The Daily Stoic - Ask Daily Stoic: Ryan and Anne Applebaum Ask How Does a Stoic Resist Tyranny?
Episode Date: September 5, 2020On today’s Daily Stoic Podcast, Ryan talks with Pulitzer Prize-winning author and journalist Anne Applebaum (Gulag: A History, Red Famine: Stalin’s War on Ukraine, Twilight of Democracy) ...about recent global political developments: the rise of authoritarianism in Western nations, the struggle against this movement, and how to fight for and defend democracy.Anne Applebaum is an expert on 20th- and 21st-century authoritarian governments. She has written books describing the authoritarian actions of the Soviet Union (Gulag: A History, Red Famine) and has written recently about modern-day authoritarianism in Eastern Europe and the West, both as a journalist at publications like The Atlantic (in articles like “History Will Judge the Complicit”) and the Washington Post and in her newest book, Twilight of Democracy. Applebaum currently lives in Poland.This episode is brought to you by GiveWell, the best site for figuring out how and where to donate your money to have the greatest impact. GiveWell’s team of researchers works countless hours to determine which charities make the most effective dollar-for-dollar contributions to the causes they support. Since 2010, GiveWell has helped over 50,000 donors donate over 500 million dollars to the most effective charities, leading to over 75,000 lives saved and millions more improved. Visit GiveWell.org/stoic and your first donation will be matched up to 100 dollars.This episode is also brought to you by Trends. Trends is the ultimate online community for entrepreneurs and business aficionados who want to know the latest news about business trends and analysis. It features articles from the most knowledgeable people, interviews with movers and shakers, and a private community of like-minded people with whom you can discuss the latest insights from Trends. Visit trends.co/stoic to start your two-week trial for just one dollar.***If you enjoyed this week’s podcast, we’d love for you to leave a review on Apple Podcasts. It helps with our visibility, and the more people listen to the podcast, the more we can invest into it and make it even better.Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: http://DailyStoic.com/signupFollow @DailyStoic:Twitter: https://twitter.com/dailystoicInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/dailystoic/Facebook: http://facebook.com/dailystoicYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/dailystoicFollow Anne Applebaum: Homepage: https://www.anneapplebaum.com/Twitter: https://twitter.com/anneapplebaumInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/anneapplebaum2000/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/anneapplebaumwp/See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey, it's Ryan Holiday.
Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoke Podcast.
Let's see, where are we?
Well, it's a crazy world, as you know.
It seems even if you try not to follow the news
and prefer history to breaking news alerts,
the news finds you and the news is alarming.
And I say alarming still within the context
of this sort of stoic alarm. I'm
not saying you're running around like a chicken with your head cut off or saying that the
sky is falling, but you are sort of deeply aware that things are not as they should be
as the expression goes, this is not normal. And as someone who's studied history and
as part of what I write and talk about, I mean, I think it's hard not to see the parallels,
particularly in America, between Kato's Rome
and today's America.
There was, or the Pax Romana of Marcus Aurelius's time
and the Pax Americana of our time.
And yet this order seems to be crumbling a little bit.
There are, there are fissures.
There are flare ups.
We are dealing with abnormal events,
not just in America, but you look at the rising threat
of China, you look at Russia's almost imperial ambitions
at this point.
And it's unpleasant, but it's also something you can't shy away from.
And so, I talk about politics here on this podcast, not because I'm trying to convince anyone
on any specific policy here or there, but because the Stokes believed that it was impossible
to separate philosophy from politics.
We are political animals, and the world we live in is made possible by politics. We are political animals and the world we live in is
made possible by politics. But most importantly, one of that that core stoic
virtue of justice, politics is the means by which that justice is either upheld
or violated. I've made no secrets about what I think about the sort of current
administration here in America. And I've tried to secrets about what I think about the sort of current administration here in America.
And I've tried to talk to interesting people with interesting perspectives across the
spectrum, whether we're having Republican congressmen on former sort of Republican speech
writers, whether we're having activists, whether we're having writers like Kamuler, crisis
conscience, which we talked about, and the sort of the fight
against corruption both in private enterprise and public politics.
But today's guest is someone I, who's writing, I have been reading for a very long time,
Ann Appelbaum.
She's a staff writer for the Atlantic, former Washington Post columnist.
She's also a Pulitzer Prize winner for her history of the Soviet
Goulog. She is just a great writer. You may have seen her Atlantic cover story recently,
history will judge the complicit. And so she is looking at the political situation, not just in
America, but across the West. She happens to live in Poland, so she's got also the perspective of
Eastern Europe there. And she's looking also the perspective of Eastern Europe there.
And she's looking at the rise of these authoritarian figures.
She's looking at what's enabling them.
She's looking at how we're able to rationalize them.
She's looking at the cowardice that they exploit
and the injustices that they inevitably do.
I mean, her three famous books, she wrote one
on the Red Fam famine, which was
one of Stalin's greatest crimes. She looks at the rise of the Iron Curtain, and then of course her
study of the Goulog is obviously an exploration of the most horrific abuses of left wing
totalitarianism. But in any case, Anne is a fantastic writer, and she's looking at this, not in the
old, can you believe, Trump said this, or oh, can you believe that Biden did this?
She's not looking at it in that political sense. She's looking at it from
the thousand-foot view, and which I think is essential right now.
And her new book, Twilight of Democracy, could not be more haunting
and sobering and eye-opening, because as she says, democracy
is not this thing that has always existed.
People made it exist.
And as Franklin famously said at the founding of America, this country is a republic if we
can keep it.
And so, you know, the Stoic is not just politically active in terms of holding office, but politically
active in the sense that we have to protect these important institutions.
We have to protect these important institutions. We have to protect these norms.
We have to stand up for what's right, even when we might disagree, say,
with the domestic policy agenda of the person that ends up,
we end up supporting or whatever.
We have to think about it in that larger sense as well.
Marcus Realized that the opening of meditations talks about how
the early still looks like Thrasia and Hilvidius
taught him about equality under the law,
the importance of rulers who respect their leaders,
the importance of that Stoic virtue of justice.
So these aren't, we can't just divorce modern politics
from the discussion of Stoicism
because Stoicism is not merely a philosophy
for personal improvement.
It's a philosophy for society, for culture, for the world.
It's an operating system for life.
And unfortunately, we can't go, oh, but that's unpleasant.
That's divisive, that's partisan.
We can't talk about that.
No, we have to talk about.
We have to look at these things.
And we have to look at them even though they're uncomfortable.
And it would be better for my brand, my audience,
if I didn't talk about these things, right?
I, you know, you're pissing people off
when you talk about them, but I feel obligated to
because that this is what we have to do, right?
This is what stoicism is about.
Senaqa says, look, the Epicurean says, I do not participate in politics unless it's an
emergency. The stoic says, I participate in politics unless there's an emergency that
prevents me. So that's why I continue to have these discussions. And I try to talk to
people and bring people on, I think, will open your mind, we'll push you, and we'll
make you better. And Anne is a great example of that. Again, Pulitzer Prize winner, National
Book Award finalist, a great writer, if you haven't read her stuff on the Atlantic, you absolutely
should. But her new book, Twilight of Democracy, is an absolute must read. So listen to my conversation
here. And what I hope you take from this is a push towards
the only thing that matters in this life
according to the stokes, which is action.
Courage is something you do.
Justice is something you implement.
Wisdom is pursued not for its own sake,
but so it can be applied to those other virtues.
And so again, we have to be active,
we have to participate as I close the interview with Anne,
she talks about this, that we have to take up roles
in society because if we don't,
that vacuum is filled, unfortunately, by the people,
we'd rather not have them filled by the ambitious
or the unethical or the unprincipled
or the lovers of power
were unfortunately in some cases the sort of deranged
sadists of the world and obviously that goes back to the
neuros of Seneca's time. So listen to my interview.
I hope this has some impact for you and be smart, be well.
And of course wear a mask.
So this is a sort of strange timing for your book.
I can't imagine that you feel vindicated,
but it must be haunting to see the world
where it is given what you've written about.
I mean, it depends which part of the world you live in,
but the threat to democracy and the possibility of democratic decline or collapse
has been pretty clear in a lot of parts of what we used to call the West for some time.
So the fact that it suddenly come home to people in the United States is a coincidence,
but actually the signs have been there for some time.
Yeah, and I'm also sort of referring to the events in Beloruss and other parts of Eastern Europe.
You're sort of focused on the rise of authoritarianism.
I don't want to say you've called it, but as you said, this has been a trend we've been on
that it seems like people have just stuck their head in the
sands about.
Yes, you know, I think one of the mistakes that we all have made, and I've made certainly
over the last 30 years, was to assume that as that the once countries had attained some
stage of liberal democracy once they had a number of free elections or in our case,
United States case, many dozens of free elections. We assumed that democracy then become somehow
stabilized and it can't then fall apart. Actually, if you look back in history, old democracies
have fallen apart sooner or later. And our assumption was that somehow we were an exception
because I don't know, our constitution was so great
or because we'd found such a great solution
or because as in Western Europe, we had learned so
with such, you know, with so bitterly
that the alternative was so terrible,
we've assumed that people wouldn't want
other kinds of choices.
But I think the events
of the last couple of years and even in the United States in the last few months have shown that
that's wrong. There are people for whom either politicians for whom authoritarianism is attractive
because it gives them more power or the press, anyway, the application of pressure against institutions designed to hold them
to account is advantageous.
There are voters who are bored by or irritated by the noise and cacophony of democratic debate
and they want it silenced.
And there are intellectuals and spin doctors and makers of memes and images who see the rise of authoritarian or liberal movements as an opportunity
for themselves to gain power or to have influence or to shape politics. And all of those people
have, you know, we see them playing public roles in the US, in Poland, where I'm at, where I'm right now, in Spain,
in the U.K., in Germany, in France, everywhere, really.
We're talking about something obviously unpleasant,
the idea of authoritarianism, the collapse of this sort of
Western order, the veering away from this sort of
historical tradition we've been on.
I'm struck by, there's a Shakespeare line I like, it says,
you know, I cannot think it.
And history appears in two different plays,
but basically it's the character not wanting
to see what is obviously in front of him
because it's unpleasant.
It strikes me that part of this is kind of snuck up on us
because a portion of us, or maybe a part of all of us, will watch an authoritarian
leader. And obviously this happened with Hitler. I mean, one of the interesting things about
Churchill's relationship with Hitler, it seemed to be the only Western leader who actually
read Mein Kampf and got, like, an Tuk Hitler at his word. There seems to be this part of us
that looks at authoritarian leaders and then says, well, I can't be exactly
what they're saying.
It's almost like we make excuses for them and then it sneaks up on us.
There's that.
And there's also the fact that if you name something for what it is, then you're obliged
to do something about it.
So this has been one of the main problems in getting the West, the Western leaders to recognize what Russia is and what
Russia has become over the last decade, namely that it's become a power, a
revanchise power that wants to reverse the changes that were made in 1989, that
wants to reestablish itself as a superpower at some level, and that has a clear plan and a clear strategy
of how to intervene in and shape the political systems
in both of its neighbors and of Europeans
and of the United States.
And the strategy has been clear for some time.
I actually started writing a it in 2014 and 2015.
And the Russians have stepped by step sought to carry this out.
Now, why don't Western nations recognize that,
understand it, seek to do something about it?
The reason because is that it would,
that would mean a major change in their thinking about the world.
That would mean that they can't sort of benignly dismiss Russia as a regional bully. They can't just say, oh well,
you know, it's far away. It's not our problem. They can't just say, well, you know, we do business
with a lot of Russian oligarchs and company, you know, Russian companies. And they seem like pretty
all right people. And we're making money off our relationships with their gas companies or their other companies.
And we don't want to end those relationships.
And the necessity of reorienting Western thinking
or American thinking around the nature of this challenge
is it would require so many sacrifices and so many changes
that people just don't want to do it.
I would say until recently there was a similar problem with China. The situation with China is a little bit different because it's become a useful scapegoat for the Trump administration. But you can
say that about our own system. Admitting that we now have an office, an American president,
who is, for example, openly seeking to undermine the post office so that it
so that it will be more difficult for Americans to vote in November. And understanding what that
means, that he is openly assaulting and attacking our electoral system, leave aside all the other
things that he's done. You know, saying that is so shocking in a way that people just don't want to
say it. You know, they don't want to do it.
It strikes me that we're experiencing a similar thing with COVID, too, where what you're saying is
it's not that the choice is hard, right?
Because it's sort of choice between the obvious right thing and the obvious wrong thing.
But then what the choice is demanding of you is really hard, you know, whether it's another lockdown or whether it's,
you know, the choice to send your kids to school
or not to school is pretty on paper, pretty clear cut,
but then what that's requiring of you
is some sort of sacrifice.
And so it strikes me that across Western societies,
it's less the, it's like intellectually we know,
but really there's a deficiency of will to do the
difficult thing.
So then cognitive dissonance kicks in and we somehow manage to convince ourselves that
the obvious right thing shouldn't be done.
Or as you said, the person who's telling you I have this authoritarian aim or Russia's
obvious actions, we find a way to rationalize them because we don't wanna do what it's obvious
we probably have to do.
Yeah, exactly.
So the price that we would have to pay,
the effort we would have to make,
the rethinking of our assumptions that we would have to do,
all of that is a big requirement.
And admitting the degree to which our political system is deteriorated
or the degree to which Russia is now a threat to numerous democracies in Europe, admitting
that would cost us and so it's just easier not to admit it.
Let's have a reset with Russia. We actually, there's a group of analysts in Washington
who want to do that again.
It failed last time.
It will fail again.
But it's a much nicer idea than admitting
the nature of the new Russian government
or the nature of the Russian government
and the ways in which it seeks to undermine our political system. That would require a lot more work than just having a reset.
I'm obviously given what I write about. I tend to go back to the ancients and what's interesting
about the sort of stills are on both sides of the Roman Republic. You have Kato and your Sissuros
on the sort of decline fall of the Roman Republic. And then, you know, the first emperor comes in Augustus
is advised by two Stoics and then famously,
Santa Cah advises Nero.
I'm curious like fascinated slash appalled, horrified.
There seems to be kind of two paths that people,
whether they're politicians or writers or intellectuals,
which you talk a lot about.
When we see one of these authoritarian leaders
that threatens the order or wants to usurp the institutions,
there's the sort of the K-dos who sort of go down swinging
and fight, they'll pay any price.
Then there's the Cicero's who sort of make excuses.
They sort of go to the strong side.
They look for the winner.
Obviously, later in Nero's administration,
you have Thrasian, a Grippinus, they sort of go to the strong side, they look for the winner. You know, obviously later in Nero's administration,
you have Thrasian, Agrippinus, and a bunch of Stoics
who are ultimately lose their life fighting against Nero.
And then you have Seneca, who's his top advisories
are telling himself that I'm mitigating it,
that I'm making it better, I'm working from the inside.
What makes someone choose one path or the other?
What have you seen in your research?
Well, if you read my book, you'll know that there isn't
a single answer to that question.
These choices are shaped so much by people's personal
experiences, by their own ambitions,
by their own political views, that you can't give us
a single answer to that.
I talk a little bit in my book and also in a recent cover story I did for the Atlantic,
which was about collaboration and why people collaborate with regimes or systems
that they know are wrong or that they know are counter to their own principles.
And you have to look at a range of explanations or a range of
You know, range of motivations. So there are people who are, you know, who are deeply
Disappointed either with their own country or with their own careers and then become attracted to radical
Politics because they see radicalism as either as a way of personal advancement.
You know, this is a new party or a new way to move up.
Or they see it as, you know, as the solution to their degenerate
or corrupt or otherwise disappointing society.
So radicalism almost always comes out of some kind of profound
disappointment that, you know, then you see other people who are attached
to the status quo, and that can be
for good reasons and bad reasons. It can be because they have a personal stake in the system as it
exists, or it can be because they think they're institutions in their society that are worth saving,
so they make the choice to stay with that system. And then there are different kinds of personalities. There are people for whom authoritarianism
or authoritarian language has a kind of deep appeal. They prefer one leader, they prefer one voice.
They don't like arguing, they think it's, they don't like the weaknesses of liberalism and
of democracy and this sort of cacophony that it creates. And then there's the opposite kind of personality.
There's sort of liberal or libertarian
or other kinds of personalities,
people who like change and difference
and who are interested and intrigued by debate
and who don't mind being in an environment
where people argue and don't get along.
So I think it's,
I think it's almost too hard to generalize me.
There are, as I said, both in my book and in some of my recent articles,
you can find examples of, you know, that whole wide range of people.
Well, you have that amazing phrase.
History will judge the complicit,
but it doesn't seem like people care that much about how history will judge them.
No, I think that's probably true that they don't.
And also people are always convinced that their version of history will win.
And that looking, you know, and they, and they think that, you know,
whatever, whatever minds that they have at the time,
they think that's the one that's going to prevail.
And they forget that, you know, things because, you know,
the ideas are overturned and they change and they forget that, you know, things become, you know, the ideas are overturned and
they change and they, and they go off in other directions. So, I, you know, it's a, it's a,
usually statesmen towards the ends of their lives begin to think about history and how history will
see them. I would say it's probably pretty rare, though, for most of us to go through, you know,
in the ordinary course of the day
and worry about how history is gonna see us.
So I think the inability to step back
and look at, you know, take a long view of what you're doing
is, I mean, that's just human.
I mean, that's not just not how most of us think
most of the time.
I had breakfast with a Republican Senator
in the Senate dining room, maybe a few months after the election.
Well, I guess I'm trying to mess up the timeline.
But anyways, I was asking him sort of about this.
Like, this is so, Trump's agenda in most cases
is so opposed to the sort of Republican orthodoxy
or what these people had talked about their whole career,
I sort of said, how's this working?
And he sort of pointed to one person
and he pointed to another person sort of,
serotoniously across the room and said,
you know, that person is now not gonna win reelection.
You know, this person could have been the CIA director.
And his point was that these people
had sort of worked their whole careers
to get in line for a certain position
or a certain advancement and to challenge it
would obviously threaten that. But what
seems so insane to me about it was we'd already had a pretty good track record of how people
holding those positions in the administration had gone for them. It seems like the cognitive
dissonance almost makes someone live in a false reality where you could
have been a successful CIA director under an authoritarian leader.
Why would you even want that position anymore given how it had gone for the, you know, the
process?
Exactly.
Yeah, now that's one of the great mysteries of the Trumpetism.
It is increasingly clear that anybody who gets too close to him, it's almost like for the price of it. Exactly. Yeah, now that's one of the great mysteries of the trumpet is you're meeting.
It is increasingly clear that anybody
who gets too close to him, it's almost like an infection.
I mean, they become somehow toxic
and they find it very difficult to extract themselves
from so all kinds of honorable people,
whether James Mattis or John Kelly,
people who attempted to work with him and inside his administration found themselves
badly tired afterwards, you know,
kind of stained by him, by the compromises
that they had to make, and then by the fact
that he invariably attacks them
if they say anything even lightly critical of him.
I mean, think about Rex Tillerson, who
blundered his way into the job of being Secretary of State,
having been an oil executive.
And as the end of his career, and he probably
saw this as some kind of moment capping
his long series of triumphs as a businessman.
And instead, he was insulted by the president.
He was dragged through the mud.
And he'll be remembered as one of history's worst secretaries
of state.
And yet you're right.
And yet people still want these jobs.
And they still want to do them.
I mean, there is one certain kind of job.
I mean, there's sort of a few deputies.
There are a few people in the state department.
There are a few people in some other parts of the government
who I still think are probably there for good reasons who are trying to, you know, behind the scenes do something useful.
But most of the people who've taken prominent, you know, forward, you know, kind of media looking forward looking jobs have been, have been stained. I mean, and will always be by the kinds of compromises they make by the idiotic things they've had to say, by the
policies that we know they don't agree with that they've had to go along with.
And yet, the desire for power and the desire for influence,
and the belief that you can somehow do something that others were incapable of doing is very strong.
So they go on imagining that by force of will,
they're talented that they'll find a way,
and they'll find a way to rise above the nastiness
of the administration and achieve something.
And I suppose the lesson is that we also underestimate
how attractive power is and how much people wanted,
especially people who've been sitting around in the house
or the Senate for many years, you know,
hoping to find a way to make a mark
and are suddenly given an opening.
It's very tempting to take it.
Hey, it's Ryan, got a quick message from one of our sponsors
and then we'll get right back to the show, stay tuned.
Yeah, that's sort of the Seneca argument, you know, of the, I'm going to be the adult in the room.
I'm going to, or it's the, it's the, the person who falls for the, the abusive spouse over and
over again, or the bad boy, I'm going to change them. There, it strikes me, there's an ego in that,
sort of a savior complex that allows someone to rationalize doing
a very selfish thing for seemingly altruistic reasons.
Well, one of the reasons I wrote that Atlantic cover story that you were referring to is that,
these are the kinds of excuses that people make in authoritarian countries, or have done in the past.
There's a long tradition of people rationalizing,
whether it was working with the V.C. government
or whether it was working with the government
in communist Germany right after the war.
There are rationales that have been used over and over again.
And in a way, the shocking thing is hearing them in Washington.
I mean, they're expect that in Washington, D. DC, you would hear people using the same kind of language
that people once used. And in much harsher and worse dictatorships, particularly in Washington,
I mean, at the end of the day, if you said, no, I'm not going to support Donald Trump,
you know, even if you did what Mitt Romney has done and distanced yourself and voted for
impeachment and, you know, dared to stand up against him in public,
and on Twitter, or whatever,
what terrible price did he pay?
I mean, it wasn't like he's been sent to the gulag
or he's lost.
You know, his children have been arrested.
I mean, none of that.
I mean, it's true that he wasn't invited to CPAC,
this conservative conference.
And I, you know, which happened to be this year was,
this version of it was one where everybody got COVID.
And, you know, it's sometimes the president attacks him
on Twitter, but actually has anything that terrible happened.
I mean, if you, you know, why aren't more people
following that example?
Is it so difficult?
You know, again, in other kinds of regimes,
I mean, you could have lost your life
for a defying leader.
And in Trump's Washington,
maybe you don't get a couple of party invitations.
And maybe it worse comes to worse,
you don't get reelected.
But is that so terrible?
Then that means you'll just have to take
a million dollar consulting job
or maybe you'll have to
go and teach at the Kennedy School.
I mean, it's not like, you know, your whole family will be executed dawn.
So the mystery in the Washington case is why more people haven't followed Mitt Romney.
Well, and it's you might not be reelected in six years.
That's what's so weird about the term limits on it.
And so when I think about the sort of the rationalization,
one of the ones I've heard, I had Congressman Mike Gallagher
on the podcast and I had Congressman Dan Crenshaw more recently.
But one of the things they tell themselves,
or I'd be curious your response to it, is
this sort of, maybe they actually see themselves leading some minor resistance to Trump in certain
cases.
But then what they would immediately point to is the illiberal left, right?
The worries of the illiberal left, which I agree exists and has issues, but there's this strange argument that the complicitness in one
authoritarian sort of administration, again, within the context of the United States,
is rationalized by because you're protecting us from college students who think sushi is racist. But this is, I mean, this is also very old.
So why did people collaborate with Vichy France?
In fact, the leadership of Vichy France,
why did they agree to collaborate with the Nazis?
The reason was because the Nazis to them
were preferable to the terrible French left,
which they were-
To the communist. To not even the communist, to the French socialists who'd run the
country in the 1930s, and the, you know, and the, you know, and the, and the
terrible degeneracy that they, that they saw there. So they justified, they
could justify working with, with fascists because, you know, because of that.
I mean, the, one of that. I mean that one of
things I have trouble and here I'm speaking to somebody I wrote three books about communist
to tell a tyrannism. Okay. I you don't have to you don't have to tell me that there is
a authoritarian streak on the left or that or that or that Marxism can can lead you in in
very dangerous directions. I spent two decades-
You're about to go along.
Right, I wrote two decades writing about that.
But what is genuinely mystifying to me is we now have,
is the difference between, so the left and the United States
is a big problem on some, by the way,
not all some university campuses.
And even on those university campuses campuses not in all departments.
It's not a problem in the biochemical engineering departments.
It's a problem in the English department maybe.
It's becoming a problem. It's some newspapers mostly in the center of the center left.
There's some cultural issues around, you know,
nutty stuff that people on the left do or the rules that they want people to adhere to
about how the right and wrong ways to speak about racism and so on. Okay. I can see that
that's a problem. On the other hand, you know, you have a team of people in government
and in power, you know, who are altering and changing American institutions day by day,
who have eviscerated the State Department,
who have eviscerated the Department of Justice,
who are seeking to twist, to use the tools
of the American government, the money that's used
to support for a military aid, for foreign military aid, for
the personal, personal use of the president in his political campaign. So all of Washington,
you know, all these institutions and organizations that were set up to serve the American people
have been undermined, you know, by this, you know, this team of authoritarians, would be
authoritarians, you know, in power in Washington.
That seems to me off the scale more dangerous and more important than the authoritarian left,
you know, at the moment. If the authoritarian left were to win and they were to take over
Washington and, you know, and and and do the same thing, then I would feel as worried.
But, but to me, the the the thread is so disproportionately from the right that, then I would feel as worried. But to me, the threat is so disproportionately
from the right that I am misdivide. And again, I speak as somebody who spent my pretty much
my whole life writing about the extremes of communism and famines created by communist
governments and so on. But this is disproportionate, you know,
this problem on the right.
And by the way, it's the same in most of Europe.
You know, there was the exception of Greece.
We had a, there was a nutty left wing government
in Greece, although in the end they, you know,
in the end they also wound up being more moderate
than their language was.
But in, you know, in one European country,
I have another with a couple, you know,
very few exceptions.
The threats to democracy are coming from the authoritarian right and from the language and tactics
being used by the authoritarian right. And I just don't, I don't even see that there's a comparable
problem on the left in most countries. Yeah, it's, I'm just, I, I, I, I'm mystified by it, by this.
I'm mystified by it too, you know, if it too. If the populists we saw in the United States
were of the Trump variety, or I live in Texas,
the sort of Papi-O-Dannules variety from the mid-1900s,
or the Huey Long variety, you could almost get,
or understand some of these ridiculous comparisons
because they're not
coming from it.
They are not as familiar as you are saying with your understanding of communism.
But a lot of the people that are complicit that you're saying history would be judged
by are not doing it from a place of ignorance either.
I mean, these are people with degrees from Harvard or Yale or they've served in the military or they've like, what's so weird to me about it is, is the people you hear
making these sort of absurd, preposterously, you know, preposterously inaccurate historical
comparisons must know either they've managed to so fool themselves because, you know, you
can't, you can't get a man to understand something that salary
depends on him not understanding, or they are doing this from a much more malevolent point
of view because you can't possibly compare those two things.
They are also looking at what kind of information they get and what they read all the time.
If you watch Fox News all the time, then you probably will feel mostly afraid that America
is about to be taken over by Antifa, socialist, radical revolutionaries.
That's the real threat that faces us.
They repeat it over and over again.
They show images of violence constantly.
You see it if you are in a, if you, if you are on Facebook
or on social media and those are the accounts that you follow, then you will see repeated images of
violence, um, uh, you know, um, crazy protesters. And the fact that it's, you know, 150 people in
Portland who are still holding out as rioters.
Or it's a few people in various cities.
You'll see that and you'll think that's the story of the country.
And people seem to be, they buy that propaganda.
They're surrounded by it, they read it, they see it.
And that's what they're afraid of.
They're afraid of, and there maybe I should add, there may be another piece of this and this is a little bit, this is in my, in my recent book as well.
You know, there are some people who are particularly susceptible to that kind of propaganda or that
kind of those kinds of images. You know, there are people who are really bothered by scenes of violent
protest and whose whose instincts when they see something like that is to kind of
lock down, switch off and say, we need a crackdown. And the Trump administration is using that,
knows that, and is using those images of kind of police cracking down on demonstrators
in order to appeal to that kind of person.
And maybe they'll be successful, I don't know.
So last question for you, and obviously,
I as an author, I hate when the sort of the wrap up question
is like, tell me what to do.
But I'm curious like, as someone who lives,
I know you live in Poland, how does an individual person,
I guess this is something I struggle with, how does an individual person, a citizen, not a person in a position of
power?
How do we know what to do?
When do you flee, when do you leave, when do you take to the streets?
I think that's what's been so hard for me to wrap my head around and I think it leads
to this sort of stoic question of,
you know, is it something you control?
Is it not something you control?
When do you fight?
Like, how do you know when this is like really early
and someone else will take care of it?
And how do you know when it's like put everything in suitcases
and, you know, head to a safe place?
Like that, I think people's inability to calibrate
where we are in the crisis
has caused a lot of the inertia and apathy
and enabled some of this.
Well, it's also, you know,
there's the strange problem in the United States
of Washington, we're such a big country,
you know, Washington is far away
and in fact, quite a decentralized country. So, you know, Washington is far away. And in fact, quite a decentralized country.
So, you know, many, you know,
it's going to look different in the United States
than it does in a smaller country like Poland,
where the central government has a lot of power
and you can feel right away when there's a, when something has changed.
I mean, I would say that for, for individuals,
the best thing to do is to, is to remember that, you remember that democracy is not like running water,
that you can just expect it to keep coming out of the tap. And you don't, you know,
that it will just happen and you don't have to do anything about it. And that we are getting to,
you know, the events of recent months should be a reminder that everybody should be involved at some level. You don't have to
join a political party if you don't want to, you don't have to run for office if you don't want to,
although it would be useful if good people would run for office, even at the lowest possible levels,
whatever, school board, local government. But being involved in civic organizations,
being involved in charities, volunteering, giving money, giving time if you can, seeking to
make sure that you're connected to your community and that you are thinking about the,
you know, just even just thinking about the local politics of your town or your city or your neighborhood and how you can contribute to that. I think, I think that's a, you know, that's
something that everybody can do. And that kind of involvement is really, that's the sort of,
the very basic building blocks of democracy are, you know, the people and the civic organizations
of democracy or the people and the civic organizations who make it function at the lowest possible levels.
And anything you can do to be involved in that, I think, is useful and also it will connect
you to people who you don't normally meet.
And so you're not fleeing Poland yet?
I'm not fleeing Poland yet.
No, no, no.
In fact, when the coronavirus start pandemic began,
we had a dramatic scene where my family,
I was in London and my children were studying abroad.
And there was a dramatic moment when we all had to get to Poland
before the border shut, which we did in March.
One of my sons very dramatically landed in Germany
when the border was already closed
and he had to walk to the cross the border with his luggage.
I mean, you know, and of course it was very funny
because it was the reverse of 1939
when everybody had to get out of Poland, you know,
before we were closed.
So no, we're not leaving yet
and we're, you know, we try to be useful here in any way that we can.
Well, thank you so much.
I love your stuff and you're writing both inspires and horrifies me.
So thanks for what you do.
Well, thanks for the interview.
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