The Bulwark Podcast - Timothy Snyder: The Politics of Impotence
Episode Date: October 8, 2024Trump and Vance are pioneering a form of politics where American power means nothing, everything is bad, and politicians focus on tearing people down—and getting other Americans to do the same. Plus..., the challenge of defining freedom, why conservative Jews are giving Trump a pass on his antisemitism, and a good and insightful poll on the presidential race. Timothy Snyder joins Tim Miller. show notes Snyder's new book, "On Freedom" Sidney Blumenthal's piece on Trump's Hitlerian logic
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Hello and welcome to the Bulwark Podcast. I'm your host, Tim Miller. I'm delighted to be here
with fellow Tim, Timothy Snyder,
professor of history at Yale, author of the new book On Freedom. He's also written a few other
books, including Bloodlands, Europe Between Hitler and Stalin, and On Tyranny, 20 Lessons
from the 20th Century. So you know, this is going to be a really uplifting podcast. How you doing,
man? Thanks for doing this. Very glad to be with you. You had an article last week that was getting sent around the Bulwark Slack that I wanted to start with
before we get to On Freedom. And it was on your sub stack, which we're all loyal readers of,
which is Trump's Hitlerian month. My colleague Bill Kristol is this morning in Morning Shots
talking about how we maybe we should be talking about how Trump is more akin
to fascism than authoritarianism, and that we should be using the F word. I have to admit,
I've been a little bit hesitant to use the Hitler metaphor, because as much as I despise Donald
Trump, it's hard for me to envision in my mind gas chambers. And and so i do wonder if i'm if i'm overstating the case or
if i'm actually harming the efficacy of the case by making the comparison but you make the counter
case that it is it is a worthwhile comparison so why don't we talk about that first yeah so i'm a
historian so it's not a metaphor for me it's not a it's not a literary device hitler is something
that could happen and he's an example of a larger pattern of politics, which can happen, which we could
call fascism.
Not every time there was a fascist or fascism did it end in the murder of 5.7 million Jews.
There were other paths that fascism could take.
It could take the Italian path, the Romanian path, Spanish, Portuguese, right? So the reflex to say it's not
exactly like that, or it's not exactly the same as Hitler would kind of rule out all comparisons,
and therefore we would be kind of stuck in a permanent present where we have no reference
points. So when you make a comparison, you're not saying this is exactly like that, or history
repeats itself, it doesn't repeat itself. What what history does the only thing that history does is that it gives us some points of reference so that
we have a sense of some things that might be coming and that's what that's why i think this
is useful i don't think it's like the point is not to say like everything's the same or everything's
different the point is to say many things are possible and let's look for patterns that we
recognize and to that point,
and I think that what you wrote, but also Bill this morning are both interesting on this,
the parallels to Italian fascism are actually pretty strong in a lot of ways. And if you read
Umberto Eco, You Are Fascism, I think where it kind of lists out the traits of fascism,
there are a lot of parallels, frankly, to Trumpism and just kind of about the style of
it, the affect, in addition to some of the more particulars of the policies. So if you kind of
look at that period, what jumps out to you as far as other parallels or things that you find the most
relevant? Relating back to the first question i appreciate i appreciate broadening
the context to fascism generally and i appreciate the the reference to umberto eco because
fascism is something that we take part in it's not something which just comes from outer space
it only works if it has the participation of large numbers of people and of course the people who are
doing it don't think it's bad. And so when you say like,
you're like Hitler, like Mussolini, people have been trained to think Hitler and Mussolini are
bad, but they don't know why necessarily. And so people who are being fascists or doing fascist
things don't necessarily know that they're doing fascist things, which I think is precisely why I
think it's useful to bring the term in. Because if we don't bring the term in, then it becomes impossible to help people make connections.
They're going to resist these connections, right? It's not like everyone's going to immediately jump
through the happy hoop and say, oh, yes, you're right. You mentioned Mussolini. I'm like Mussolini.
But without the history, we really don't have a chance to see what's coming. So with respect to
the comparison between Mussolini and Trump, of course, Ruth Ben-Ghiat
has made, has written a book, which is largely about that.
But the overdone masculinity, which like verges on a kind of like conspicuous impotence, you
know, like I can't, I'm not actually going to do anything.
I'm going to fail at everything, but I'm going to be large while I'm failing, which I think
J.D. Vance has actually perfected
this performance of political,
like hyper-masculine political impotence
where the message is,
the government isn't actually going to do anything.
If we fought a war, we would lose it.
Everything is bad, but look at me like I'm a guy.
It's almost like they've taken Mussolini to the next stage
because Mussolini at least tried to win wars before he lost them. Like he at least tried to make the Italian government do things
before failing. Whereas these guys have kind of taken the next conceptual step to all you have to
do is perform masculinity. But it's a particular kind of masculinity where you give in to Putin
in advance, where you admit that you don't have any policy in advance, where like masculinity is
entirely visual, it's entirely aesthetic. So strange that J.D. Vance and Donald Trump with
his makeup of all people are the representation of performative aesthetic masculinity. It feels
like it works for them to a certain audience, less about their personal traits, and more about
how they tear down other people, right? That it's
this kind of high school schoolyard bully-ish form of masculinity. I think that observation is
absolutely spot on and it gets to what kind of politics we're talking about because I think in
any form of a republic, in any form where you think about politics as being about
the common good, you have to have a story about how some things are going to be good for some
group, other things are good for other group. Maybe there are things that are going to be good
for all of us. Maybe there'll be institutions we can all agree on and we can kind of compromise
and respect one another and move forward. So like the politics of, for lack of a better word, progress or the politics of stability
or the politics of prosperity depend on some kind of respect and some kind of language
where I can recognize you despite our differences.
The politics of impotence, which is what they're pioneering, depends precisely on tearing everybody
else down
all the time. Because if you don't actually care about the American state, which they don't,
if you don't care about American power, which they don't, if you don't care about any sort of virtue,
which they don't, then you have the luxury that you can practice politics just by tearing other
people down. And when you set that tone and that example, then what you're trying to do is get Americans to
just tear each other down all the time. Over imaginary issues like Pets in Springfield,
for example, you know, you get Americans to tear each other down and that becomes politics.
And that, by the way, that is a form of fascism, right? You're teaching everybody that all politics
is about is choosing the enemy. The state isn't going to do anything for you. You just choose your enemy. You get to it. That's it. So when you wrote about
Trump's Hitlerian month in September, you're talking mostly about some of his comments related
to kind of the bad Jews. And I want to get to that for a second, but I felt remiss given what you'd
written if we did not just play the audio from Trump here last week talking about genes and how
that might tie into his
Hitlerian mind. Let's listen to Donald Trump the other day.
How about allowing people to come to an open border, 13,000 of which were murderers,
many of them murdered far more than one person, and they're now happily living in the United
States. You know, now a murderer, I believe this, it's in their genes. And we got a lot of bad genes in our country right now.
We got a lot of bad genes in our country right now. That's pretty ominous stuff.
I don't know if you all caught Sidney Blumenthal's longer article about this in The Guardian,
I think yesterday.
I did. I'll put it in the show notes.
Yeah. Yeah. In which Blumenthal points out that the people doing the genealogical research seem to be pretty confident that Donald
Trump had relatives who were war criminals on the German side in the Second World War,
which would put that whole notion of murder being in your genes in an entirely different light. But
being even more serious, that's directly Nazi language, of course,
you know, this notion of racial superiority and genetic superiority. And it's not the only time
he's done it. I mean, he does these things where it sounds like he's half joking or whatever,
but he actually talks about genes, and his family's genes and his genes and why his genes
are why he's smart. You know, when he's in northern states, like Minnesota, he says,
like in Minnesota, you've got good genes. And and what you know what he means is obvious what he means
and it's like in my piece i was mostly talking about i was talking about the anti-semitic stuff
but the genetic stuff is also kind of right down the middle and i think folks who want to try to
resist this comparison just need to take that data a little more seriously.
Let's just talk about the anti-Semitic stuff really quick, because I was emailing with a very thoughtful listener that I email with often, and I think that there's some legitimate concerns
among Jews in America, particularly center-right Jews, particularly Jews that have a strong
affinity for Israel, about the left anti-Semitism that you're seeing from the protests that spring up on campuses, but also in the country that you just see online from left anti-Semites.
And that there is like an acute concern about that among a certain group of Jews here in America. And yet, like the Trump behavior on this
and the way that Trump has almost more maybe deftly,
this is a weird word to use for Trump,
sidled up to right anti-Semitism,
I feel like sometimes gets missed.
And like, I can't quite put my finger on why.
Like he's getting a pass for it in a way
that the left anti-Semitism is not
getting a pass for good reason, by the way. Talk about what you identified there and if you have
any thoughts on why you think he gets more of a pass on this. I would love to hear them.
Yeah, that's interesting. I agree with what you're saying. I mean, there can be a lot of
bad things going on at once. And one bad thing which is certainly going on is a rise of global anti-Semitism, which one does pick up. The left is kind of a broad category, but certainly one does pick up very specific kinds of anti-Semitism from folks who claim to be supporting very progressive causes. And I see that too, and it would be silly to deny it in the dynamic you're talking about
i think there's an understandable desire for people to see the anti-semitism as being on the
other side you know i mean this is just sort of personal experience and anecdotal and maybe wrong
but if you're right of center i think you're you kind of prefer for the anti-semites to be on the
left yeah right and probably the other way around too and that's human and understandable and because
maybe they're other you can kind of imagine them as having more power like you're like i know the
right anti-semites these are troll nobody would ever listen to these freaks right like these are
trolls and so it's harder to imagine them gaining power maybe that's like the extreme version i was
thinking more of like a kind of center version where you'd be thinking, yeah, you know, I mean, I know that there's a little anti-Semitism among people on the American,
you know, American conservatives. I know that, but like, I know these guys, they're not so bad,
right? Whereas I don't know the other guys. So maybe they're much worse than I think that's
another possible dynamic. But I think you're right that Trump on this issue, as on a number
of other issues, he's kind of, I think he is deft, actually. I think he're right that Trump on this issue, as on a number of other issues, he's kind of,
I think he is deft, actually. I think he's quite intelligent. And I think he's kind of
step by step by step normalized things to the point where he's now literally telling American
Jews that they're going to stab him in the back. And it doesn't really provoke the kind of reaction
that one would have expected. And, you know,
I don't want to speak for American Jews or American Jews on the right in general, but I do
think that we have crossed a point where we shouldn't really be saying, like, is it right,
or is it left? We should be saying, wow, that's Hitlerian, or wow, that's conspiratorial
anti-Semitism, or wow, that's very familiar kinds of anti-semitism it doesn't
really matter whether we think trump is right or left what matters is the anti-semitism itself
yeah and i just you you went through like things he's done you know recently saying that it will
be jews fault if he loses that they must be loyal to him yeah you talked about the unusual powers
that they that they have as trump references that maybe not quite
as dramatically as marjorie taylor green who's been once again saying this week that they control
the weather but i when you when you put it all together it is a pretty alarming run of comments
by the former president i'm going to bring in ukraine because it actually links the like what
we're calling left and what we're calling right because there are folks on
the far left let me put it this way there are pro-palestinian anti-semites who don't like
ukraine because the president's jewish right and you think that if you like ukraine it's because
you're a zionist and you know that's that's anti-semitism i'm not even sure that's the left
honestly but there is that thing in the world. And then simultaneously, you have Donald Trump, who gets up and says that Vladimir Zelensky is basically a huckster. You know, he's a shyster. He's the greatest salesman on earth, right? And that's obviously anti-Semitic. It's obviously anti-Semitic. It's just that Trump has pushed the needle so far that folks don't even necessarily notice.
But Zelensky is a very courageous human being.
And what Trump is doing is he's applying this age-old Jewish stereotype, which is that,
of course, a Jew can't be courageous.
Of course, a Jew couldn't be at the front.
Of course, a Jew couldn't be doing all the things Zelensky is doing.
Therefore, it must be a scam.
And so this whole argument that Zelensky is taking money,
spending it on yachts, that he's a war profiteer, that is 100% pure anti-Semitism. It has zero basis in reality. And we've kind of let it slip through. And that's because Trump has pushed the needle so
far. Yeah, let's go to Ukraine for a bit. So you were there a couple weeks ago. You've written
recently how the war in Ukraine ends. You offered one potential path for that.
And I want to talk about that.
But before we do that, I want to actually listen to the vice president.
Kamala Harris was asked about this.
How does the war in Ukraine end on 60 Minutes last night?
And I want to listen to that with you.
What does success look like in ending the war in Ukraine?
There will be no success in ending that war without Ukraine and the UN
Charter participating in what that success looks like. Would you meet with President Vladimir Putin
to negotiate a solution to the war in Ukraine? Not bilaterally without Ukraine, no. Ukraine
must have a say in the future of Ukraine. As president, would you support the effort to expand NATO to include Ukraine?
Those are all issues that we will deal with if and when it arrives at that point.
Right now, we are supporting Ukraine's ability to defend itself against Russia's unprovoked aggression.
Donald Trump, if he were president,
Putin would be sitting in Kiev right now.
He talks about, oh, he can end it on day one.
You know what that is?
It's about surrender.
I wonder what you made of her answer.
And then we can talk a little bit about how you think the war might come to a conclusion.
I mean, I think that's all basically very sound. You know, Trump thinks that might
makes right. And he also thinks that Putin is strong, which isn't necessarily so. But
I think it's all fundamentally sound. I think the war ends. And this is the part that all pretty
much all Americans have trouble understanding. So one wouldn't want to fault the vice president,
particularly for this. But I think the war ends when Putin
realizes that he's losing. And the way that we help it to end is to mobilize the economic and
political and military strengths that we have to make sure that Putin realizes that it's coming to
an end. And just to be specific, I mean, better sanctions, NATO membership for Ukraine, plus
better and faster weapons deliveries. Because
the war ends when in Moscow, they know that they're losing that that's it. There's no magical
third way where you just get to choose peace. The Russians started the war, they'll change the
subject when they know they're losing. And I don't think Americans have generally quite seen that
basic reality. I think we still kind of want there to be some notion of peace, which doesn't involve
defeat, but defeat is part of the deal. There's another article, I think it was in Politico,
that you're sharing recently about does the US really want the war in Ukraine to end?
The Biden-Harris administration has been pretty stalwart in allyship with Zelensky and Ukraine,
but there does seem to be like a little bit of a hesitation to want to provide what is necessary to like actually decimate
Russian forces. Do you feel that way that the US has kind of given been giving enough support to
help Ukraine defend itself as the vice president said in that answer, but like, at times, maybe not
enough to help Ukraine win? Yeah, I mean, I'm not a person who, who, who,
who likes war. And like this, this is a horrifying war. I mean, alongside other
horrifying wars that are going on in Gaza, and in Sudan, and other places, it's a horrifying war.
I wish it had never happened. I wish it weren't going on. But once there's a war, you have to
think in the categories of war, you can't think in the categories of war. You can't think
in the categories of being on the right side. So I think that there are three basic American
conceptual mistakes here. The first was, at the beginning, we correctly and very importantly
predicted the war, and the Biden administration gathered allies. But we also incorrectly predicted
that Ukraine would lose in three days.
And I don't think America has ever quite recovered from that incorrect prediction,
partly because Americans are really not the world leaders in recognizing our own mistakes. And so it takes us a long time, you know, to catch up to something like that. We should like two years ago,
we should already have been talking about Ukrainian victory. And we're just now kind of
slowly getting to that point. The second conceptual mistake is thinking about the war
in psychological terms. So like, how is Putin feeling? And once you do that, then Putin has
you by the throat, because he just tells you, oh, I'm feeling very threatened. And so I might nuke
you. And you take that seriously. And then that slows you down. Whereas of course, the nuclear
blackmail was always nuclear blackmail. That was always the weapon down. Whereas of course, the nuclear blackmail was always
nuclear blackmail. That was always the weapon itself. That's the whole point. And the third
mistake was not to take seriously basic things about time and space. You have to act quickly.
You have to surprise the other side. You can't wait for what the other side is doing and then
say, okay, they did this thing. Now I'm going to think for six weeks about my reaction. Oh, look, I reacted, box checked, you know,
back padded. That's not how wars are won. And we've let that fourth dimension, we've let that
fourth dimension of time just kind of slip away from us. Instead of thinking about how we could
mobilize the strengths that we have cleverly and sometimes unpredictably to give the Ukrainians a shot.
Having just been there, is there any kind of insight for, you know, us Americans about,
you know, what the mood is there, like what the needs are, you know, kind of like what was the sense you got having been in Ukraine recently? I mean, I've been to Ukraine now like four times.
I've spent maybe six weeks total there during the war.
I was on the front most recently about a month ago.
There are lots of Americans who've spent more time there than me,
but you know what?
Not enough.
That's a big problem.
We just don't have enough people there.
And to be clear, I don't mean boots on the ground.
And when I was talking to guys and soldiers in Kharkiv region,
they said, tell the Americans,
we don't need your soldiers. And we, they don't, you know, they need our weapons. They need our,
they need our sanctions. They need, they need economic support. They don't need our troops. And that's very clear. But I stress that other people are there too, because I think there's
a certain thing which everybody understands who spent any time there, which is that this is a
kind of misery, which Americans just aren't in the
position to understand. And I include America, the American armed forces, we have just never
fought a war like this. Nobody alive in America has fought a war like this, planned a war like
this. It's a daily misery, not just for the troops, but for a good part of the civilian population,
daily sources of stress. And that stress and that suffering and that misery
is a price paid almost exclusively by ukrainians so that like you and i can have this normal
conversation so that like people in the west can have these normal lives if the ukrainians break
then everything changes and european integration is threatened the international order is threatened
china is emboldened and like all this like more or less relative normality we've had for the last two and a half
years goes away. The thing that you get from Ukrainians is that they're very humble about all
of this. You know, they're very realistic about what we can do. But they just want us to do the
things that that we can do, you know, like they're, they're kind of past the point where they're like
making appeals, like emotional appeals, they just want us to do the basic things that we can do so they can do the much harder things that we're doing.
And I think the American problem that we have as a people, honestly, and also as an elite is like shifting into the respect position where we say, OK, we respect what you're doing.
Let us do the things that we can do to help.
We kind of have to be at the center. And being at the center is one of the things that causes all the delays. Because once we think that this stuff is about
ourselves, then then of course, if it's about us, it's reasonable to leak to the press, it's
reasonable to talk for six weeks, etc, etc, etc. But when we realize other people are actually at
the center, and we're doing our part for a very important cause, then maybe we can move a little
more quickly. Is there a tangible example that misery or like an anecdote that was something that struck you? Let me put it this way. Like, everybody has
lost someone. Everybody has lost someone closer or further, like every there's nobody hasn't lost
anybody. There's a degree of grief and grieving, which you would associate like, with a particular
disaster in America, maybe, you know, but it's on
the scale of the whole country and it's ongoing. And despite the grief and the grieving, people go
on and the first responders show up and the soldiers fight and the civilians in the white
vans drive their supplies to the front and the teachers go to work underground, people just keep
on doing it. The keeping on doing it is the part which is very hard to convey, I think, because
like we kind of think, okay, there's a tragedy and then like you take a break and like they're just
keeping on doing it despite everything. So, I mean, there are particular examples in my life
of people like, but I, this is maybe not the format for that. We'd have to kind of start that a different way. I would just say that like, everybody's lost
somebody and the losses always come in, you know, they, it's always in some unpredictable way. And
it's always, it's always at the worst time and no one ever completely recovers from anything,
but they keep going. They keep going.
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order plus free shipping. This takes us to the book. You talk a bit at the beginning, towards
the beginning of the book on freedom about how it ties to Ukraine and the time you'd spent there.
And there's an anecdote, I forget if it's an introduction or towards the beginning,
about how you're in a classroom and there were military experts who were talking about how Zelensky was going to flee. And you said that
you don't think so. You think that they're going to fight. Just talk about that kind of anecdote.
And then let's use that to kind of get into the themes of the book on freedom.
Yeah. I mean, it's an anecdote about us, not about them. That was February. That was the week before the full-scale invasion. It was a few days before the full-scale invasion. And it was a class special about them. They were representing a complete American consensus at that time,
which was that Zelensky would flee. And I said that he wouldn't and that they would fight and
everyone disagreed with me. But that microcosm of that class just represented the entire American
moment. That was the consensus inside the Beltway. And the disturbing thing is that the consensus
inside the Beltway was the same as the consensus inside the Kremlin. And so that reveals a couple of problems. One is that one we kind of already talked about, which is-intellectual level, a pre-cognitive level.
But the second problem, the problem about us has to do with freedom.
I think we too often tend to think that freedom is just doing what you feel like doing.
And that freedom is somehow guaranteed by somebody else, like by the founding fathers or by the market economy or whatever, or by the fact that you're America and America is great.
And if that's how you think about freedom,
then the moment something goes wrong, of course, you're going to run,
because that's going to be your impulse. And if you think freedom is brought to you by these outside forces, well, the outside forces turn against you, like if there's an overwhelming
invading army, too bad, again, you're just going to run. And what worries me about us is that in
our reaction to Ukraine, it just didn't seem to occur to anybody that there might actually be people who would fight for freedom. And that's disturbing, because so much of our national identity is supposed to be built around precisely that idea that you would, not that everybody has to fight all the time, right, but that you would take risks for this idea. And in that moment,
that historical moment, which was kind of almost a perfect case of people choosing to fight for
freedom, that it wouldn't even occur to us that they would. That's troubling for us. And so,
that's one of the starting points of the book is how we got to this place where we talk about
freedom so much. But when push comes to shove, we maybe don't take it seriously.
What parallels do you see there? You're on the Never Trumper podcast, so I've got to center our experience.
Like the total acquiescence to him, you know, and to the potential threats to freedom here in America within the right.
It does feel as if there is, again, it's a reflection of, as you were writing about this kind of perverted form of freedom, where it's like these guys are like, well, as long as I'm
still going to be free to have power, and as long as we can convince Donald Trump that he's only
going to take away people he hates freedom, like then this is not something that I need to fight
about on a, on a principled level, but maybe because I have a misunderstanding of the principle.
I don't know. What do you think? Let me say something that will be more uncomfortable
for center right people. Okay. Let's get real uncomfortable with it. I don't know. What do you think? Let me say something that will be more uncomfortable for center-right people.
Okay. Let's get real uncomfortable with it.
Well, I mean, I can probably get more comfortable than this, but
I think it has something to do with libertarianism.
Oh, you're coming right at me now. Okay. I'm ready. I'm ready. I can take it.
Well, first of all, I should say like, if libertarianism means that liberty is the
most important value, then obviously I'm a libertarian. I just wrote a book about how
freedom is the value of values. And I deeply believe that. And I spent seven years
trying to figure out how to make that case. But the problem with the way libertarians often talk
about the economy and politics is that if you talk about a free market as bringing about freedom,
then you're putting the burden of freedom not on yourself,
but on something else, on this social institution, basically, which is what the market is.
And then if you talk about the problem with freedom as not being you and your limitations
and so on, but the problem with freedom is the government, and you got to make the government
smaller, then I think from there, it is a pretty natural shift
to a politics of us and them, where if freedom is all about the barriers, which is the negative way
of talking about freedom, then it's pretty easy to shift from there to the barrier is another person.
And of course, that's wrong, and it's unethical and so on. But I think that's the psychological
path that a lot of folks have in fact followed where you go from like
government is the problem to migrants are the problem and so suddenly you have all these people
who you know day before yesterday called themselves libertarians talking about how government should
build huge walls right so i think that's something which has gone on on the right side of american
politics everything you said i agree with that's the ron paul to maga pipeline yeah that's what
you see very clearly yeah Yeah. Anyway, continue.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I mean, I agree with what you said.
There's also the fundamental problem that it's easier to talk about freedom than it is to be free.
And the temptation to let somebody else talk about freedom for you is very strong.
It's very tempting, this goes back to fascism, to say we're free because this person speaks for us.
Right?
It's tempting.
It's just not freedom.
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Talk about then the more positive elements of freedom.
On the one hand, you have the Harris campaign has been trying to co the more positive elements of freedom. On the one hand, you have
the Harris campaign has been trying to co-opt this notion of freedom. And in a lot of ways,
like kind of in the same negative view, just on more liberal issues, right, like abortion or,
you know, issues such as that. But then I think that there's, you know, it's kind of a deeper
conceptual element that you write about that they touch on occasionally as much as you can in a
campaign about sort of more of these more positive elements of freedom. So talk about what those are
and how you wrote about it, how you thought about it for the book. Yeah, so I'm going to start I'm
going to start with the book and I'll work my way back to the campaign because it's I'm happy they're
speaking about freedom and I'm happy to analyze the way they're doing it. But I didn't have anything
to do with that, at least as far as I know. And, and, and it wasn't you and George Lakoff sitting
in a room with Kamala Harris, uh, plotting the Biden overthrow and the, and the pivot to freedom.
That's what, that's what I heard. I can't believe you're breaking the story, man. I mean, that's,
that's bold. So here's how I think about it. And this is like an all now philosophical naivete,
like just starting from the beginning, there are good things in the world. Honesty is good. Loyalty is good. Beauty is good.
Fidelity is good. Mercy is good. Compassion is good. But consistency is also good. And so,
you know, mercy and consistency don't necessarily go together. In fact, they conflict. And loyalty
and honesty sometimes conflict too. So the good
things in the world really are good. And they're as real as the rocks and the trees, morality is
real, values are real, but they conflict. And so the condition in which we can handle those
conflicts and kind of think our way out of them, work our way out of them and build character by
dealing with them is freedom. So that's what positive freedom is.
Freedom is positive because of the kinds of creatures we are in the world. It's not just
about barriers, right? Like negative freedom says a barrier is the problem, a wall is a problem,
barbed wire is a problem. And that's true. But the reason why those things are problems is because of
the human being on the other side. If there's no human being, then there's no problem. And so,
of course, you have to raise the walls and bring down the barbed wire. But then you're left with
the question of how do you create the conditions positively so that people can become free? And
this is where positive freedom becomes a political project and not just a philosophical one.
If you agree with me that good things are good and that freedom is the condition in which we're
able to make choices among the good things and realize those choices in a meaningful way, then you have to also agree, I think, that we should
be creating the conditions in which children, babies, infants can grow up in this country to
become the kinds of people who can make those choices and have real choices to make. And so
then freedom becomes positive in the sense of if we care about freedom, we would agree that parents
should have time to raise children or children should educated, and so on and so forth. And those kinds of things require
collective work and generational work. And so in that way, freedom becomes a justification for
government, the things that are justified for government to do are the things which create
the conditions to help us to become free. So my account is positive. And then so turning to the
campaign, I think you're 100 right the trump
people have moved so far that like the way they talk about freedom is just this kind of empty
like leader cult stuff so they basically dropped the ball and the democrats have very wisely picked
it up wisely and i think correctly and then you're also i agree with you again like they started with
saying hey the republicans now no longer give you negative freedom they're the ones who are and I think correctly. And then you're also I agree with you again, like they started with saying,
hey, the Republicans now no longer give you negative freedom. They're the ones who are going to put government on your back, right? But then because they're the Democrats,
they don't have to only say that they can shift to positive freedom, which you see them kind of
gropingly doing, right? They're talking about freedom to as well as freedom to go to school
without getting shut up freedom to you know
without worry about climate emergency constantly like all that kind of stuff yeah yeah yeah and i
think that's the right way to talk about freedom i mean freedom from is very important but it's
important because of the freedom to and that when you just talk about freedom from you end up
getting caught in various kinds of traps i think all right we could do a whole 35 minutes on this
next and final question but i've got it so so maybe we'll do that in 2025, if Donald Trump's been defeated,
and we've got more time in the world to worry about these bigger problems. But I have to at
least rep the small c conservative or libertarian pushback to this, and just hear what you say about
it, which is, yeah, good things are good are good and yes we should try to foster an
environment where people have the freedom to have these good things whether it be health safety
family but we also need to have some humility and like we're not that great so we're not as good as
we think we are at like picking policies that will lead to good outcomes.
And sometimes we pick policies well-intentioned to lead to good outcomes and it leads to bad
outcomes.
And this is where the conservative impulse comes in, which says, okay, yeah, you think
that this policy is going to give you the freedom to do it, but actually it's going
to yield all these unintended consequences.
What's your pushback to that kind of critique of the positive freedom? Okay, there's going to be kind
of a superficial response, and then there's going to be a deep response. And the superficial part
is going to be disagreement, and the deep part is going to be agreement, or at least dialectical
agreement. Okay, great. So, the unintended consequences thing, I think that argument as a historical argument
is generally wrong. So there's this notion that the argument that libertarians make, which,
you know, which by the way, libertarian founding fathers like Hayek did not believe, but there's
an argument that like, as soon as you have the welfare state, then you have a bigger government
and then eventually you get totalitarianism, right you get hitler or you get stalin and historically speaking there's just nothing
to say about that except that it's just not true like that is not how nazi germany arose that is
not how stalinism arose they did not arise because of free kindergarten that simply never happened
maybe a more modest version of that argument is these sorts of things lead to less growth
and less less well-being right like if you look sorts of things lead to less growth and less
well-being, right? Like if you look at Europe, you've had less growth, but I hear you.
I need to get that out of the way because that's kind of-
Okay, fair. Concur.
Okay, good. So then on the conservative point, I want to say that I agree with that and that the
proposal I'm making for government is meant to solve this kind of quandary that we find ourselves in, where people
on the left say we should have the welfare state because of equality or justice, and people on the
right say we can't have the welfare state because of unintended consequences. I think the reason you
want the welfare state is fundamentally freedom. That's the reason. And if that's the reason, it's also the check, right? Because if
you legitimate, for example, public school by freedom, because you say, as I do in the book,
that mobility is an essential part of freedom, then if the rationale has to do with freedom,
then you have the ideological conceptual apparatus to check whether things are getting out of control
and whether this policy is
leading to things which are counterproductive all the unintended consequences which i agree are
going to be built into any policy but if you legitimate government by freedom then you have
a way to test government which you didn't have before i think the conservative libertarian view
that the safest thing is just never to make policy sorry Sorry, I'm parodying now. But if you say that
the safest thing is not to do policy, I think that's over elegant. And it saves you having to
think about which policies create freedom and which ones don't. But I think the messy truth
is that some policies are consistent with freedom and some aren't. And it can't be the case that,
a huge state is always best, nor is it the case that zero state is always best. The messy human historical answer is some things are good. I'm going to go out on a
limb and say that people who have eight weeks of vacation a year are more free than people who
don't. And the only way you're ever going to get there is by state policy. I'm going to go out on
a limb and say that parents who have two years of parental leave are freer than parents who have two
days. And the only way you're going to get there is by government policy.
So I don't think of this as a book which is meant to like be against anyone.
I mean, obviously, it's against some people, but it's...
It's against Hitler.
I named some other names.
But it is...
But I honestly believe that conservatives have important things right, like that you can't do politics without a sense that it's ultimately about the good things, like the virtues, which is the word I use, and that freedom is the virtue of them, right? Not just one. And so therefore, you have to juggle.
And I think the Social Democrats are right to say you need to have the state doing stuff.
But I think they're wrong not to invoke freedom.
I think freedom is the reason why you need to get the government doing stuff.
So I do honestly believe, and this is the case I try to make towards the end of the
book, that the conservative position only really works together with the other positions
and likewise.
Well, I think that we should have an On Freedom Symposium in 2025, God willing, that we're
still, you know, we still have the freedom to have such discussions.
Tim Snyder, thanks so much.
Everybody will stick around.
I want to do a little poll talk.
We got a New York Times poll out this morning.
So I'm going to analyze that for you all.
Thanks to Tim Snyder.
His book is On Freedom.
His sub stack is Snyder.substack.com and there
are a couple great pieces i didn't even get to so go check it out and subscribe
and uh thanks to him snyder i told you it'd be weighty you know just nothing like a
little tuesday to talk about a hitlerian turn to the to the american democracy but i want to talk
about how how likely it is that that is being prevented.
And we got a new New York Times poll out this morning.
And I want to talk about why I like to focus on this New York Times-Siena poll so much.
Because it's not because the old great lady has any special brand affinity for me.
It's because Nate Cohn is doing such a good job of explaining his rationale for the presumptions
that go into the poll and when i've complained in the podcast with jim messina and with others that
i suspect that there's some poll herding going on there's a lot of evidence in the plot today
particularly the one in florida that that is correct that there are some of these pollsters
who aren't as good are are waiting their responses responses to various things, and eight points to the 2020 election results
in ways that are yielding numbers that kind of revert to the mean. And so it's hard to learn
things when like, there's potentially an outlier, there's potentially a change in the electorate,
it's hard to learn that if the pollster is just too afraid to be wrong,
because they don't want to get an F rating in the silver bulletin, that instead, they're sort of,
you know, jimmying their presumptions to get every number close to, you know, what the poll average
is. Cohen isn't doing that. And has yielded some interesting results. And today's poll is just a
prime example of that. He's got nationally some really good news for
kamala harris 49 46 and kind of if you if you actually go to the 10th mark and you kind of
round it's really almost a four-point lead for harris in the national polls and at the same time
he does an oversample of or actually a full poll of florida and texas and then he also looks at an
oversample of florida texas from all their national polls. And the Florida poll had Trump winning by 13,
which is just like 3x what he beat Biden by in 2020. And in Texas, it has him about where he
was at in 2020, just maybe a nudge higher winning by 650 to 44. And so why is this interesting?
Well, there's this huge
conversation happening about like biden needed to have a four or five point national poll win
to eke out a a narrow electoral college win so shouldn't you be concerned that harris is only up
about two or three in the poll average the answer is yes but but nate is like giving us evidence for why that is happening in real time
and what his polls are showing is that in certain states particularly florida on the red state side
and then in in blue states with big urban areas new york is when he points out i'd also point to
california potentially as somewhere where this is happening republic Republicans are doing better. And so that
has an impact on the national polls. Nate writes this morning that if it is true that Trump has
gained, you know, eight to 10 points in Florida and in New York, the states are so big that that's
enough to give him a one point bump in the national with no electoral college advantage,
right? Because he's still going to lose New York and he's still going to win Florida. You don't get extra bonus points in
Florida by winning by 13 instead of four. And so that explains then why Harris could have a similar
number to Biden in the key swing states, particularly in these upper Midwest swing states
with a lot of older white voters while not reaching his gap in the national number. And that's good
news for Harris. It's good news for everybody that doesn't want to have another Electoral College
popular vote split. So, and just a couple other interesting items in the poll. Kamala Harris
continues to do well with older white voters, as I mentioned, but also with some Republican voters,
9% of Republicans in the New York Times poll going for Harris. So, good I mentioned, but also with some Republican voters, 9% of Republicans in the New
York Times poll going for Harris. So good on you, Republican voters against Trump. And I think that
also, you know, kind of explains why she's maybe overperforming places like Milwaukee suburbs,
Philly suburbs will be next week for our live event. Well, actually, we'll be in downtown
Philly, but in the Philly burbs, and hopefully also Maricopa County, Atlanta suburbs as well.
So anyway, interesting results. I think that despite the fact that it's bad news if you live
in Florida about which way the state is going, it might be supercharged towards the right.
It might turn out that 2022 is not really an outlier in Florida and that Florida is no longer
a swing state. So that's not great news for Democrats in Florida. But for Harris to have her best national poll with the New York Times, and then
to pair it with kind of this real tangible evidence that there's good reason to think that the
popular electoral college gap might not be as big as it was in 2022. Those are both good data points
for her and something that we're going to be talking about with some political experts the rest of the week we got some big wigs coming through the next two
days so come on back thanks to tim snyder and i guess yeah before i lose you philly october 17th
pittsburgh the 18th detroit the 19th philly's already on sale go to the bork.com slash events
pittsburgh should be on sale any minute maybe by the time this podcast is upilly's already on sale. Go to thebork.com slash events. Pittsburgh should be on sale any minute.
Maybe by the time this podcast is up, it'll be on sale.
So check out thebork.com slash events.
Hope to see you all there.
We can kind of rally these 9% of never Trumpers as well as bring them in.
Some of our Democratic friends all get together, have a nice evening, and then go out and knock
some doors and support the pro-democracy candidates.
Very much look forward to seeing you all there,
getting out to the swing states
as we're under a month to election day.
And one last thing, you know,
while we're talking about Florida,
our thoughts are just going out to everybody,
particularly on that West Coast of the Florida Gulf.
What has happened with Hurricane Milton is very alarming.
God willing, you and yours,
if you have friends or family there, are evacuating. And it's something that's needed this time but
obviously it's very ominous forecast for this this hurricane headed towards florida so sending all of
our thoughts to the folks in the tampa area and uh and the surrounding areas so i appreciate you all
and uh we'll be back tomorrow with another edition of the board podcast i'll be monitoring what's
happening in florida be honoring what's happening in Florida.
Be monitoring what's happening in the presidential race.
We'll see you all then.
Peace. Marching on the Freedom Highway Marching each and every day I made up my mind And I won't turn around
I made up my mind And I won't turn around
There is just one thing
March
That I can't understand my friends
Marching
Why some folks think freedom
March
Is not designed for all men
Marching
There are so many people
March
Living their lives perplexed
Marching
Wondering in their minds
March What's gonna happen next Marching, wondering in their minds, what's gonna happen next?
Marching, on the Freedom Highway, marching each and every day.
Marching, on the Freedom Highway.
Marching each and every day.
I made up my mind that I won't turn around.
I made up my mind. The Bullard Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason Brown.