The Daily Stoic - We Must Beat Back The Mob | Where, Who, What and Why
Episode Date: January 6, 2022Ryan talks about the high stakes of America’s political climate, the Stoic's responsibility to uphold justice, and reads The Daily Stoic’s entry of the day, on today’s Daily Stoic Podca...st.For a limited time, the Daily Stoic ebook is $1.99 in the US and UK this week only. We have a premium leather bound version available at dailystoic.com/leather. Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: http://DailyStoic.com/emailFollow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, and 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 Daily Stoke Podcast. Each day we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stoics,
illustrated with stories from history, current events, and literature to help you be better at what you do. And at the beginning of the week, we try to do a deeper dive, setting a kind of
stoic intention for the week, something to meditate on, something to think on,
something to leave you with, to journal about whatever it is you happen to be
doing. So let's get into it. We must beat back the mob. The overthrow of the
Roman Republic didn't just happen.
It wasn't just Julius Caesar, it wasn't just one man's ambition that undid some 450 years
worth of work.
As Mike Duncan writes in his fabulous book The Storm Before The Storm, and as we talked
about our interview here on The Daily Stoke, which you can listen to.
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Many events in the decades prior contributed to the Republic's
fall.
There was the crisis in 133 BC over a land redistribution
bill which escalated into an armed attack in the first political murder in the Republic's
history. In 100 BC, when it became clear that one leader was going to lose an election,
his supporters stormed Capitoline Hill, murdered the man who won the consular vote and barricaded themselves in the capital. And then in the 80s BC troops formed factions and Rome's first civil war broke out.
The mob then, to the Romans, symbolized the breakdown of their political order.
Political violence was something to be abhorred, to be feared, never to be tolerated.
Cicero's greatest moment as a statesman came when he stared down the
Catalan conspiracy, just as 2,000 years later, two of George Washington's greatest moments when
he nipped the new bird conspiracy in the bud and then put down Shae's rebellion. Lincoln would give
one of his best speeches before the Civil War, warning against the rise of Mabo-Cratics spirit,
which had infected
both the South and the North alike.
It would have been no surprise then to anyone paying attention, at least, that Lincoln had
no tolerance for the slave owners who, having lost a legitimate election, attempted to
overthrow the U.S. government by force and violence.
If you are in the United States, you are listening today to a message on a date
that will forever live in infamy, January 6th. The day that armed insurrectionists stormed
the US Capitol, smearing the temple of democracy with feces and blood, wearing clothes that
celebrated the Holocaust, waving the Confederate flag, a banner of traders to freedom and traders of flesh,
looking to murder elected officials in attempt to thwart the peaceful transfer of power.
One Republican congressman, a student of stoicism, who has appeared on the Daily Stoke podcast
no less, was trapped in his office where he broadcast live on social media,
a plea to the then president of the United States,
Donald Trump, call his goons off.
A plea we have recently learned that was also made
by some of his staunchest supporters in the media,
and even members of his own family.
Instead, Trump called his supporters very special,
and thus the push into the Capitol rotunda gained force.
This happened.
It was very terribly real,
and it cannot be denied or forgotten. Sadly, that was not the only event of political violence we
have seen in recent years. Gangs have beaten up peaceful protesters. Protesters have turned into
rioters, looting and burning private property. People have brandished weapons at protests.
Maniacs have driven cars into crowds of people
they disagreed with.
COVID deniers attempted to kidnap the governor of Michigan,
a GOP lawmaker and organ knowingly let
far right demonstrators breach the organ capital.
Extreme groups, be they Antifa or the Proud Boys,
now look forward to heading into cities
in anticipation of verdicts or news events to bring mayhem and destruction.
There is no question that there is much at stake politically in America and all over the
world.
There is no question that factions on both sides pretty much every issue have been polarized
and radicalized and set at each other's throats
in the struggle for the soul of the world
that both sides view in black and white terms.
But as citizens, as decent human beings,
as lovers of justice,
we cannot tolerate rationalize,
excuse or accept this sort of political violence.
We cannot cater to or join with the mob.
Crescipus, an early stoic said that the whole point of being a philosopher was to separate
yourself from the mob. It was to be above chaos and destruction, to appeal to and to demonstrate,
as Lincoln said, the better angels of irrational and civic nature. Cato worshipped and even died
protecting the moors and traditions of the Republic.
The very same norms that were shattered in the decades leading up to Julius Caesar's
rise and whose brittleness and precariousness were easily exploited as the Republic crumbled
and tumbled into empire.
Those old ways that Cato fought for, they must be similarly protected in America and wherever
you live.
The peaceful transition of political power today is both the most important of those old
ways and the most under threat by the mob, as philosophers and citizens and politicians.
It is our job to stand for the former and beat back the latter.
And anyone that violates this or any of its related principles deserves the most ancient
of civil punishments, not cancellation, but permanent exile.
Where, who, what, and why?
This is from today's, I'm actually holding it right now. This is the leather bound edition of the Daily Stoic,
366 meditations on wisdom, perseverance,
and the art of living, which, if you hadn't heard,
I think only one more day is $1.99 on Amazon,
or wherever you get your e-books right now in the US.
So that's exciting, but let's open with today's quote from
meditation. A person who doesn't know what the universe is, doesn't know where
they are. A person who doesn't know their purpose in life doesn't know who they
are or what the universe is. A person who doesn't know any of these things doesn't
know why they are here. So what should we make of people who seek or avoid the praise of those who have no knowledge
of where or who they are?
That's Marcus Aurelius' Meditations, 852.
The late comedian, Mitch Hedberg,
had a funny story told in his act,
sitting down for an honor and interview,
a radio DJ asked him,
so who are you?
In that moment, Hedberg had to think,
sky really deep, or did I drive to the wrong station. How often are we asked a simple question
like, who are you? What do you do? Where are you from? And we consider it a superficial question,
if we consider it at all, we don't bother with much more than a superficial answer. But,
gun to their head, most people couldn't give much in the way of a
substantive answer. Could you? Have you taken the time to get clarity about who you are, what you
stand for? Or are you too busy chasing unimportant things, mimicking the wrong influences,
and following disappointing or unfulfilling or non-existent paths. This idea of not knowing who you are
or where you come from or what you stand for,
I think this is a huge problem.
Obviously, one of the things I have this taped
on my computer screen, it's actually from
one of the daily stoke challenges like several years ago.
But one of my favorite passages in meditation's
Marx realized gives some epithets for the self.
So there's like rules for who he is,
sort of virtues he's trying to abide by.
These are in addition, I think obviously
to the four virtues of courage, temperance, justice, wisdom.
But Marx has his list, I have my list.
I put honest, calm, fair, father, brave, generous still.
And so the idea is like, that's who I want to be.
That's what I'm trying to become.
And so that's how I sort of see the world.
And so if you don't know who you are, where you come from, what the world is, what matters,
what makes the world operate.
You're sort of spinning.
If you're familiar with Plato's allegory of the cave, right, it's this idea that people
are chained down in a cave.
They can only see these shadows in the wall, so they think the world is shadows.
I think that's unfortunately how a lot of people are.
Not only do they think things are shadows, but then you could say they're chasing ghosts.
They don't know who they are.
They don't know what anything is.
They've got this skewed, artificial,
circumscribed understanding of reality.
And then of course they make bad decisions, right?
Of course they follow the wrong things.
Of course they get off track.
And so you've got to know that.
And so as you start off this year, I want you to think a little bit off track. And so you've got to know that. And so as you start
off this year, I want you to think a little bit about that. Where do you come from? Not like,
just literally, because that's not that interesting, but like what tradition are you hailing from?
Like what is the universe? How does things, how do you explain how things work? Why they work?
Right. Who are you? What do you stand for? What are you trying to be?
Right, you've got to answer that question.
But then I think there's another key part of this quote
that honestly, I feel like I missed
the first couple times I read it.
Marcus is saying,
so what do we make of people who seek and avoid the praise
of those who have no knowledge of where or who they are?
This is the other part.
When you don't know who you are,
when you don't know what you stand for,
when you don't know how things work,
you are really susceptible or vulnerable
to charlatans, to misinformation, to disinformation,
to the wrong influences, the wrong people, false idols,
false gods, et cetera, right? So he's, I think he's expressing a certain amount of sympathy or at least understanding.
These are people. They don't know how the world works. They don't know who they are. They don't know where they're from.
And so of course they follow the wrong leader. Of course they follow the wrong ideals. Of course they put the wrong things first. They don't know any better.
They are helpless.
Their compass is broken, and that's not a good place to be.
So who are you?
What do you stand for?
What matters?
That's the message today.
Really think about it, right?
Don't have the glib answers.
Don't have the literal answers to these questions.
Try to get to the bottom of it.
Try to really understand.
It makes an enormous difference.
You might say it makes all the difference in the world.
Talk to you next week.
Thanks so much for listening to the Daily Stoke Podcast.
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You just go to dailystoke.com slash email. So check it go to dailystoke.com slash email.
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