar Melkonian, and Amelia Montooth, who film and share our episodes as videos every week.