The Daily Stoic - David Wallace-Wells on Empowering the Future
Episode Date: September 10, 2022Ryan talks to journalist David Wallace-Wells about his new book The Uninhabitable Earth: Life After Warming, seeking out information, challenging assumptions, and becoming empowered through b...etter understanding.During his 11 years at New York magazine, David has emerged as one of the nation’s most formidable thinkers about science and society, writing agenda-setting essays on the dangers and complexities of global warming. His 2019 book, “The Uninhabitable Earth: Life After Warming,” was a number one Times bestseller, and reviewers called it both “brilliant” and “the most terrifying book I have ever read”; The Washington Post aptly called it “the ‘Silent Spring’ of our time,” and it has become a touchstone for the younger generation of climate activists who have helped redraw the landscape of global climate politics in just the last few years.📕Pre-order Ryan Holiday's new book "Discipline Is Destiny" and get exclusive pre-order bonuses at https://dailystoic.com/preorder ✉️ Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, FacebookSee 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, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoke podcast early and add free on Amazon music. Download the app today.
Welcome to the weekend edition of the Daily Stoke. Each weekday we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stokes,
something to help you live up to those four Stoke virtues of courage, justice, temperance, and wisdom.
And then here on the weekend, we take a deeper dive into those same topics.
We interview stoic philosophers. We explore at length how these stoic ideas can be applied
to our actual lives and the challenging issues of our time. Here on the weekend when you have a little
bit more space when things have slowed down, be sure to take some time to think, to go
for a walk, to sit with your journal, and most importantly to prepare for what the week
ahead may bring.
Hi I'm David Brown, the host of Wundery's podcast business wars.
And in our new season, Walmart must fight off target, the new discounter that's both
savvy and fashion forward.
Listen to business wars on Amazon music or wherever you get your podcasts.
I guess it would have been, it's either 2017 or 2018, I was in New York City on my book tour
for Conspiracy and my friend, Tim Irvin, threw together a little dinner at this steakhouse.
It was really cool.
I forget everyone who was there, but one person was there.
I wasn't familiar with his work before, but he has since become one of my absolute favorite writers, especially over the last couple years.
I'm talking about David Wallace-Wells. You've almost certainly read some of his columns in the Times or in New York magazine.
He has a really cool new newsletter for the New York Times that I very much recommend, but he is a climate change reporter, a pandemic
reporter, and just a really thoughtful, intelligent guy.
In his 2019 book, The Uninhabitable Earth Life After Warming was a number one bestseller.
It was, as one reviewer said, one of the most terrifying books you will ever read,
The Washington Post called it, The Silent Spring of Our Time.
I really enjoyed this conversation. I've been waiting for it to come out somehow. I've got like lost in the shuffle, so it's a little later than I would like it to run,
but I very much think you are going to enjoy this interview. I won't belabor the intro too much.
I am a bit exhausted. I just got back from
Mantino, Illinois, where the warehouse for Daily Stoke is. I was trying to sign as many copies
of the book for the pre-orderers that I could. I ended up doing like 2750 to the first
day. I did like 35 35 3600 the second day.
So more than 6000 copies already signed
and then I'm back at the office here on a Saturday
but signing some more copies,
you guys have been overwhelming in the support of the book
and it means so much to me.
If you haven't prior to discipline is destiny yet,
you can do that at DailyStow at Backcom slash Pre-Order.
But back to David, when I said that he went on
to become one of my favorite writers,
there was a part of me that was somewhat resistant to reading his writing at first, and we talk
about this in the interview. I guess, you know, it's not that it's a buzzkill, but it's not exactly
the most inspiring stuff to read about how badly we are screwing things up. But to me, this is a
really key part of Stoicism, the virtue of wisdom, which I will tackle,
two books from now.
But the idea that you have to seek out uncomfortable information, and if you are studying information
that makes you comfortable, that confirms your viewpoint, you're not learning, you're
not pushing yourself, I really think David does a great job of challenging assumptions,
looking at data both dispassionately as well as passionately. And, you know, he lays
it all out there. His reading was a load star for me during the pandemic. And I would say his
pandemic reporting and how right he was and how wrong many other people who I previously, you know,
liked to read were, you know, it's definitely made me reevaluate some of the climate change stuff
that maybe I wasn't as concerned about as I should be, but remember,
a key part of this doses is giving a crap about people you will never meet, including future generations.
And that's why I very much recommend David's book. You can read the uninhabitable Earth life after warming. You'd follow him on Twitter, D Wallace Wells, and you can get his new New York Times
and subscriber-only newsletter. Just go to nytime.com slash newsletter, David Wallace Wells,
there's a dash in between each one. And yeah, I really think he's a great writer. I really
enjoyed this conversation, and I think you will too.
enjoyed this conversation and I think you will too. I'm trying to think so we met at that dinner.
Like when was this?
This is 2007.
No, 2017, I guess, right?
In New York.
Sounds ballpark right to me.
Yeah.
I think that was it, right?
This is right before uninhabitable Earth came out.
It was, well, it was probably, yeah,
I mean, the book came out in 2019.
I don't, I mean, somewhere in that ballpark, 2017, 2018,
it might be like closer to a, like a landmark day
in your life than mine.
So if you say, if you're like,
it was definitely 2017, I'm sure you're right.
Oh, yeah, no, actually I don't know when that,
this, I think I was there because conspiracy had just come out,
but I honestly, I don't remember.
Yeah, it could also be like getting older.
I think that is, that is true.
It does blur together.
Yeah, like when you're younger, like even, okay,
so let's say that was four or five years ago,
like five years used to be a long amount of time, right?
Like because-
Journal-ledding high school.
Yeah, it only been through a number of five year spans.
And then as you go through more of them,
it all blurs together.
Yeah, I mean, I'd something I think about a lot
with my kids, which is that it's a,
I'm, you know, as like any parent is,
I'm constantly amazed at how fast they're growing up
and then you're like, oh, I'm aging at the same exact speed.
Yes.
Which doesn't occur to any of us, but.
I am.
My youngest was like nine months old
when the pandemic started.
And so you know those little frames that you have
or you take like the nine month photo
and then the 10 month photo, the one that we just stopped.
It's like that's when that's when the Titanic hit the iceberg and my watch stopped.
You know what I mean?
We have this weird, that's when it happened.
You know kind of a thing.
So your kids do help you benchmark.
It is funny.
I wrote this email a while ago where I was saying, every time you cut your kids' nails
or every time you take them to get your haircut,
you think it's like this wonderful moment, which it is, but then it's also a terrible
moment if you think about it, because that's like a one-way street.
Not just getting older, but it's a one-way street for both of you, like heading towards
a place where that won't happen anymore.
Yeah, my older daughter, who's four.5, has never had her hair cut.
And we were just talking about it the other day.
And my wife was like, I think that means like the end of your hair may have been inside
me.
And it's amazing to think that that's like, oh, right.
That is, that's both beautiful and weird.
Yes.
So I was talking to, I thought you would like this.
I was talking to John Embarry, who wrote the great influenza, certainly.
And I loved, I read his book Rising Tide many years ago, which I think is kind of a climate
change book.
It's certainly about what happens when we fuck with the climate and the consequences
there.
And so I was like, okay, so you wrote this book like 15 years ago about climate change basically,
or 20 years ago, about climate change,
and things have gotten worse,
then you wrote this book about pandemics,
and then that was like sort of eerily prescient.
And I was like, could you stop writing books
about these topics?
That would be nice.
And we laughed at it.
And then later in the interview, he mentions,
I said the phrase church in state,
and he was like, you know, I wrote a book about that too,
which I did not know.
And I read, he wrote this book about the invention,
like we think of America being founded as people
who fled religious persecution, right?
Which is kind of true,
but they weren't seeking religious freedom for everyone.
Dr. Justin Trinum established religious societies just their own.
Yeah, they were attempting to set up a religious theocracy for their religion, right?
And it's only this guy, Roger Williams, who sort of differs from that, goes on to found the state
of Rhode Island. But I was like, God damn it, could you stop writing about the terrible things that are
happening right now in the world, but the historical prequel to them.
And then I guess it's just like humans have always struggled with these things and struggled
with collective action problems, with thinking about complicated
topics. And then we're so often at the mercy of singular mercy and at the saved by heroic
or evil individuals who sort of decide to exert their will on everyone else.
And now we're in a situation on a number of fronts where one big question is whether these are unprecedented challenges or whether we just feel that they are.
And it's something we can talk about, but it's something that I feel differently about
almost like every minute of every day.
I can find myself thinking especially the climate crisis, but also the whole sort of poly-crisis that we're living
through right now is really daunting in its scale and unprecedented and has no meaningful
analog in human history.
And then there are other times and other ways of looking at it where I think, you know,
this is obviously very serious and
managing it poorly will result in an enormous amount of suffering and probably even managing
it well will result in some amounts of real suffering.
But the question of how we relate to it emotionally, politically, philosophically, I think is kind
of an open one.
And I do wonder slash worry a little bit,
whether or to what degree our sort of presentism
and our cultural, present tense apocalyptic impulses,
to which I've contributed,
are pulling us towards a darker vision of what we're living
through now, what we're heading towards,
then someone in 50 or 100 years might think looking
back. I don't know. Yeah, I was going to ask you about that. Not in the sort of don't
look up sense of like, how do you stay positive? But I am curious as someone whose job it is
to write about or to seek out almost universally unpleasant information, right? Like the data that you look at, the people
that you talk to, whether it's your COVID reporting or your climate change reporting,
like you're talking to the people who are looking at the worst information that there is, right?
Like the things that the fringes or at the extremes or the doomsday scenarios.
And then on top of that, you're a journalist,
which means that you're sort of in this media culture
of presentism and social media
and sort of competitiveness
and the day-to-day news cycle,
which isn't super healthy just even when
you're not talking doomsday scenarios.
How do you manage to stay sane with them?
I don't want to, I don't mean like how do you see the good
and everything, but how does that not just break your brain?
Because it seems like it could break someone's brain.
I guess I look at it from the opposite perspective,
which is to say that if I wasn't seeking out that information,
then I'd be turning away from
what knowledge there was to help us guide thinking about where we are and where we're going. So
you know, the alternative world in which journalists like me are telling, like just a good news,
and our media just has a good news by us. And that would actually be a really scary world for me to
live in, because I would think that there would be an enormous number of threats that we weren't taking very seriously, but which were very real.
And you know, it's, I think to some degree, a matter of just pure temperament. some amount of sociopathic, slash journalistic distance that I'm able to write about these stories,
sort of as stories. But, you know, the, the fact is that we are living through this enormous
transformation and taking that seriously means looking very hard at where we are, looking very hard at where
we're going and not shining away from whatever might be embedded in that information that
is quite scary.
So, to talk in slightly less abstracted terms, you know, talk about climate change for a second.
The planet's like 1.2 degrees Celsius warmer than it was before the industrial revolution.
And that, which doesn't sound very much, but it literally means it is warmer now than
at any point, at any point, previous to this one in the entire history of human civilization.
So the planet is already warmer
than at any point when there were humans around to walk around and talk about it. So much
of what we know of as human history, our politics, our agriculture, our culture, our psychology
are, you know, everything, is the result of cultures that arose from climate conditions that are no longer
here. And that means that we are today embarked on a genuine experiment, which is to say how
much of what we have can survive and how much can't, how much will have to be transformed.
I don't think it's like, you know, doom saying to look into the future with that frame.
I think it's just honest.
And I think we're-
It's not better bad, it just is.
It's facts or facts.
And you know, those people who are like,
well, we've gotten through challenges in the past,
I actually, I do think that that wisdom is valid,
although I also don't think it's total.
And I don't think that we can assume success
based on previous usually mixed success.
But I also don't want to let that sort of crowd out.
For me, the central dramatic, emotional, political,
philosophical question of our time,
which is just, how are we going to survive in this new world that we're making for ourselves?
No, I get that.
And I totally understand the duty of it, and I'm not saying that you shouldn't be doing
it.
I'm more saying it's like if I was talking to a police officer or a special forces operator,
you're seeing dark shit on a daily basis, right?
Like your job forces you to stare into a kind of a this, right?
Their job does, but also yours.
I'm asking like, how do you actually process
and think through that or is it just not affect you
and you just see it as sort of like,
this is the information I'm processing
and my job is to make sense of it and tell that story.
I sense, though, from your writing,
that there's a moral element of it to you
that alarms you and scares you and upsets you.
So how, as you day in and day out are living in that world,
like how do you not bring that home?
How does it not depress you,
how do you function with the climate in your work that you have to acclimate to?
Yeah, I mean, I don't know that I have an especially satisfactory answer to it because,
I mean, I can tell you the way that it affects me, which is, add an abstract and intellectual moral level more than at a base emotional psychological level.
And that may make me well-sited to this work, or it may make me a sociopath,
who is not just talking about these things, I don't entirely know.
And I think it is important that I came to these stories as a journalist,
which is to say a sort of a,
someone who's making narrative out of the messiness
of the world.
And on these two big stories,
in particular, climate change in the pandemic,
it was the bigness of the story that really excited me,
which is to say I didn't find it intimidating
or overwhelming, I mean, in certain ways,
overwhelming and intimidating,
but in other ways, I just found it exciting
to be carried along on a huge drama.
And the pandemic in particular was fascinating
in the sense that as a reporter,
which I sort of am part-time, I guess you could say,
it was amazing to be very rapidly pulled into a saga that no one understood because
the disease was so novel.
And you could talk to experts who had, you know, rules of thumb, they were caring for
mother, you know, epidemiological experience and there are ways of sort of conceptually
modeling it based on previous influenza's respiratory illnesses, etc. But we have not seen anything
like this pandemic in 100 years. You know, a disease that literally infected the entire planet
within a couple of years. And we were all figuring it out from scratch at the start.
Now at the time, I think the world as a whole
responded in terror, primarily.
They were like, let's bunker down,
let's cut ourselves off from one another,
we need to protect ourselves, we don't know what this is.
And I didn't fight that impulse myself.
I wasn't like, no, I wanna be going out to nightclubs
in March of 2020, but I was also really pulled forward
and excited by the idea that there was a,
you know, a grand historical narrative
that was not only unfolding through the time of our lives,
but had just begun, and in which I wasn't behind anyone else
who had more expertise.
I was able to like,
as much as anyone who was not a scientific expert in respiratory infection, I was like,
as well positioned to be understanding that at the Vanguard as anyone else in the world.
And that found, that's all really, really exciting, particularly in contrast to writing about
climate where no matter how expert I ever got, I would always
know that there were thousands of people who knew the material actually much deeper than I did,
and you could understand the physics of ocean currents and explain them in a way that I probably
never would be able to. And it's one of the sort of strange facts of my life now is that I am
in certain ways this expert and in other ways this total novice.
You know, the other day I was like, I had a couple of interviews on CNN and MSNBC and I like
literally walked off set and like didn't interview with a climate scientist and I was just like,
let's start from scratch. Like, really a big picture like, you know, and I, it's like disorienting to be playing both an expert and an ignoramus.
But I think it's also, there's something sort of, it reflects our, you know, everyone's basic ignorance
about so much of what's transpiring in the world, and the more that we can try to do both of those
things, both understand how little we know and do whatever we can to understand more.
I think to get back to your original question, the sort of more thoughtful and empowered
will be about the future of facing both as individuals and sort of as a collective.
It is kind of weird because you think about history and you think about these moments, but
like all the edges are rounded off those moments.
It just feels like it's this thing that happened.
You don't get the sense, it doesn't fully strike you that the people who were living in
it were not aware of what it was.
Its significance or where it would go.
They were experiencing it day to day, right?
So like the depression happens,
you know, the stock market crashes in 1929. Nobody knows that this is the great depression,
right? They'd obviously lived through panics and things before, but they didn't know how big it would
be. They certainly didn't know it would last this many years. They didn't know that this president
would flub it and then this president would come in. Like they had no idea. They just, it was just day to day life.
And then so something like the pandemic happens and this is also happening,
I guess with the climate, but it's over a longer time span.
Now, I don't just mean like decades, but just like years.
So it doesn't feel the same way, but like the pandemic is one of those things where you're like,
oh, this is history. This is the things that I read about.
dynamic is one of those things where you're like, oh, this is history.
This is the things that I read about.
That's the day to dayness that I'm feeling.
That's what World War II was like.
That's what the Great Depression was like.
That's what the Great Influenza was like.
And that history is not fun.
Really, you know what I mean?
Like just a reminder that like,
this is what I think is the reason for us now.
Yeah, because I think one of the uncertainty
about the course of the larger narratives in our lives
is was a much bigger part of human experience
for all of human history.
But we sort of more recently started to believe
that we were really profoundly in control of everything
or should be.
And I think it's a much deeper emotional violation to us to try to accept the basic uncertainties.
And embrace a sort of more humble perspective about what's about to come.
Then it would have been 50 or 75 or 100 years ago where we didn't even have models,
let alone no other models didn't work all that well.
And so I think that we were all knocked off our feet a little bit more and really wanted to believe
that we could, if we had chosen to, stop this disease, especially across the West, there was this mantra all through 2020. We know what we need to do.
And I think to some degree, we knew what tools we had, that's true.
But I think that we really were flattering our capacity to fundamentally change the
course of a once in a generation, a once in a century pathogen.
And there were places in the world
that did better and managed,
especially by taking very, very rapid early action,
were able to sort of eliminate the disease
from their borders, but they were actually very few
and they were culturally relatively foreign
from places like the US and Europe.
And while in overall, long enough,
time span, it even out for the most part.
Yeah, I mean, now you're like, would you rather be living in China or the UK?
You know, probably the UK, I mean, for many reasons, but even just on the pandemic
front, like probably in the UK. And, you know, and yet we told ourselves all through the pandemic,
we told ourselves these stories that it was essentially, you know, we were living through,
not just history, we were living through a fable, which was revealing our virtue.
And we said in 2020, oh, it's political malfeasance that our leadership was so broken about this,
which I think, you know, that's very enough to say. But I also think that, you know,
it wasn't like Angela Merkel, like oversaw a dramatically
better pandemic than Donald Trump did.
It was better, but it wasn't categorically better.
And, you know, these failures were really pervasive because the challenge is really hard
and really human and not reducible to ideology or partisanship, which revealed itself, I
think, again, in 2021 when we told ourselves that the main driver of the disease was vaccination, which to a certain degree, again, was true,
it was not untrue.
But the gaps in vaccination between red state, similar states, Republicans, and Democrats
were large, but they were roughly comparable to the gaps by education, by race, by income.
And we didn't want to see that complexity.
We wanted to see pandemic death in 2021,
almost as willful and the people who chose not to get
vaccinated as deserving whatever fate they got.
I actually think we're in a slightly more healthy place
narratively about the pandemic now because we've sort of,
because of reinfections and because of breakthrough deaths,
we've sort of dropped that pretense
that pandemic suffering is elective.
And we've started to just treat it as background noise,
which is probably how earlier generations
would have treated it,
gotten around. They would have gotten around to that point much more quickly because they were
much more familiar with the idea that things were out of our control, but we're so addicted to the
idea, especially the wealthy, powerful countries of the world, especially wealthy, powerful people,
in wealthy, powerful countries in the world, we're so addicted to the idea that we can control
whatever we set about to control, that we were just unwilling to admit that this virus was bigger than us,
which turns out to have been, I mean, it's literally infected the entire planet.
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Well, no, it's interesting that this idea of like what's in our control,
it's out of our control.
Do we come to terms with things?
Do we practice acceptance?
This is like the essence of obviously of stoicism, and I go back to the Antonin plague,
this plague breaks out in Rome.
And it's not like a one, two, three-year thing.
I mean, the Antonin plague lasts for 15 years, right?
And so, and I think one of the things, one of the, one of the lessons we've wrongly learned
in the modern world is that things happen quickly, right?
Because we can, they have, like, yes,
we still know things happen that are outside our control,
but then we cook, as you're saying,
we figure them out, we come up with solutions,
and then that's the end of them.
The idea that like, this is how things are now
is a more ancient, or we might like to believe antiquated idea, but that is
the human experience. That new variables are introduced, new species are introduced, new
events, things happen, and then that becomes the new normal, as they say. But we're more
interested in getting back to normal than we are to say, like, this is how the world is now.
Although you wrote that piece recently
where you're sort of talking about people
who wanted to COVID to go to the endemic phase,
and you're like, endemic COVID is still pretty fucking bad.
Like, it's just because it's normal,
doesn't mean that normal is good or acceptable
or even reasonable. It can still be quite tragic
on a day-to-day basis.
And just out of population scale, I mean, it's one of the things I think connects, I've
been thinking a lot both about in climate and about the pandemic is just when you have
impacts that are relatively trivial, that affect a small number of people, but everyone is, you know,
in fact, they're applied to everyone,
the number is really add up.
So even before vaccines,
even in the initial phase of the pandemic,
we're still talking about,
you know, a infection fatality rate
that was, you know, between one and two percent,
which is, and all of that was,
or not all of that,
but most of that was concentrated in the very old.
You know, this is not Ebola,
but Ebola doesn't infect the entire planet
within a couple of years.
And we had such a hard time wrapping our mind around
that set of facts.
Like people either acted as though
almost anybody getting infected
was effectively getting like a death sentence
and needed to run from the disease
as though it was that scary. Or that we didn't need to worry about the spread of a disease
at all because nobody was going to die. And both of those are really, really misleading
conceptual models for what we're going through, which may, you know, depending on where we end
up on a climate, may also be true for our climate future, which is to say there's probably going to
be considerable really unconscionable levels of human suffering
that come out of climate changes, I see it.
But it also isn't, I don't think going to be the case that, you know, every person on
the planet alive in 2070 is going to look around and think that, you know, we're living
in a total hellscape.
There's still going to be life going on.
And we need to be able to think about both of those things as being true at once that
many are affected and suffering without the world ending as a result.
But our emotional impulse is always to, if we're scared, to treat it as a sort of a universal
apocalypse, which I think, you know, yeah, I think it's not the best at it.
No, no, that's, that's really interesting.
It's like, we have this blind spot for things.
Like, it's like, no one would want their country
to become, like, overrun and become a totalitarian state, right?
This is an analogy.
You would, you would reject that, hopefully.
But we struggle with dealing with understanding
why we should care about a system that might be totalitarian for 0.01% of the population.
So it's like, you know, it's unlikely you driving down the street,
you're going to be harassed by the cops thrown in jail,
never see a lawyer, never see the light of day again.
And because of that, you're not that worried about it.
But the fact that that potentiality exists
for a small fraction of the population,
doesn't make it any less of a human travesty
and any less of a sort of problem that should be dealt with.
So we struggle with this idea of like,
what doesn't really affect me,
and I'm not like seeing the body's pile
up in the street or I'm not being paraded by the injustices, we struggle when things are
happening to people or places or things at the margin.
And as you said, when the world gets bigger and bigger and more interconnected, more interconnected,
things that happen at the margins, cumatively mean a very large amount of people are negatively affected by this thing and a lot of our best instant like the US legal system is supposed to be
Predicated again to go to the analogy on the idea that like it's better that a hundred
Guilty people go free than one innocent person be convicted
but it's hard to get a person to care about an innocent person getting convicted because
that's not happening to the vast majority of people.
And so that sort of fundamental may also know more victims than no criminals.
Yes.
And you're actually getting upset that the people who are breaking car windows in San Francisco
or shoplifting at the CVS are getting bought. And so that fundamental tentative justice that like you have to care about people you
will never see or meet and bad things happening to them that you have to care about that.
It does feel like we're struggling both to agree about that and then is struggling even
more to care about it or martial resources to do anything about it.
In a lot of these problems, whether it's climate or COVID or criminal justice or, you know,
and just to stick with your analogy for a second, that's not just how like creeping authoritarianism works.
That's how real authoritarianism works, too, because most people in the authoritarian state
are not being policed in a daily way by the, they're living lives and they're thinking,
well, it's nice to, there's no trash on the ground.
Yes.
And so it works all the way up.
And I think about this a lot,
I've been writing a fair amount about air pollution,
which tells a very similar story,
which is they're range of scientific work,
but the high end estimates suggest
something like 10 million people are dying every year, annually, from air pollution.
And even the low end estimates are still in the millions.
So we're talking about an unbelievably large toll.
And yet it has, in some profound way, not even registered on our, our, anybody, aside from
a very small number of advocates, anybody's
sense of, you know, political social outrage.
There are a lot of reasons for that.
It's complicated, but one of them is that, you know, what we're talking about is an ambient,
you know, an ambient stressor, which is ultimately affecting a small fraction of people
in certain parts of the world.
And that's super visibly in the sense either.
Like it's like, I imagine dying from the effects of air pollution.
It's probably comorbid with a lot of other things.
Yeah, I am totally right.
So it's not like you're just keeling over and dying and then there's a mark on your face
and they say, oh, air pollution death.
So the ambiguity of all of it too makes it easier.
If you already didn't wanna care
or you're already inclined not to care,
it's conspiring with you so you don't have to.
But that part of it is really important too
in the sense that so much of it is concentrated in,
I mean, in particular in India,
where in Delhi, the average resident of Delhi
is life expectancy is 10 years shorter than it would be without our pollution, which means
every single person in Delhi on average could count on 10 extra years of life if there was
no air pollution.
That is just mind bending.
And it's especially wild when you think, okay, well, that's just the average.
So for a lot of people, those effects are much, much bigger.
And so how much we care about those people when the average American life
expectancy is being reduced only by 0.2 years or a couple of months by our pollution is really relevant.
And in fact, I think in some perverse ways, the fact of pollution and our sense of the
dirtiness of the developing world and by dirtiness, I mean, pollution,
is making us, it's like it's poisoned our sense of,
even what those people's lives could be like,
sufficiently, that we treat it as just what it is there,
and not something that could be designed differently there,
because we don't treat them as the same category, ultimately moral creature
as we would treat someone who lived down the street from us or in our family. And part of
that is natural, but part of that is totally inhumane and unforgivable.
Yeah, it's like they could get on a plane, although that might contribute to said air pollution
and land in a different country and immediately their lifespan increases by 10 years.
That's like, and Tyler Cowan has talked a lot about
this on immigration and Alex Terabick is writing partner two,
just the idea that like,
you know, your average medium wage is here,
and then you travel across this line
and it doubles or triples, the
policies that prevent people from doing that are—
I found this on the way—
Sorry, I'm a stupid Apple Watch.
Anyway, the policies that prevent someone from doing something like that are profoundly
unjust.
If you think about it, it's a daily human rights travesty that someone who lives here dies 10 years earlier,
or can't afford this or that.
And then if they could just go here where there's plenty of
space, and that we don't see ourselves as complicit in
maintaining that status quo because we're concerned with this
or that.
But there is blood on people's
hands as a result of that.
Yeah, well, I think the even darker interpretation of that, which I find myself thinking occasionally
when it comes to climate, is that there's something we find comforting about the suffering
of people living elsewhere because it reassures us of our relative privilege and
prosperity
and
you know, it's not just that we don't want to be bothered to help the people in the developing world
It's that we actually like having them suffer and I think about that not just in terms of climate as I mentioned, but you know
About the global vaccination rollout
um, you know the IMF in 2021 estimated that I think it was
global vaccination program would cost $60 billion and they thought that the returns by 2025 would be nine trillion. So it was like the biggest economic no-brainer you could possibly imagine.
And even if like the US paid for it entirely themselves,
the returns, even within the US economy,
would be so much bigger than the outlay.
And yet there was no interest in taking that up
by any leader of any country
or any group of countries around the world.
We've in fits and starts talked about maybe loosening IP
and maybe donating some vaccines here and there,
but nothing like a,
we're actually gonna get the entire world vaccinated
kind of a program.
And that's just like this is a deal
in which not just, you know, the people of
sub-Saharan Africa and South Asians,
South East Asia would benefit,
but Americans would benefit too.
Right.
Economy would be so much stronger as a result
that even just thinking about our narrow self-interest,
it makes it worth doing.
And we wouldn't even take that deal.
So we didn't take that deal that maximized our own well-interest, it makes it worth doing. And we wouldn't even take that deal. So we didn't take that deal that maximized our own wellbeing.
We didn't take the deal that maximized the world's wellbeing.
We took the deal that maximized the difference
between the people who were best off
and the people who were worst off.
And that is, right, we're like, where's my stuff?
And they're like, yeah, the people who would be making it
in the already moral abomination sweatshop, you know, sweatshop, they're dead. That's why they're not working
on making this or that, right? Like that when you, when you put it in the starkest terms
as it can be, it becomes so repugnant as to be almost parallel. Like you're just like,
man, are we the worst? You know, it's, it's, it's difficult to comprehend.
There's a one of the Middle Stoics's name is Heracles. He, he comes up with this exercise. He says that
there's like these concentric circles. So the first circle is you. He says, everyone's born
thinking of themselves, right? I have to survive. Then yeah, you're, you know, your parents and your
spouse and your children. And that these circles get bigger and bigger and bigger. And he's like the point of the philosophy, which is funny because people think of Stoicism
as this individualistic philosophy, which it is. He's like the whole point of the philosophy
is to figure out how to draw the outer rings inward, right? So how to care about the faceless
person in India, although they literally do have a
face, there's faces to you. It's how you just find out caring about them. But how to draw that just the
80-year-old woman dying at 70 in India instead of the 10 years that she's entitled to, her dying of
air pollution. How do you pull that person into the inner circles to the degree
in which you care about them and want to do something for them? But I don't think just in the
form of mindless, meaningless sympathy, but like you said, let's approve this global vaccine
package. What are you actually doing about these problems?
Were you asking me personally? No, no, I'm saying that that's that's yeah, there are, I mean, you have written a lot about what to do with the point we we we just don't do it like some people
get to a place where they at least have empathy about it. Well that's some level that's also there's
a way in which that's kind of ugly too because it's a way that we exercise our moral feelings without ever actually asking, demanding anything
for ourselves materially to fall from that.
So it's a little bit like, yeah, we're going to the morality gym for a little while to
feel guilty about our carbon footprint or whatever.
By the way, I don't say any of this to say that I'm immune to it.
And the expanding circle idea that you talked about is interesting.
Peter Singer writes about this too in a more modern context.
And I've always found his formulation interesting in the sense that it's certainly the case that
our liberal cultures tell us that our circles are growing and more and more people are included
and more and more people are counted as human
and counted as equal over the centuries.
And that's not just what we've been told.
It is from broad strokes of history, true.
But I also think, you know,
it's interesting to think about in terms of
where we started the conversation about the
sort of networked bad news bias that we have in our narrative impulses where we now know
so much about the rest of the world that we see so much more suffering, not just in the
sense of poverty, but in the sense of natural disaster.
And you know, there're just more bad news stories
that rise to the level of global attention
because we are all network together.
We're also made in certain ways more vulnerable
because of those networks.
Although you could argue that on network, less vulnerable.
But there are some vulnerabilities
that are introduced by globalization effectively.
But we are in this like incredible tragedy economy, narrative tragedy economy
as a result of globalization that I think is really, really in the context of your expanding
circles or whatever is really novel as a human experience. Like, we just didn't hear these stories in centuries past.
And tragedies might have been overwhelming when they were
local, but they were also experienced collectively by
everyone who was local.
And obviously in differential ways, but a community would see
something immediate and understand that as a tragedy.
And I don't think we really have a lot of the tools we maybe should try to develop for how to process and contextualize
tragedies which we understand to be horrible, but which are not ultimately not even relevant to our particular lives.
It's just a very different experience
than we've ever had before as people.
Well, yeah, you go back not that many hundreds of years,
and like, not only did they not know the bad stuff
that was happening, let's say you live in Europe,
you don't know what's happening in North America,
till the, you know, a certain period there,
you're not even aware that North America exists, you're not even aware that North America exists.
You're not even aware that things are happening to those people, right?
So like, as our ability to understand more and more what's happening in the world, there
are more things tugging at your heartstrings, which I think is good because it allows you
to do something, but then you're right, it can become kind of this, like, information overload
where you're, you're like, everything's terrible. I'm just going to care
about the seven people around me or whatever. I think it gets back to what we're saying earlier about
the, you know, the way tiny adjustments to to calibrations of any kind when when applied to
the entire planet have huge effects. So even if you're bad news bias is just tiny. It's just like
a little to the negative side. If you're really news bias is just tiny. It's just like a little
to the negative side. If you're really applying that to a planet of 8 billion people, it's
going to add up in an absolutely overwhelming way. And I actually think that's, you know,
that's a bigger part of the why is the media so depressing story than clickbait, which
in many cases isn't as relevant anymore now that we're doing subscriber-based stuff. Yeah. Or like the sensationalism, or you know,
I think it really is just like,
it's just like a little bit more of a story
when something bad happens,
like people care a little bit more.
And even just a little bit when you're talking about
a global feed has an unbelievably dramatic effect. Well, my first book was about medium manipulation.
So I've always thought about this,
and you mentioned a word a couple times.
I think the bad news bias is there.
The more the other distorting bias
is just the human bias you mentioned, which is narrative.
Like a journalist can't, a journalist can't be like, here's a complicated series of facts,
you figure it out, right? The journalist has to put it in the form of a narrative or has to
to come up with an argument and explain it like you have to put it in a story, right?
To go back to the word of narrative. And so that's the other problem is like people are consuming information day to day,
even though our understanding is changing
on a slightly different time span
and an events are transpiring on a different time span.
So I think one of the things that makes,
even if we could all immediately download
everyone give us a shared consciousness
of all the problems of the world,
that would be hard to mobilize us to solve
those difficult problems.
But that can't happen between us and the alignment we need is this inherently unreliable,
unevenly distributed media system.
Like I wouldn't say I was a climate skeptic or that I have been, but I would say that
given my experiences with media, I was skeptical of some of the media, let's say, lenses on the climate
story. And so then you play that out with lots of people. People don't trust the media. And then
the media is how they learn about COVID.
The media is how they learn about pollution deaths in India.
The media is how we learn about this stuff.
And we're in a real difficult situation
because now we can't even get people
to understand the reality.
Let alone do something about the complicated reality
once they learn about.
I was just looking at some polling the other day.
Yale does this sort of, it's kind of considered
like the gold standard opinion polling about climate.
They've been doing it for like 20 years
so they have a very good running data set.
And I think that 72% of Americans think
that global warming is happening.
And 55% of Americans think that scientists agree that global warming is happening. And 55% of Americans think that scientists agree that global warming is
happening. So there are more Americans who believe this is happening than think that there are
scientific consensus about it, which is an incredible example. What is that? Well, I think it gets
back to the basic trust in institutions and authorities that like you're talking about, but
yeah, it's kind of remarkable.
I mean, there's another way of looking at it
that it's a sign of, you know,
the sort of disinformation denial campaigns
of the last couple of decades,
which is probably playing some role,
but it's notable that so many of those people
who are basically discarding or discounting,
can you hear me?
I'm sorry to have a second.
I can't sense this.
Are doing it by saying we actually know better than the scientists and are more
concerned, rather than less concerned.
Um, there there's you.
You back on.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sorry.
Keep going.
No problem.
Wait.
So I just did that riff about the more you believe climate changes happening.
I believe scientists believe it's happening.
Yeah.
Why I just said that like I went through it
so I do I get through you.
Yeah, yeah, I go.
So yeah, I mean, what it basically,
there's part of it, which is just a basic
distrust and elites and institutions and media in particular.
I think part of it is also a sign of some amount
of disinformation and denial in the sort of fossil fuel
campaigns that have been up the last couple of decades
that's playing some role.
But nevertheless, it's remarkable that there's a really
significant chunk of people, even among those who are
discounting the conventional scientific wisdom,
who think both that they know better than scientists
and that they are more worried about climate than scientists.
Like 17% of America, that's the gap between those two numbers, 17%. That's, you know,
what's that? 50 million people.
And we hear a lot about people who distrust the science and distrust the public narrative,
but we don't hear about those who distrusted
in the other direction very often.
And it seems like at least according to this,
like I said, it's sort of concerned
the gold center pulling.
There's quite a lot of them.
I always go back to that study that said,
like 15% of Americans think that chocolate milk
comes from brown cows.
And then I use that at like whenever,
whenever they're like,
can you believe this many million people think this or this many million? I'm like, do you know how many 15%
of America is right? The same thing. And you're like, and they they look at a cow and they
think that's a chocolate milk cow. And you're just like, ah, okay, that's again, when you
think about percentages, that's a lot of dumb people or a lot of people who aren't thinking
very much.
My I used to use the number of people who believe that aliens were living among us on planet earth.
But now it seems like that's, you know, that's that might be true.
We're directors of the CIA now believe.
Yeah.
And on the on the bigger question, you know, it's something that I've tried to do more on in
COVID in my COVID writing than in my climate writing.
But I've tried to be a sort of counter narrative writer
and someone who treats the narrative itself
as a sort of subjective, an area of inquiry.
And I, you know, who knows how useful that is,
but it's been really, really interesting to me.
Just all of the complicated ways that we,
as we were talking about earlier,
have narrowed advise this pandemic, almost beyond the point of being sensible, legible to us.
And it's just wild, the things that our brains have allowed us to do.
And I think a lot about how liberals, I know, spend 20, 20 yelling at people
for going to visit their family at Thanksgiving
and being like the thing we need to do most of all
is to protect one another and to sacrifice in order
to protect one another.
And then by 2021, they were really just like,
you know, your death is on your own hands.
You've chosen not to get vaccinated,
and I don't wanna do anything to help you know stop the disease from getting to you
Why is that in life in like a year? Yeah, well, don't you see this in the in the peer group that we're in because we both have young children
Where you're like they were hardcore everyone's got to get vaccinated
You know
Vaccine mandates blah blah blah and then you're like so hey, so, hey, I heard your kid just turned five.
Did you get him vaccinated?
And though, I think I'm gonna wait, right?
Like the difference between the decision they made
personally for themselves, and then the cognitive dissonance
they've picked up about kids and COVID.
Of course, it's super, it's not nearly as dangerous
for children as it is
for adults, which is wonderful news.
But like, I was talking to a reporter I know about this,
I was saying that what the government did
is the government was like, a good,
they wanted to convince people they're like,
there's no danger sending your kids to school, right?
And then so, all the parents sent their kids to school
and then they're like, and then by the way,
you can vaccinate them now to make them safer,
but they already internalized the idea
that COVID's not dangerous.
So why would you go take this precaution
if it's not dangerous, right?
It's like cognitive dissonance being this super powerful force.
But I found it really interesting.
The same people, they are super hardcore on COVID,
shaming people who visited their families,
shaming people who didn't get vaccinated, and then they're like,
I'm not going to get my kids vaccinated, though.
Right? So it's like when they actually take that, when they can do something tangibly themselves,
but they feel a little weird about it, and it's not obvious,
then they're the difference between behavior and public morality is different.
And you know, just to talk numbers for a second, like 350,000 Americans died of COVID in
2020, about 400,000 died in 2021.
We're on track for about 250 or 300,000 deaths this year.
So we're like in the ballpark of the previous years.
And you know, it's very different.
We're taking many fewer precautions.
So if we had been this reckless or reckless is probably too low to determine.
But if we had been this carefree about mitigation in 2020,
we would have had many more deaths, same in 2021.
It's not exactly an Apple's apples comparison.
But just at the level of like ultimate death toll,
like think about this as a human story,
as a tragic human story, how big is it?
How big is that tragedy?
I mean, 250,000 American lives is an enormous toll.
And most of the scientists that I speak to expect that, you know, that'll be a little bit
lower next year, probably in the range of 100 to 150.
But we're not getting like down to nobody knows anybody who's dying of COVID.
We're getting down just in the range where like, oh, it's only grandparents that are dying
of COVID.
Right.
And, you know, in some basic way, actually speaking of narrative, you kind of could have said
the same thing in 2020.
That would have been more of an oversimplification than it is now, but nevertheless, I think one
of the big things that was undersold by public health 30s in 2020 was the HQ of the disease.
And I do think there's some...
Well, because they wanted people to care.
They didn't want them to be able to do precisely what we're doing now, which is pretend that
it's not real.
Totally.
And there's some wisdom in that.
On the other hand, this HQ is so profound.
I mean, your risk doubles every eight years about.
So someone who's in their 80s is like thousands of times more at risk of death than someone
in their 20s.
That is not just like eight times more, 10 times more, 12 times more.
It is a whole different disease. And, you know, when you get vaccinated, that reduces your risk of mortality by about
the equivalent of about 20 or 25 years.
So someone who's, you know, a well-vaccinated 85-year-old is still more at risk than a totally
unvaccinated 55-year-old.
And that's how profound and ginormous the HQ is.
And yet, all through the beginning of a pandemic, we were given such a sense of uniform threat and
uniform risk. I think, like you say, for some good reasons, but it ultimately was, you know,
it was ultimately a distortion of the story that anybody looking at the data could follow
themselves.
Well, we're not good at changing narratives, right?
So like people do this now to undermine
what they're saying about COVID now.
They go, oh, but they said this, but they said this.
A lot of what they said this,
but when they said this, it was true,
or it was the understanding of that time,
whether it was true or not,
is what they believed they, was the understanding of that time, whether it was true or not,
is what they believed they,
is what the information made it look like was true.
And then that narrative changes.
And then once people,
even people have said several times,
it's like, oh, it's over.
And it's like, maybe it was and then it's changed.
I still, so I have this bookstore here in Texas
and we still require masks. We're probably like the only business left in America that does at this point.
But I remember someone posted a picture and then someone said,
well, what's this mask?
I thought the pandemic was over.
And that's also a narrative, right?
In their head, they've decided a thing is over.
And so people can't change things.
And I think that is the problem with narrative, is life. The
story is always changing if there is a story. But once you lock into a narrative or an identity
around that narrative, it's very difficult to update or counter the narrative as you were
saying with your writing. Yeah, I mean, the mask story is such an interesting one to me. So,
Yeah, I mean, the mask story is such an interesting one to me. So, you know, we now, quote unquote,
know that there are some meaningful benefits
in reducing transmission through high quality masks.
So, N95s, KN95s.
But for most of the pandemic, we were not given advice
that was focused on that.
It was focused on covering your mouth with anything.
And actually, the science that we have from that
suggests that the effects there are quite limited. And you know, there are often people point to this big Bangladesh
randomized control trial, which found some effect from surgical masks. It found zero effect
on cloth masks from cloth masks. And the effect on surgical masks was,
you know, they grew the uptake of mask wearing by 3,000%.
And the reduction of disease transmission
was I think by like 15%.
So in theory, that bargain at the peak of a pandemic,
at the peak of a wave, that bargain may well be worth taking
in a local way, you know, I personally have always thought,
like, well, what's the big deal?
Like it's wear mask, it's, you know,
even if it has a marginal benefit,
it's like, what's the cost to me?
That seems like a very easy, pro-social thing to do.
But I wonder if we rewound the clock to, say, April, May of 2020
when the public health establishment was like,
you know, turning towards mask wearing,
having been against
mass wearing at the very outbreak of the pandemic and saying everybody should wear a
mask.
If they had known then what we know now about the relatively limited effect of cloth and
surgical masks on transmission, would they have still been making those giving that advice,
would they still choose to do that?
And my own feeling is that, or would they have chosen that as the hill, if they knew the political consequences, like the hard consequences, they're so enormous.
I mean, when people talk about, you know, lockdowns, it's like, well, there haven't been
lockdown since the summer of 2020. What we've had is maskment. It's like, but that's
not the same thing. And yet, for people who are opposed to pandemic mitigation policy,
is they sort of became the same thing. And they were so offended by any public mask policy,
but also any private establishment requiring masks,
that they sort of, I don't know, they developed a deep hostility to it.
I think out of proportion, both to the cost to the person,
but also to the benefit.
And I wonder if we would have taken that part.
And like, if we could have taken that part. And like if we could have avoided that,
at least part of the pandemic culture war,
at relatively limited cost to the actual levels
of the disease, if we had just chosen to like,
you know, whatever, not push.
No, no, that's a really, that's a really interesting
counterfactual, because part of the reason they were,
like there's two reasons they were saying
don't wear a massive first.
One was they didn't have very many masks.
And two, the studies that they had,
it wasn't that masks didn't work.
It's that masks were a complicated
or ineffectual public health measure
for the population at large, right?
So there may have been an argument
where there's a counterfactual where they decide masks are not going to be part
of the government toolkit, but then you and I as individuals
who had done research or learning, we're wearing a mask
voluntarily everywhere we go. We're probably not getting
COVID, but then COVID doesn't become the politicized thing
that it becomes to the same degree. And then maybe people
actually listen better when they say, hey, these vaccines,
this is the main thing to treat COVID
or this other treatment or whatever it is.
Yeah, maybe the thing goes differently.
And then you're like, man, that gut call
that whoever made in March, April of 2020,
that actually was the right call.
And then they second-guess themselves.
And then here we are
We'll never know. It's also it's interesting in in when you play out the whole narrative because according to at least
Survey data, which is probably misleading, but maybe directionally accurate
in the fall and winter surge of
2020 into 2021 there was very little difference in mass-quaring among even the most conservative places
in the country and the most liberal places
in the country.
So we had a narrative that like red states
and Republicans were like totally unwilling to mask.
That became true in 2021, much more than it had been true
in 2020.
But I think that narrative, which existed in 2020,
primed us for the same fight over
vaccination, which became much more significant and profound.
And even there, there are some really interesting kind of factual.
So we know that the FDA delayed approval of the vaccines until after the election for,
you know, again, it's a kind of a defensible position.
They didn't want it to be a campaign trail issue. But even a delay of three or four weeks then
would have made a really profound narrative difference
in the sense that Trump would have been talking about
the imminent vaccines in the last weeks of the campaign.
He might have won
because the margins were small enough
that maybe some additional boost there would have helped him.
In which case, maybe we wouldn't have had the partisan split that we have today at all.
And that's just like, you know, a war that, or the rollout was then bungled even more.
And you know, it could also be infinitely worse in so many other ways and probably, yeah,
probably would be.
But go ahead.
Go ahead. No, go ahead.
No, go ahead.
I was going to say as far as policy goes, the other interesting thing I found for COVID
stuff is like, yeah, basically everyone's like, life's back to normal, do whatever you want.
The only people I know that have strict COVID protocols that treated seriously at this point
are musicians who are still on tour.
Because there's something you lose by getting sick, right? And I've had to do this as a speaker.
It's like I've not had not a gig in like further than two weeks apart, like basically consistently
for like the last year or so, right? So like there's not a window in which I can get COVID that it would not cost me a large
amount of money, right?
And so like I have to individually think about the choices that I'm going to make.
And so there's also this interesting dichotomy went as you were saying, like when COVID becomes endemic and we often make these individual decisions,
there's still people for whom COVID is costly,
either because they're immunocompromised,
they're someone on the edges of society or life,
or they're someone who is trying to do or see certain things.
So it's this weird thing where it puts the burden on the individual
to have to make these choices, but then because things have been politicized and complicated,
people don't actually really know what those choices are. So it's a weird sort of
Balkanized world that we live in now.
Yeah, I think everybody's sort of confused and choosing to relate to that confusion by indifference.
Yes, yes.
Well, it's like we are with all things.
Like, if I don't think about it, then I don't have to be confused by it.
If I don't think about it, I don't have to make decisions by it.
And then this is, if I don't think about, as you were saying, that the lifespan in the
years, 10 years lower because of pollution, then I don't have to make any changes.
I don't have to live my life any differently.
And although, then this may be a good place to wrap up,
the other problem with COVID climate change, et cetera,
is that these aren't things that can be dealt
with individually, right?
So it's like, hey, the climate is,
all this stuff is happening.
And so I'm gonna recycle or do whatever I can as an individual.
This is nothing compared to Kylie Jenner's
17 minute private jet flight, right?
Like there's not anything I can do as an individual
that would make even a microscopic difference
compared to corporate or national decisions that people are making
unthinkingly that have enormous impact.
So it comes back to how do you solve a collective action problem?
Well, I think it might be useful to answer that first by talking about the pandemic and
then about climate. So we have evolved this very particular sort of
risk assessment dynamic that you're describing,
where it's basically all on the individual to make decisions
about what they're comfortable with and what they're not.
And I think in some way that is useful and empowering,
that individuals can make their own assessments
and make their own decisions.
But we are talking about navigating a landscape
that is shaped profoundly by collective and social actions.
And by that, I don't mean whether New York City
is in a lockdown.
What I mean is like, we knew in spring of 2020
that better ventilation systems in public prices
would make a huge difference.
We did not spend that money to upgrade ventilation systems in schools in, you know, in
my carcloth masks.
Right.
We were like, we're going to put this, put the burden on the, and the cost on the individual.
And as a result, we are living with a considerably riskier environment than we needed to.
And there are other ways which are
play out slightly more subtly. I mean, you were talking about the, you know,
touring musicians, speaking gigs in a slightly like less sort of like, you know,
high rolling kind of way. You should have people who are like, they don't have paid sick leave.
Yeah. So if they want to protect themselves or or their co-workers and they get COVID,
they can't do like a two-week quarantine
and they can't elect to do that.
The law does not support them doing that.
And that's really broken.
Total should, if we're gonna try to empower individuals
to navigate the risk landscape of their own lives
on their own, which I think is, like I said,
a pretty useful thing to do, we should also be trying to design that landscape so it
minimizes the absolute risk to everyone and makes it possible for people who want to make
responsible choices to make responsible choices. And the same is absolutely true in climate. So,
you know, the average American refrigerator uses more carbon than the average person living in Sub-Saharan
Africa. Like you just cannot live in the United States responsibly by global standards when it comes
to carbon. You cannot live in two refrigerators. I got an extra one in the garage, right?
Yeah, your flat screen is just as bad. And like, you know, you can buy your, you can buy your EV. You can do what you can to try to power your home through, you know, personal
solar power, but many people can't do that.
I just did this, by the way, I don't know how anyone can afford to do it.
It was insanely expect.
Like, do you know what I mean?
Like I could have just, yeah, I probably should have just bought.
It would have been better for the world if I just bought a small house and put a homeless person in it. Do you know what I mean? Like, that's how much it cost to put
solar on my house. Like, it was not, it was insanely expensive. Yeah, well, I like Texas.
Stay by state. There are tax incentives elsewhere that make it better, but yeah, it's, it can be
cumbersome and certainly beyond the reach of, you know, working class poor people in the country
who are just gonna get whatever electricity
comes into the plug in their wall
and don't have any say about it.
But, like, collectively, we have a say
in what kind of electricity goes into the plug in your wall.
And we have a say in whether our grid
wastes two thirds of the power that's put into it
through waste heat, or whether it delivers
it much more efficiently.
Officially. Right. You know, on a longer time scale, thirds of the power that's put into it through waste heat or whether it delivers it much more efficiently. Efficiently.
Right.
You know, on a longer time scale, we can be pouring money into carbon neutral jet fuel.
So that a 17 minute private jet flight doesn't have a carbon impact at all, let alone one that
is so wildly disproportionate.
And this is like, this is, you know, true of everything.
It's a sort of a naive, basic thing to say. say, but it's really true of every aspect of climate.
Like, we are living in a policy landscape
that has been designed for us in part
to maximize the use of fossil fuels.
And if we are able to change that architecture
so that fossil fuels are less present, less dominant,
or ideally absent, it means that we can make any choice we want to make
without any guilt or responsibility at all.
If we get to a genuinely net zero future,
which is, you know, it'll take a lot,
and I think we will get there.
The question is whether we're going to get there
in 2060, 2070, 2100,
but when we get there,
we won't have to be thinking about our consumption patterns
in terms of environmental guilt,
because anything we consume will have no carbon footprint
at all.
And the fact that we're not excited by that prospect,
says a lot about, I mean, our political economy is,
but it also says a lot about our limited moral imaginations
that we're not even...
So, provision.
Both.
I mean, it's some, you know,
but like we're not even interested in bringing about a future where we don't have to think about how much of a burden we're not even... So, co-vision. Both. I mean, it's some, you know, but like we're not even interested in bringing about a future
where we don't have to think about how much of a burden we're imposing on the rest of
the world.
We can just make the choices we want to make and trust that the impact will be neutral,
responsible, sustainable, however you want to think about it.
So, you know, that's just like to circle back to some of the themes we were talking about earlier in the conversation.
Like, you know, if you're the kind of person who is burdened by a sense of guilt and responsibility,
there is a path forward to, you know, eliminate that from your sense of, you know, the political shape of the world
and the political shape of your own life.
And yet we're not moving, I think, nearly fast enough to sort of embrace that opportunity,
which is worth embracing for many reasons, like saving the 10 million people a year who
dying from air pollution, more prosperity, economic growth, more global justice, environmental
justice, et cetera.
But even at the level of the selfish consumer American individual, you're like,
you could be, you'd have more freedom. If we made these larger policy choices, you would
have more individual freedom to do what you wanted and live how you wanted.
Yeah. And you would have to feel much less guilt about making those choices, even if they were by
today's standards, like obscenely wasteful, grandiose, and ultimately harmful to the planet.
In a future that's not that far off, those same choices wouldn't have any of those impacts at all,
and could be just embarrassing on a personal level.
and could be just sort of embarrassing on a personal level. No, I will say once we got the solar panels installed,
I was much less of the cliche dad of like giving a shit
where the thermostat was, right?
Yeah.
Because it's not really my problem.
Like, you know what I mean?
Like, I saw you solved the problem at the source
instead of dealing with the pitiless shit on the margins.
That seems like a good deal.
It was not a good deal, but I made it work.
Anyways, dude, this was awesome.
I really appreciate you taking time.
No, my pleasure.
Great to talk, and yeah, let's hopefully cross paths again soon.
Let's do it.
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