The Bulwark Podcast - Tracy Alloway and Jordan Ritter Conn: The Global Economic Shock from a Stupid War
Episode Date: April 21, 2026Trump keeps jawboning the markets to try to manage the fallout from the war on Iran, but we have yet to see the full economic impact of his foreign policy misadventure. Oil and gas facilities in the ...Gulf have been critically damaged and will take years to repair—which will inevitably lead to higher fuel prices. And countries are stockpiling commodities and products like fertilizer, which will also feed inflation. Plus, a new book on the social and economic travails of modern American men.The Ringer's Jordan Ritter Conn and Bloomberg's Tracy Alloway join Tim Miller.show notes Jordan's new book, "American Men" Tracy's podcast, "Odd Lots" "Road from Raqqa," Jordan's book about two Syrian brothers The NYT story on the Syrian billionaires and their business deals with the Trump family Jordan's reporting on the heartbeat of resistance in Minneapolis Tickets for our Bulwark Live shows in San Diego and LA in May: TheBulwark.com/Events Get 20% off when you go to trustandwill.com/BULWARK
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The Board Podcast. I'm your host, Tim Miller. A few notes. We've got tickets on sale now for everybody for our live events in California, May 20th in San Diego, May 21st in Los Angeles. I'm working on some fun stuff for you all. So please, if you're in Southern California, come hang out. If you want to make a trip to beautiful Southern California, what better time than May. I hope to see you all there. I've got a fun doubleheader for you today that are about a couple niche topics. So if you just want straight politics,
Trump porn.
Ew, that's gross.
But you know what I mean.
The next level.
Always out on Tuesday nights.
We're trying to make it always out on Tuesday nights.
So make sure to check that out in your podcast feed of choice.
In segment two, we've got Jordan Ritter Khan.
He's got a new book out, American Men.
It's talking about the travails of men in our culture right now.
It's kind of bleak.
But he's a great writer and it's really sweet.
So we're going to hash that out in segment two.
but up first. She's the co-host of Bloomberg's Oddlots podcast, which I have been binging on
because the news is horrible. And when the economic news is horrible, I always like to turn to my
friends at Oddlots. It's Tracy Alloy. How you doing, girl? I'm good, thanks. That's fine,
by the way. We're used to people binge listening, Oddlots episodes when the world is falling
apart. So all good. I kind of want to talk about the men, though. You want to talk about the men?
Let's just talk about the men. Do you have thoughts about men and what's happening with the men?
And it doesn't seem great.
The men can always be improved.
That's what I say.
Yeah, men need to be improved.
It feels like a lot of times away from, you know, doing things that are fulfilling to their life
and being in communion with other men and instead replacing that with a lot of time betting on.
Listening to podcast.
No, podcast is good.
That's fulfilling.
That's nourishing.
I'm talking about maybe, I don't know, gambling on what Donald Trump is going to say on
squack box today. Like whether he, you know, whether Donald Trump is going to use the word
Hormuz on squack box today, gambling on that. That does, that seems less healthy. Yeah, I would say
prediction markets are not a substitute for a viable social network. So men should work on those,
those relationships. All right. They should. Thank you, Trancy. We're trying to model that here at the
Borg podcast. Trump is on, was on the squawk box this morning. And it's just like he does a call in at
830 right before the market's open.
And it is pretty wild the extent to which, like, jawboning the market is driving war and peace negotiations.
I've never really seen anything like it.
There's the old line about weekend wars.
I don't think this is what they meant, which was just that we had fight literal wars while the markets were closed.
But it seems to be working for him, kind of, on the margins.
I don't know.
What do you think?
I mean, you're definitely saying that sort of pattern of impact on the market where the expectation is that he announced.
is something along the lines of, you know, talks or some sort of ceasefire agreement on a
Friday before the weekend and then over the weekend, the bad news actually hits. And then on
Monday, the market's open lower. I guess the question is how long that pattern can continue
without the talks actually materializing into a durable agreement of some sort. But yeah,
the market moves have been crazy. So I was looking at a chart yesterday. Apparently, we've had
three weeks now where the S&P 500 has rallied over 3% per week. That's something that's happened
seven times since 1928. So this is really unusual. The speed of the moves that we are seeing in
markets are I think what a lot of investors are struggling to get their heads around right now.
Because it used to be, if you were an investor, you were used to bad news comes out, the market plunges
really, really quickly. And then it takes a while to sort of dig yourself out of that hole and
climb the proverbial wall of worry is what we used to call it. Now, we're seeing markets just
recover almost instantaneously. And so the velocity of those moves have been really unexpected for a
lot of market participants. How much of this do you think is manipulation versus just something
different? Yeah. I mean, look, it's hard. We've all seen the same stats.
about what's going on in prediction markets, right?
Big accounts that are putting on bets.
I know they don't like to call them bets.
Putting on event contracts very close to news breaking.
I'm sorry.
I thought it was just the woaks that made us to certain words now.
Now it's the prediction market bros that are doing politically correct language.
We can't call it what it is.
I'm following CFTC regulations.
The CFTC says these are event contracts.
So I'm going with that language.
But I've seen the same things you have.
I mean, it's hard to know how much of this is.
deliberate sort of day-to-day manipulation versus how much of it is just part of a general
Trump jaw-boning strategy where he's trying to manage what would otherwise be some serious
market fallout from a kinetic war in the Middle East. JVL's theory on this, my colleague in the
triad last week, was that we have a madman theory of the stock market, that the madman theory of
foreign policy didn't really work because eventually, you know, people smell the bluffs, but it does
work in the stock market for this reason. He says that the more intensely speculative of
market is, the more it views chaos as an opportunity instead of a risk. When stability is the
norm, chaos is an outlier, so it presents risk. But when chaos is the baseline, there's no inherent
risk to it. And any outbreak of normality creates an opportunity for growth and optimism.
I like that. That's his theory of the case. I like that. The other framing I've seen,
and it's sort of similar along those lines, is you know how investors, when a company reports results,
you'll get earnings before taxes and depreciation and interest and all of that.
I've seen people talk about earnings before the Trump factor,
which is basically that chaos that you're talking about.
If the chaos is so unpredictable and if the headlines are changing on a day-to-day,
if not hour-by-hour, minute-by-minute basis,
all you can kind of do is try to look through some of that
and think about what earnings would look like without that cloud of chaos sort of obscuring them.
There's a counterpoint from your colleague, Stallworth, Joe Weizenthal.
He posted a meme that I liked.
I'm sorry to compliment him when, you know, when we're with you.
But I'm going to read from the main.
I'll try not to take it personally.
I'm going to read from the me.
I don't know if you have that rivalry.
Like I do.
It would hurt my feelings if I was on someone else's podcast.
They're like, you know, I want to tell you about something Sarah Longwell said recently
that I really liked.
But anyway, so I apologize.
But too good not to share.
It was a meme about these people talking to party.
One person is talking to the other.
And they say they don't know the straight.
Hormuz isn't actually open, that the prices on the screen don't represent the two
situations in the commodity markets, that even if the war comes to an end, we're looking at
environment where inflation is already higher than the Fed's target, meaning rate cuts are off
the table. And this is before we get to the fact that deficits are rising when combined with
increased trade frictions and we're creating a structurally greater inflationary picture.
And therefore, we're facing the most stag-flationary environment over 50 years. There's more
that suggests. The more I listen to your show, like this is when I come
away with. I'm like, I don't like Trump. And so at some level, I do want things to go badly,
but I'm not wishing for the economy to go bad, but you just look at what is happening.
And I don't understand why like that perspective lays good, which is like even if the
straight gets opened right after we get off this show and it's open for good, like there was still
all of this disruption that is auguring poorly for the next few months. But the investing market
doesn't seem to see it that way. Joe likes to make fun of rational take.
on the market. I think the guy at the party has a very rational take on the market. Like,
I'm all in favor of sincere basic analysis on Twitter, and that is some sincere, basic,
accurate analysis. I would argue, which is we haven't seen all of the impacts flow through
into global markets just yet. I mean, just a week ago, we still had ships that had the last
loads of Middle East oil that were making deliveries, right? So, again, like, we are waiting
to see the full impact of this. We've already.
seen some demand destruction, mostly in emerging market countries like Bangladesh, maybe Thailand,
that aren't necessarily going to resonate with Americans just yet. But it is an undeniable fact
that 20% of the world's oil and gas supply has been disrupted for the past six or seven weeks.
We've seen critical damage to a bunch of oil and gas facilities in the Middle East that in some
cases is going to take years to fully repair. Katar came out and talked about one of its oil
and gas fields was going to take three to five years to actually fix. That is just inevitably
going to have to translate into higher prices. And the wildcard, I guess, is the supply response
from the U.S. Are we actually going to see a bunch of drillers try to make up that lost production
over here? We've been doing a bunch of episodes on this. I'm sure you've been listening. I hope you've
We spoke to Jack McClendon. He's the CEO of a small oil producer in the U.S. yesterday.
And he pointed out there's a fundamental tension here, which is, number one, you don't know how long
the Iran situation is going to last. So you could wake up tomorrow. And if there's some sort of
agreement reached, then oil prices immediately plunge lower, which means that they don't have
incentive to immediately ramp up production. And there's also a fundamental tension within the Trump
administration itself, which is they keep talking about how they want everyone to drill oil,
but at the same time, they want lower gas prices.
And if the drillers don't see profit in encouraging that additional supply, they're just,
they're not going to start those new projects.
And so I have yet to see the administration really square those two goals.
And all this stuff takes time, too.
Like on the margins, you know, we could put out more oil here.
but to the degree of what is being disrupted,
like there's just basic supply chain limitations of, you know,
ports capabilities, you know, et cetera, you could go down the list.
Oh, absolutely.
And this is another thing that came up with Jack McClendon,
which is this idea that even if you want to start new oil rigs at the moment,
a lot of the prices for the components to actually build those drills have gone up because of tariffs.
And in fact, if you look at, I'm looking at it right now,
the Baker Hughes Oil and Gas Index on my trusty Bloomberg.
That thing has been moving sideways, basically since mid-20205.
And in recent weeks, when we've had that big oil spike and you might have expected some
sort of supply response from U.S. drillers, it actually fell by three last week.
So here we are.
Another gap that you were pointing out is between the fertilizer inflation costs and kind of
the lag in food inflation that we've seen.
I learned about urea from your guys' podcast,
which is coming from the Middle East and how that impacts fertilizer
and how fertilizer costs go up.
The Secretary of Ag, I saw this, was saying that like,
well, this isn't that big of a deal because 80% of the fertilizer for the season has
already been bought.
But then the Farm Bureau, which is pretty Trump-friendly,
I went out at a survey that they put out publicly, I think,
to pressure for a bailout or something,
and basically said, that is wrong.
Like, in the Midwest, it was 60,
7% was the highest, but in other parts of the country, like the majority had not bought fertilizer yet.
And so you would assume that that increase is going to yield increase in grocery prices.
Yeah, the fertilizer story I find really interesting.
And I've seen the same figures as you, and they seem kind of contradictory at times.
So I'm not entirely sure what to make of where exactly we are in the planting season.
But again, even if you set aside this particular planting season, there's a broader problem here,
which is America is not the only food-producing nation in the world.
And there are a lot of other countries out there that have different planting seasons.
And they're going to want the same fertilizer for their particular crops.
And where are they going to get it if they can't get it from the Middle East?
Well, China, which is a big fertilizer producer, has tightened up its export controls
because it's concerned about keeping enough supply at home for its own food production.
And meanwhile, the U.S., if you look at U.S. prices for fertilizer at the moment,
they are trading at a huge discount to what normally comes out of the Middle East. So U.S.
fertilizer is really cheap at the moment compared to everything else available in the world, again,
because most of the supply has been cut off because of the Iran situation. So a lot of those food
producers are going to start coming to the U.S. for their fertilizer needs. And there's actually
a Reuters story out today talking about U.S. fertilizer companies selling more internationally.
So even if the U.S. has its own supply of fertilizer that is maybe, you know, keeping U.S. farmers somewhat insulated from what's happening in the Middle East right now, that doesn't mean that prices aren't going to increase in the future as we see other countries scrambling to get supplies. One other interesting thing here, I got to say, I find all the corporate behavior in this particular environment really fascinating. There's a big U.S. fertilizer producer called CF Industries. And they actually put out a statement talking about everything.
they're trying to do in the context of this fertilizer crisis.
And one of the things they explicitly said was we are going to give up the ability to sell a
bunch of U.S. fertilizer at a huge, huge premium to international customers.
We're going to keep it all at home for U.S. farmers.
So there's an element of politics that's coming into here.
And like, it's also kind of similar to what China.
Maybe greedflation is real.
After all, I'm not hearing that greedflation was not real.
But if the fertilizer companies can avoid the greed, maybe other companies could too.
Well, we can talk about the exact motivations.
I'm sure they'll win like a bunch of fans from some U.S. farmers.
But like, what do their shareholders think if they're explicitly foregoing the ability to make money in order to keep U.S. farmers happy?
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Speaking of big corporate behavior, I wanted to ask you about two other things really quick.
On Squawk Box, Andrew Ross Sork and asked Trump about how some of the big companies,
particularly the big tech companies, are not seeking reimbursements for the tariffs,
even though they can get them because of the Supreme Court rules.
He said that they're not doing this because they're worried to offend Trump.
Trump replied that the people doing that are very smart and he'll remember them.
So he's thrilled if American companies aren't taking money that was wrongly garnished from them back.
It's a very weird style of political capitalism, isn't it?
Yeah.
Is it capitalism?
Is it capitalism?
Politically tinged capitalism.
I mean, he was also talking about spirit, right?
this idea that maybe the U.S. government would support spirit in some way. It wouldn't be the first
time that the U.S. government bailed out an airline, that's for sure. But like, it certainly has
different political undertones in the current administration. Yeah, I guess I would just say that the
government wrongfully seizing money from companies and then not giving it back to them because
they're threatening the companies. It just doesn't really feel like free market capital. I mean,
I feel like there's another word that a lot of the Wall Street Journal types are.
I think Joe Kernan would call that something else if it was Obama seizing money from companies
and then threatening them if they were going to take it back.
Just my opinion.
I don't know.
I mean, I will just say I remember specifically paying a tariff on a vintage item that came from Spain.
So it's not even something that I could necessarily buy in the U.S.
It's an old item.
And the mailman turns up at my door and says, like, I need a check for 50 bucks or you can pay me in cash.
that money is never coming back.
Are you going to get it back?
Specifically.
How?
I have no idea.
It seems like they're not even instituting a system for, you know,
individual payers to actually get any money back.
I don't even think it's recorded as like paid probably.
I can't even imagine what the systems look like for actually recording all of this stuff.
I have a few rebates.
I want, too.
We also have in suck up corporate world, Tim Cook stepped aside at Apple.
The president put out a very lengthy statement about how he's all.
always been a big fan of Tim Cook about how excited he was of the head of Apple calling to kiss
my ass and how that was really smart of him and other CEOs should do that. And he's actually
better than Steve Jobs. So that's an interesting valedictory for the president to Tim Cook.
I assume that this is just a pretty standard transition with Apple and Tim Cook wants to enjoy
his time on yachts and stuff.
I don't know if you have any takes on the Apple transition.
I don't have any good takes on the Apple transition.
But I mean, when you read those sorts of statements
and we talk about what capitalism actually is
and what it looks like,
it does seem to devolve into something
that looks a lot more like a patronage system
than free market capitalism.
You guys do fun niche stuff.
Is there anything else out there you're watching
or you have a show coming up we should look for
or something in the market people should be keeping their eye on?
Oh, well, just going back to the sort of broad outline of the impacts of the Strait of Hormuz closure, we have a great episode coming out with oil historian Dan Juergen later this week.
He's the guy that wrote the book on energy history called The Prize.
And he does a really good job of explaining why, even if the straight is opened tomorrow, we're not really going back to the previous energy world.
We just can't.
This is sort of like one of those, you know, the straight.
toothpaste can't be put in the bottle kind of moments where every government on earth has realized
how unpredictable geopolitics is at the moment. And every country on earth that has the monetary
ability to do so will be trying to rebuild its own stockpiles of energy for future
unforeseeable, unpredictable events. So it does feel like we're-
Yeah. Because right-wing mag, a podcaster Clay Travis, challenged me to a $1 million bet that
gas prices will be lower next April than they were before the war started. And I feel like I would
win that. Yeah. I don't have a million dollars to throw around now. I don't know. Maybe.
Do you have any thoughts? I mean, I feel like there is, there's going to be a longer term
structural bid for oil going forward. I just don't see how there can't be. You know, the U.S.
is using some of its strategic petroleum reserve through this crisis. China has built this
big strategic petroleum reserve as well. And again, they're using it during this crisis.
They're going to want to top those up as soon as possible, I would imagine. And the same for every
other country that's, you know, gone through the shock. So this idea of governments really stockpiling
crucial commodities and products, I don't think it's going away anytime soon. We've had six years
now of talking about unpredictable choke points first with the pandemic, where we all sort of woke up
to these supply chain vulnerabilities.
And now with the straight of Hormuz closure, I just don't think it's going away.
And that's, you know, that's a long-term underpinning on stockpiling.
And it's a long-term upward pressure on inflation.
All commodities products, yeah.
It has to be.
The thing that worries me most about the bet is that we end up, the earnest guy at the party's thing comes true.
And then we end up in stagnation.
Then we end up in a recession.
And the market crashes.
And I lose the bet.
I lose the million dollars because we're in a recession.
would really be a Pyrick loss in a lot of ways. So I don't know, I'll probably stick away.
But if any listener wants to take the bet for me, they can. Tracy, I really appreciate you.
I hope you don't feel guilty at all that bad news means your downloads go up. I hope that,
I want you to free yourself of that if you have those feelings. Our download figures are
correlated with the VIX, or at least they used to be, because the VIX isn't actually moving
that much anymore either. But yeah, it's a pattern that we've come to recognize and we're okay with
You know, we're just happy that we're able to elucidate some of these hidden corners of the global economy during a crisis.
And if that's what it takes to get people interested in things like urea and helium prices, it's all right with me.
We appreciate your elucidation.
All right.
That's Tracy Alley.
The podcast is Odd Lots.
Up next, Jordan Ritter-Con.
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All right, he's a features writer for the ringer.
His 2021 book, The Road from Raka, about two Syrian brothers.
It was one of my favorite pandemic reads in my bed in Oakland.
And now he's the author of a brand new book, American Men out today.
It's Jordan Ritter Khan.
What's up, bro?
How's it going, man?
Thanks for having me.
American men.
All right, well, you've you've entered the podcast arena.
The book is out today.
This is your first, you know, day of podcasting about it.
And so I feel compelled to ask you about your book American men.
What is a man?
A big question that doesn't have an easy answer.
A big question.
And one that I more wanted to kind of explore rather than trying to answer explicitly.
What this book is is a.
book that weaves together the stories of four men who are very, very different different
different different experiences as they kind of wrestle with things that we all wrestle
with as they wrestle with that specific question of who they are as men, what it means to be a man,
and kind of come up against kind of their own feelings of inadequacy against that definition
and try to navigate that feeling of inadequacy and ways to work for them. Yeah, the four men you
picked, it was interesting to see how kind of weaves through the themes.
of kind of the challenges facing men right now through these four stories.
We, Gideon was a West Point graduate, leaving the military and doing with that.
We had a poor, underemployed black trans man, Nate in Ohio, and thinking about what his story is like
and what manhood and fatherhood eventually is for him.
Then you had Ryan, a gay Native American.
They liked to get in bar fights.
Obviously, my favorite character and Joseph married law student from Alabama, who moved to Pacific Northwest.
and had all these emotional problems.
And I guess I'm just wondering, like, you talked to a bunch of people for this.
You were trying to tease out certain themes.
Like, what was it about that interconnected these four stories for you?
Yeah.
So, you know, I set out to kind of write something that was really, really intimate into several men's lives.
And so I wanted to find, A, men that were willing to kind of open up in the ways that that would
require, but be men whose stories would really complement each other.
I did kind of have the belief and still do have the belief that everyone's story is really, really interesting if they're willing to kind of look at some of the uglier pieces of it, you know, some of the pieces of it that they might be a bit afraid of.
And so it was about finding men who were willing to do that, but also who kind of fit together.
And so there were a few different themes that I feel like kind of touch on conversations around masculinity in this country that I wanted to make sure we're kind of present in their stories.
I wanted someone with some sort of relationship to violence.
I mean, that's so often what comes up quickly when we talk about men in this country.
And like you mentioned, Ryan is a gay man who a lot of his story, he's kind of struggling to kind of come to terms with his sexuality, with who he is, and also dealing with the fact that he really likes to beat people up.
He'd been bullied a lot as a kid.
And he kind of, he snaps as an adult outside a bar one night and likes it.
And so he's kind of both trying to find kind of a romantic.
partnership, trying to find a relationship with men that is, you know, tender, loving, caring,
while also wanting to, you know, craving that kind of violence at times.
I wanted men who had been in the military.
I mean, that's so, you know, such a big part of how we kind of talk about masculinity in this country.
And so one of them, Gideon is a West Point graduate, another Joseph serves in Iraq as an enlistee.
I wanted to tell the story of a trans man.
And I wanted to tell the story of a trans man in a pocket of the U.S. where you might expect trans people to not really find.
love and care and acceptance.
And Nate is a trans man in Youngstown, Ohio,
a town outside Youngstown.
And the story kind of follows him as he goes through his transition
and as he kind of tries to find economic security there.
I wanted a story of someone who had some sort of relationship
to the evangelical church,
because that's another way in which masculinity is,
I don't know, just on full display in a very particular kind of way.
And Joseph, the man who's kind of dealing with the effects of childhood sexual trauma,
is also someone who's kind of kind of kind of
coming out of the world of evangelicalism and trying to figure out his relationship to that world.
It's impossible to take four lives and really fully survey masculinity in this country,
but I wanted to do the best I could with four stories that were very different.
Let's talk about the evangelism part of it, or evangelicalism of it.
You started the book like this.
This is part of your story and background as well.
I opened it up on the airplane on the way to Coachella with my husband,
another story of masculinity.
We sat next to him on the plane, opened up the book, and it begins.
like this every Saturday night when I was in high school I sat in a room with a half
dozen other teenage boys and I announced whether I'd made it through the week without
masturbating. I was like, all right, we're diving right in. I also left it out in the rain.
So it's kind of a, it's already a beat up copy of it. It's weather. It's nice. It's clear that you
kind of started there to frame this up also with kind of your experience and kind of thinking
about manhood through that like Christian right frame. And,
and you went to school at a, you know, Christian university.
And I'm just kind of wondering, like, how, you know, much that trajectory intersects with, like,
where we are now.
Yeah, a lot.
So, you know, I grew up in kind of an evangelical Christian context, like you mentioned.
My parents were both from the Church of God, which is this Pentecostal denomination.
And so I grew up around a lot of speaking in tongues, a lot of running the aisles,
a lot of people fainting at the altar call, that sort of thing.
Have you spoken in tongues?
I have not.
I've attempted.
I've hoped the spirit would overtake me as a 12-year-old kind of yearning to be a yearning for that experience.
It didn't happen.
Didn't happen.
But I will say.
You never know.
Yeah.
As an adult, I've spent a lot of time in like, you know, kind of like episcopal churches, like liturgical,
Methodist churches, like more kind of lefty, progressive churches.
And I've also as a journalist spent time in a snake handling church.
And that felt much more familiar to me.
me in terms of my childhood experiences than any of the nice,
crunchy lefty churches that I've been happy to be a member of and am now.
But one thing I'll say about the evangelical experience is like you see men talking
in some ways with vulnerability about their lives.
It's under the guise of like trying not to sin.
And for me as a teenager, as I write about in that book,
I was in this Bible study where we would go around the room announcing ways in which
we had sinned that week and trying to be better the next week.
And the first question every single week was,
did you masturbate?
That led to a lot of kind of shame around sex that I've spent some time unpacking.
But it also put me in this place where I was really open and vulnerable with other guys as a teenage boy.
And I've kind of followed that into adulthood.
And I think like paired with that is just this like kind of often bombastic performance.
of kind of man as leader, man as like you have to be the head of the household in every possible
way I was certainly taught from a young age, not really by my parents, just by the waters I was
kind of swimming in, that you have to lead your household someday, that you have to be a man who
other people will follow. You know, I think that often sets us up for relationship structures
that are not really great for us and not really great for the other people we're in relationship with.
And it certainly sets us up for a sense of kind of entitlement as to what,
where our place should be kind of in any sort of hierarchy.
You know, kind of wondering how you see that,
you know, kind of that tension and that change developing over time
from like when we are growing up, like, we're both kind of elder millennials versus like now
and like what you're seeing in the younger, like, Christian Right church.
And I go to, I went to a TPSA conference about a year ago now.
And I was struck by, you know, on the main stage,
it was all this like political speech, all of the stuff that you would expect from, you know,
the Charlie Kirk crowd.
But then they had like side sessions, like breakout sessions that were about faith.
And like I went and sat through a couple of those.
You would sit in them and that, that tension that you talk about is just on display so intensely.
It's like half of the conversation is about being a better person and, you know, being in service
to others and, you know, taking responsibility.
And then like the other half of it is a lot of the culture war.
masculine bravado, you know, being the man of a house, like, you know, all this stuff that,
and then, you know, some obviously negative and hateful attitude towards LGBT people or immigrants or
whatever. And so like those two kind of elements are living together. And I remember I would be
sitting in there and feeling moments of, I'm kind of, there's like a kernel of something here
that could maybe be positive for the people in the room, but is sort of overshadowed by the culture
war element. And I kind of feel like that has been exacerbated recently. I feel like that tension was
always there, but it's like particularly acute now. But you kind of lived it. How do you do you kind of
agree with that or no? Yeah. I know a lot of kind of ex-evangelicals like in my social circles
these days. And sometimes we're so traumatized by certain the negative pieces of that experience that
we don't want to kind of remember what we at one point were really connected to in it. We don't want to
kind of admits out loud the ways in which there are pieces of it that are really not only appealing,
but also nurturing. You know, I think we are at this moment in our culture kind of starved for
structures that foster, you know, pushing each other, being in community with other people,
pushing them to try to be the best version of themselves. And at its best, that is what,
what religion can do and often does. And that's present in those settings. It's present in
settings where, you know, there are sermons being preached in the pulpit that I would find,
you know, pretty abhorrent. But there's still this, you know, there, there is someone trying
to hold you accountable to be the best version of yourself. And I do think, you know, we're seeing
data showing young men kind of making a turn back toward, toward religion after kind of years of
religious activity, kind of being in decline. And I think that that's a huge reason why, that
There is a craving for kind of structures of community, structures of accountability,
and going to a place once a week where you're trying to tell each other or work on being a better person,
you know, is really appealing.
Talk to you about those ex-evangelical communities because I think about this.
It's like on the one hand, you see the benefit of that.
And you talk a lot in this book about loneliness.
Obviously, there's this epidemic of loneliness that's showing up.
And the data and the anecdot, we all, we all.
to see it. So you can kind of see the benefit of like having a, you know, positive structure
force for, you know, men, young men to get together and kind of work through all this stuff.
But that's kind of not really very visible in the culture.
Like what you instead have are, you know, gatherings that are, you know, have a lot more of the,
you know, pernicious elements to it, whether it's the right-wing evangelical crowd,
or Andrew Tateism or Groyperism, you know,
what do you feel like is the disconnect there?
Like, is it just that the lips are too soft and there's like nothing we can do about it?
Or I don't know, like how do we find positive nurturing, structural, masculine, organizational outfits?
You know, my general sense is that there's people talk a lot about whether we're in like a crisis of masculinity.
I think we're kind of in a crisis period of people being increasingly dislocated and isolated and disconnected from one another.
And we're kind of siloed off in a culture that makes us less empathetic, less eager to engage with kind of the full humanity of other people.
And what comes out is what has often come out, which is men kind of grasping toward their sort of basest impulses,
grasping toward things that are kind of dehumanizing to other people that are subjugating other
people. You know, when you have a sense that you should be powerful, that you should be on top
and you have moments where you feel disempowered, often men grasp for something that's, you know,
really awful and gross. And so I do think that a lot of what we're talking about is kind of
as much a technological problem as anything. It's just the fact that like, you know,
there are these companies that benefit from these kinds of images and messages,
is that they draw a strong reaction
kind of being beamed around the world
into everyone's pocket all the time.
It's not good for anyone.
But I think we're talking about
very old problems mapped on to new technologies.
Yeah, I think that's right.
I mean, another change in addition to the technology
is just the way the American economy has developed
as often like a lot of more opportunity for women,
like the cultural manner in which has been a good thing,
like the way that the culture has changed,
you know, more women going to college,
more women going to the workforce,
before, you know,
finding, like all this sort of stuff.
And now as we get into, you know,
the types of industries where people are succeeding,
you know, in the white collar,
parts of the economy,
you have a lot more women college grads
and a lot more men struggling economically.
And I do think that in the past,
a lot of men were finding this kind of structure
that we're talking about and community
in a way that is, you know,
fulfilling in the workplace, right?
In their job.
And when you write about this in the book,
I mean, like a lot of these folks are struggling.
Obviously, Nate is really struggling.
Economically, Joseph goes from Alabama to Washington and goes through a period where there's
huge economic strain.
And really all of them, like, go through periods of huge economic strain.
And, you know, I think that kind of navigating the modern economy has sort of layered on,
particularly in certain demographics and kind of like exacerbated these problems.
Yeah, I mean, we hear a lot, talk a lot about how men are falling behind.
But really, a lot of big part of that story is just advances that women have made over a period of decades.
And so you have that paired with still so many people hanging on to this image of being the provider,
this desire to be a provider.
There's kind of a simplicity to that.
There's like a clarity of, if I feel this role, I am a person who has worth.
it's a very simple way just to feel like you matter.
And as families have been constructed in ways where that's not really the case, as the economy,
you know, wages aren't keeping up with inflation, the story that's been continuing for decades now,
jobs like manufacturing, that sort of thing, have been in decline for a long time.
You have a lot of men who are kind of grasping for ways to feel like they have worth,
grasping for ways to feel like they matter when the simplest, easiest way to do that is not really as easy to obtain.
as it once was.
And so I think there's a sense of often just being a bit of drift.
I mean, you know, there are times I'm like, I care about that stuff.
Like as much as I try to tell myself that it's not like I want to be making sure that I'm
providing for a family.
And there's a man in this book, Gideon, who is kind of like the tall, handsome West Point
grad baseball star.
He's married twice in the book.
But in his second marriage, it takes him years to kind of come to realize that his wife
married him for the fact that he's kind.
curious, empathetic, good listener,
caring of their children.
He just doesn't want to believe it.
He thinks that he kind of exists as someone
who's supposed to achieve, as someone who is supposed to provide,
and it kind of leads to this real crisis of identity for him.
Because it's a much more complicated thing
to find your way to being in people's lives
in a way that contributes to them
through kind of who you are as a person,
not just what you provide.
These things are all in connection to each other in the sense of,
so if you don't have that confidence
that comes from being a provider of that feeling of worth, right?
Another thing you write about in the book is a lot of, you know, men have fewer and fewer
friendships as they get older.
You see this in the data too.
I mean, Gideon is the character you just talk about at one point, is having suicidal
thoughts and like only has two good friends and he calls both of them and neither of them
answer and kind of realizes that they just, you know, don't talk that much anymore.
And so if you have this crisis of self-worth, if you don't have community or fellowship
to lean on and then you're relying on devices of whatever it is in your phone, whether that be
the porn or the gambling apps or you're drinking, right? Like it's just this cycle that people get
into. I guess the one question for you is kind of how living the lives of all these men,
you feel like that is like, how can that be intercepted, right? Like in what ways can that be
resolved? Like it's easy to be like, well, if you get a good job and start feeling self-confidence
or you go out and join a softball team and meet friends.
You know, it's kind of like,
but in one of those areas,
I feel like something has to be remediated.
Yeah.
Things just spiral.
You know, I think like a lot of what we talked about
when it comes to like these larger structures
that have kind of upheld those relationships,
the decline of those has been just a really big problem.
You know, religion has certainly filled that role.
But like you said, the workplace,
like just being in person with your coworkers,
it's a huge piece of that.
The military functions that way
for two of the men in this book at times.
You know, sports teams,
you know, things like just a beer league softball team like you mentioned.
And I'm kind of curious to hear what you think about this
because you strike me as someone who is really, really good.
It's kind of making and maintaining friendships
and that's just always been kind of natural for you.
But often...
I have a lot of pals, thanks.
Yeah.
Often we're just not good at it.
Like, we're just not.
Yeah.
And like, you know, it's largely, I guess,
the ways that we're socialized.
But like the simple, like dumb vulnerability
that comes from just reaching out to a person
and saying like, hey, I'd like to meet up for a drink
or I'd like to go play around to golf
or do whatever that thing is that you do,
we often just struggle to do that struggle
to kind of check back in with that person
we haven't heard from in a long while.
The number of men who will say things like,
you know, I saw so-and-so for the first time in 15 years
and we just picked up right where we left off.
It was like no time had passed.
And it's like, well, what have you been doing over those 15 years?
Like you couldn't just have that feeling, you know, a few more times over the course of that
period of time.
Like I do think that some of it is just like kind of interpersonally, like not on like a kind
of a structural or policy level, just interpersonally like trying to work our way toward
reaching out to each other, toward like treating this part of our lives like it matters.
I think we can be good at treating our jobs like they matter, our marriages and families
like they matter, even like our physical health like they matter.
I mean, Gen Z like very much is prioritizing kind of physical health.
But we don't treat this part of our lives like it matters.
And it's a huge, huge piece of having a well-rounded, meaningful life.
Yeah, I sometimes feel bad when I give advice in this stuff because I am like an extrovert
and this is easy for me.
I understand that it's harder for some people.
But what I want people to know is that other people want to hang out with you.
Other people are in your boat and want socialization.
humans want socialization and you like get in your head like it's going to be a hassle I'm going to ask
that and it's like I don't know I think back to my grandparents and on both sides like both my
grandfathers just like had a poker club and they met every week or every other week and it was just
like that's what we did on Thursday nights and I don't know for some people at some reason I think
people feel like that is an imposition now to like go schedule that sort of thing which I don't
understand why I don't know when I was laughing with one of my friends in town this weekend about
this where he was like, he's like, other people at work tell me that it seems like I go out a lot.
And they're like, how do you do that? And he's like, I just do it. Like, what do you do between
eight and 10 o'clock at night? And they're like, well, I'm scrolling on my phone and doing
laundry. And it's like, well, maybe you go meet a friend instead, you know? And I think that, like,
actually, it's like a lot of things in life. Like you say, like prioritizing it and trying it,
like really matters. But it's, I think it becomes hard once it's lost to regain. And I, you know,
I see this in my life. Like, once you stop
doing it and get into your interior life, like on your phone in your apartment and you get sad,
then it becomes harder and harder to break out of it. And I think that that is, like I was saying,
I think that there's kind of this intersecting issue. And you see it with people who like feel
unfulfilled in their work life, feel unfulfilled in their marriage or if they don't have one,
don't have friends. And then, you know, it's easy to just kind of get into computer life after that.
So over the course of the time I was working on this book, I also, you know, I work full time at the
ringer. I also had a child. I have a son who's almost three. I kind of looked up at the end of it and
realized that a lot of my friendships had been kind of atrophied. And it was entirely my fault. I'd just
been kind of consumed by other things. You know, I was kind of like, well, I'm about to be putting out
this book about masculinity. There's a lot of talk about loneliness among men. Like I should probably,
you know, do some fucking work to make sure that I'm not one of the lonely men. Yeah. And so I spend a lot
a time kind of just doing that stuff, just reaching back out to people I hadn't talked to in a long
time. You know, when I would meet someone, someone new, like, you know, there's the dad like playground
circuit, which, you know, I'm, it's not my natural kind of place. Yeah, I don't do great there.
My wife is so good at it. I'm just, I'm just not. And I think that's, that's a pretty common
dynamic too. Yeah. But, you know, I did things like, you know, I started a book club with some other
guys. Like, it's just like, we're going to get together once a month. We're going to read this book
and we're going to talk about it. And that pretty quickly, it was guys who I knew individually,
but they'd never met each other. And it pretty quickly became, like, talked about pretty intimate
stuff just because, like, when you have, like, kind of the structure and proximity of, like,
we are going to be together once a month. And talking about books leads to talking about other stuff.
Like, it's, that really helps. But it does, it does come back to just, like, telling yourself,
like, I just, you just got to do it. Like, this stuff matters.
you have to prioritize it like you try other stuff.
Yeah.
I feel like you're putting a lot of pressure on people by making them talk about intimate
stuff.
I mean,
you work at the ringer, bro.
You can just talk about like the balls.
You can just talk about it.
You can start with sports or whatever.
You know,
don't intimidate people.
So you started this book like you said many years ago.
And there's been a lot of stuff that's changed since these characters were coming
of age, right?
And I'm just wondering how you think the book intersects with some of the news now.
Now, particularly I'm thinking of the prediction market boom, crypto, and now like the looks maxing trends that you were referencing earlier with the young men that are, you know, bone smashing their faces in order to look at some nurse so that girls like them or maybe not even girls like them.
I don't know.
At some level, like as all this stuff is popping up, you've got to be like, man, like the book, you could, you know, almost have a full post book.
Sure.
that covers like how the themes of it are echoing and what's happening now.
Yeah.
You know, I think the, I don't know, the looks maxing thing to me is like,
kind of intersects with some of the stuff we've already been talking about.
It's on one hand, it's another way to answer this kind of very old problem,
which is just men feeling inadequate and not knowing what to do with it.
You know, feeling like we all kind of inherit this idea of who we're supposed to be.
We all at some point kind of fall short of that.
and how we kind of navigate that in some ways
kind of defines our relationship to masculinity.
And the looks maxing thing is like one way to attempt to bridge that gap.
I think a lot of the messaging online to young men
is telling them different ways in which they can kind of bridge that gap.
If you just work harder in the gym,
if you work harder in your career,
if you work harder at learning how to talk to women,
then your inadequacies will be erased
and you will have everything that you want.
and I think it's great to work harder.
I think men respond to messaging that has like,
emphasizes kind of an internal locus of control,
like the sense that like you have some,
some agency,
some power over kind of the future of your life.
I think that's important.
But also like,
that feeling's not going to just like vanish
because you're the like optimized version of yourself
or you're the hottest possible version of yourself.
But I also think the looks maxing thing connects to like the provider conversation.
Like the fact that there was kind of historically,
this very simple way to feel like you have worth,
to feel like you're going to be attractive to a potential partner.
And as the economy has changed in ways that have made that a bit more difficult to obtain,
it's like, what are the other ways?
Now, some of those ways could be, you know, become someone who's a bit easier to get along with,
become someone who's a bit more considerate, a bit more thoughtful.
But it could also just be get hotter.
And so I think that's what a lot of guys are trying.
For somebody who's went through midlife crisis therapy,
I would just like to say bluntly that, you know, you have to, what's the RuPaul line?
If you don't love yourself, how the hell are you going to love anybody else?
Unfortunately, you can't rely on external compliments and support for resolving those feelings of inadequacy.
You've got to be happy with yourself.
And I do think that that's something that clavicular is going to end up having to find out.
I wonder what you say, like the ringer's a little lib coded, we can say.
You've already mentioned you're in ex-evangelical circles,
just pretty lib-coded, based on some of your other writing.
What do you say to kind of the intersectional libs in your life that say,
oh, poor men, there are all these other groups that have dealt with, you know, this for generations
and, you know, marginalized groups of all these challenges and men go through a slightly
rockier period and now everybody is talking about their needs again.
How do you kind of address that, the mindset, which I know that you've,
hers. Yeah. I mean, I think, for one, you know, we're half the population. Like, we're a pretty
big group of people. Like, it's, it's probably worth kind of considering our inner lives. I also think
kind of, you know, this book talks about a lot of things that men ourselves don't really like to talk
about. So it's less kind of demanding more attention from others than it is, like,
digging into stuff that we are often kind of the reason why it's, it's not really discussed.
Over the years, I've been working on this as I told people what I was doing, the kind of demographic
that was most likely to be excited and interested
were millennial and Gen X women.
Usually if they have kids, especially if they have sons.
Because they see it.
Yeah, yeah.
With men, it was kind of all over the map,
kind of how they would respond.
Some were very, very skeptical.
And it was kind of the first time
that they'd ever thought about the idea of masculinity.
Others were really interested.
Gen Z women, for the most part,
when it has come up,
or just like, I'm very happy for you.
I will not be reading this book.
which I get.
No, it makes sense that it's moms.
Yeah.
As it's like moms of boys see it.
Like they see it, right?
Because they've grown up and they've lived through it
and they've seen the frailties of men already in their lives
but like to see the ways in which things are getting worse right now.
Absolutely.
I hear it all the time.
And I just think like everyone in their lives, you know,
knows a boy or has known a little boy.
And like it's hard to kind of imagine the little boy that you
know in your life alongside, you know, some of the more negative feelings that you might have toward
men. And so, like, wanting to imagine a world in which that boy that you know and care about can
grow up and be kind of the fullest, you know, kind of most human, like, most like socially connected,
caring version of himself, I think is something that, you know, people want. I'll talk about one of
your other stories recently, which kind of intersect, at least one of the characters as a man I'd
like to tell a little more about, which is Daniel.
You wrote for the ringer inside the hidden network of resistance in Minneapolis.
Obviously, we're covering this a bunch on the pod at the time.
But I was struck in particular by this one story of Daniel, who's from Venezuela.
He spent 36 days in detention, some at the Whipple Building.
His family found an attorney to take on his case, but he heard nothing for weeks.
He sat in a cell, only one small window facing the hallway.
He felt like a criminal.
He's not a criminal.
He'd been here as a legal resident with a work permit.
Just kind of talk about that story and everything else that you saw when you were reporting this out in Minneapolis.
So I was in Minneapolis for about 10 days during kind of the height of everything that was going on immediately after Alex Prady's shooting.
I went there.
And I wrote mostly about kind of the lives of people who were hiding, who were kind of sheltering in their homes away from ice.
And, you know, the thing that, I don't know, the thing about it that most struck me was just the sense of interconnectedness among the people in that community.
You know, we've talked a lot in this conversation about like kind of social isolation and lack of community.
And I haven't seen a more kind of robust expression of community than I did when I was there.
Well, so this is what I was going to ask you next.
we'll come back to Daniel, but like, I just because I felt that way too, like, there was this tension between like the book that I was reading in that story that you read. And I'm just wondering what your observation was on that. Is it something about how like, JBL says this, you hear people sometimes say that a lot of this, these problems that we're talking about, about loneliness and addiction, etc. are kind of related to societal decadence, but like things are going so well that you have time for these other problems, like versus past eras where it's like you went to work every day. You're fucking.
and tired when you went home.
You know, your kids go to bed and, you know, you clean the house and you did it again, right?
And like, life and that kind of the societal decadence has led to some of these problems.
And it was an interesting data point for that in Minneapolis that you see like a city going
through this crisis, like really coming together and not, you know, not isolating or turning
on one another.
And I'm just kind of wondering how you mesh those two kind of narratives and two types of reporting
you did.
you know, I think that what you said about societal decadence is really interesting.
Because I do think that, you know, crisis pulls people together, obviously.
I don't know.
I think like the lesson I took away is that people really want to care about each other.
People really want to, you know, to be together to do something for someone else and to find
ways to kind of be more connected to the people around them.
And sometimes like some sort of intense strain, whether it be interpersonal or societal, can be the thing that kind of forces you into into that kind of action.
And right now, like you said, it's so easy to be disconnected.
It's so easy to not be relying on anyone else.
It's so easy to get like a facsimile of the things that we actually need and care about, something that feels like community that feels like connection, but isn't really that thing, something that feels like sex, but isn't really that thing.
And, you know, what happened in Minneapolis is, like, people needed that thing.
They needed to, like, show up for other people in real and meaningful ways.
And they did so.
I don't know.
It was just, it was just, like, incredibly moving.
Like, honestly, it was, like, frigid, like, freezing fucking cold.
And I'm just walking around that city, going and meeting these people, you know,
and homes and churches and, you know, out of protest everywhere.
And just, like, constantly moved by some random.
story that I'm hearing of the way that, you know, a mom is kind of checking on the mothers of like
her kids' classmates who are hiding in their homes of kind of a retiree who's driving around
groceries and taking people to the hospital. And I don't know, it was just a kind of remarkable
reminder of kind of what humans and Americans are capable of. I hate that it takes something so
monstrous and so kind of craven on the part of our government to,
to bring that out. But I hope that it's something that we can kind of find our way toward
in settings that don't feel quite as dire as it did there. And Daniel, who we mentioned
who had been detention, I was just struck by the scene where he's speaking to Teresa's local
pastor about how to rebuild his life and how to move forward. And you have his story,
having been wrongfully detained for a month and a half. And then you have Teresa who has
sharpied under her arm,
her legal resident number
and her lawyer's phone number,
both of which she had memorized,
but she put them on her arm
for fear that if she was incapacitated
or knocked out or something
during a protest that people would be able to
contact representation from her.
And it's just crazy.
It feels like something that's not even
from this country.
Yeah, really dystopian.
I mean, like you said,
not the sort of thing that you imagine
happening in the United States of America.
You know, when I was there, I was there with a friend,
a photojournalist who mostly covers wars,
who had last seen in like Southern Turkey
and we were reporting on things related to Syria.
And I couldn't believe that she was in Minneapolis
because that was where the story
that most needed her skill set was happening in the world.
It was pretty shocking to see up close.
And I'm still, to be honest, a little shaken
by some of the memories from my time there.
Then just finally on the Syria point, I was curious. I mean, so much has happened there.
Obviously, there's been another coup, another regime change. Now, we've got some Syrian billionaires
from Qatar who are trying to Dubai, Syria, where they're working with Jared Kushner, our president's son-in-law slash lead negotiator on all war matters.
And they're talking about putting a Trump golf course in Syria.
I'm just like, in such a strange world.
I mean, your story followed these two brothers,
like one that had stayed in Syria,
one that had come to America.
I'm just kind of, you know,
wondering if you have any post script for us on,
from your time there and what you're seeing in the region now.
So, you know, again,
as someone who's not really a Syria or Middle East expert,
but has a lot of, you know,
knows a lot of people from there and has written about their lives.
You know, what I hear is like,
just so much relief that Assad has gone.
And,
cautious optimism and patience for what might come next.
Certainly not all the way bought in.
The infrastructure there is still totally destroyed.
I mean, there's a reason why it's being discussed for this kind of development
because right now there's just nothing there.
A lot of places are still pretty uninhabitable.
But the fact that this family that it tormented so many people for so long is no longer
in power, that the fact that I think that the new president has seemed a bit more,
their impression of him is that he's a bit more pragmatic than they imagined.
He would be a little bit less of an ideologue.
And so I think there is patience and cautious optimism while very much feeling like
it's still, you know, there is a long, long, long way to go and there's no certainty
that they will get there.
It's a really beautiful book.
Folks should go read it.
They should get both of them, the road from Raka from 2021 and then American Men,
which I have right here, all mangled from the New Orleans rainstorm out today.
Jordan, I appreciate your brother.
Good luck on the book tour.
We'll be talking to you again soon.
Thank you so much, man.
Thanks so much to Tracy Alloway and to Jordan Ritter Khan.
We'll be back tomorrow, still working out who we're going to be talking to,
but it's going to be good.
It's always good.
Bangers only here.
We'll see y'all then.
Appreciate you.
Peace.
The Borg podcast is brought to you thanks to the work of lead producer Katie Cooper,
Associate producer Ansley Skipper, and with video editing by Katie Lutz
and audio engineering.
editing by Jason Brown.
