The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Pulitzer Prize Historian: You Won't Notice Until It's Too Late!
Episode Date: May 11, 2026Anne Applebaum has spent decades studying how democracies collapse, how authoritarian systems rise, and why the warning signs are often ignored until it’s too late. She reveals why America is enteri...ng a dangerous new phase, and what happens next! Anne Applebaum is a staff writer at The Atlantic and has hosted its Autocracy in America podcast. She is also a senior fellow at the SNF Agora Institute at Johns Hopkins University and the School of Advanced International Studies. She is also the bestselling author of books such as, ‘Autocracy, Inc.: The Dictators Who Want to Run the World’. She explains: ◼️ Why democracies rarely collapse overnight ◼️ Why America may be closer to autocracy than people think ◼️ How elected leaders can slowly take apart the system from within ◼️ Why corruption is one of the clearest warning signs of authoritarianism ◼️ Why Big Tech leaders are bending toward political power ◼️ How America’s allies are already preparing for U.S. betrayal ◼️ Why Russia, China, and Iran are challenging the democratic world order ◼️ Why America may never fully go back to normal after Trump Chapters 00:00:00 Intro 00:03:13 Why History Keeps Repeating 00:04:52 Why Democracy Feels So Broken 00:07:21 The Biggest Threats Right Now 00:08:32 Why Democracy Is Rapidly Shifting 00:09:58 Could America Become An Autocracy? 00:11:45 What A Trump Third Term Means 00:14:36 Why Autocracy Appeals To People 00:18:52 Trump’s Wealth Changes Everything 00:21:08 Why Global Stability Is Collapsing 00:26:06 Democracy Vs Dictatorship: What Lasts? 00:27:18 Who’s Happier: Democracies Or Autocracies? 00:28:44 Would Informed People Choose Democracy? 00:30:25 How Putin Stays In Power 00:32:20 5 Tactics Autocrats Use 00:33:59 Are Tech CEOs Enabling This? 00:37:51 Can America Ever Return To Normal? 00:39:07 Why Nations Are Turning Inward 00:43:37 What This Means For Americans 00:45:19 The Most Dangerous Part Of Dictatorship 00:48:29 Why Trump’s Ratings Are Falling 00:50:28 Ads 00:52:31 The 2nd Tactic Autocrats Use 00:57:19 The 3rd Tactic Autocrats Use 00:59:20 The 4th Tactic Autocrats Use 01:05:38 Should Social Media Have Legal Power? 01:12:38 Can Citizens Really Leave China? 01:13:55 The 5th Tactic Autocrats Use 01:14:28 Why ICE Is Breaking Down 01:16:40 Ads 01:17:49 Is The American Empire Declining? 01:21:49 Is Politics Just Human Nature? 01:24:38 Does Democracy Create Extreme Capitalism? 01:26:44 How Democracies Defend Themselves 01:28:18 Is Mainstream Media Politically Biased? 01:31:59 Why Journalism Matters More Than Ever 01:33:29 How Algorithms Control Your Reality 01:34:37 Anne’s Personal Political Journey 01:41:05 What Regime Change Really Feels Like 01:44:36 Anne’s Toughest Setback Follow Anne: Youtube - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/4pTtMb1 Instagram - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/1GOn8p5 X - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/8M5yUMK Website - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/GGmhcYf You can purchase Anne’s book, ‘Autocracy, Inc.: The Dictators Who Want to Run the World’, here: https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/D07471h Sponsors: Stan - Visit https://coach.stan.store/?ref=stevenbartlett&utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=episode5 Wispr - Get 14 days of Wispr Flow for free at https://wisprflow.ai/steven
Transcript
Discussion (0)
A couple of weeks ago, I was traveling through Ireland with my team, and I was telling them how I don't love when things in my life sit idle, whether it's my time, my energy, my health, or my investments.
If something has value, it should be working, even if just quietly in the background.
And one of the most overlooked examples of this was when you're traveling and you're away from your home.
Because when you're not in your home, they just sit empty.
And they're not doing anything for you, which is easy not to think about, but it's still a choice that you're making.
we're choosing not to get anything back from something that has real value
because our home can easily play a part in someone else's holiday experience.
Airbnb is one of my partners, as you know,
and hosting with them is a quick, easy way of changing that.
You make your home available for dates that suit you,
and instead of it just sitting there,
someone else gets to experience and enjoy your home
and your neighborhood and your city.
Hosting on Airbnb, it also lets you make a little bit of extra money on the side,
which you can put towards your next holiday.
your home might be worth more than you think.
And you can find out how much it's worth at Airbnb.ca slash host.
This was Trump's net worth when he went into office.
$2.3 billion.
And this is his net worth now, just two years later.
$6.5 billion.
So we've never had a president running businesses while in office.
And so decisions are being made not based on what's good for Americans,
but what's good for his company.
For example, why did the Saudi government invest $2 billion in Jared Christian?
It wasn't because they just like Jared Kushman.
It was because Kushner is Trump's son-in-law.
And so my biggest concern is the deterioration of American democracy.
I mean, it's already happening.
Most people think democracies end with tanks in the street
or somebody shooting up the presidential palace.
But actually, in the modern world, they mostly end
because someone who is legitimately elected
begins to take apart the system.
Trump, he has never cared much one way or the other for American democracy.
He admires foreign leaders who have no constraints.
strengths. And I have a goal that is to remind people of why democracy is important and to pay attention
to the ways in which it's declining so that we can fight back. So we're just at the beginning of what
could be quite a big change. So there's five core tactics that autocratic leaders use to dismantle
a democracy. Did you walk me through the five tactics? So first of all,
guys, I've got a favor to ask before this episode begins. The algorithm, if you follow a show,
will deliver you the best episodes from that show very prominently in your feed.
So when we have our best episodes on this show, the most shared episodes, the most rated episodes, I would love you to know.
And the simple way for you to know that is to hit that follow button.
But also, it's the simple, easy, free thing that you can do to help us make this show better.
And I would be hugely grateful if you could take a minute on the app you're listening to this on right now and hit that follow button.
Thank you so, so, so much.
An Applebone.
What is it you spend the last couple of decades of your life doing, understanding, studying and sharing with the world?
I started out as somebody who was fascinated by the Soviet Union.
I went there when it still existed as a student.
I was lucky enough to watch it fall apart.
I was a journalist based in Warsaw at the time the Warsaw Pact came to an end.
Then I spent some years writing history books,
trying to explain how control was maintained over such a large space by so few people.
But all that time, I thought that what I was doing was writing stories about,
the distant past. I was analyzing a system that didn't exist anymore. What's happened to me in the
last decade is that I've discovered that a lot of what I thought was over and done and belonged to
some other era has come back. Most people think democracies end with a coup d'etat or, you know,
tanks in the street or somebody shooting up the presidential palace. But actually, in the modern world,
they mostly end because someone who is legitimately elected begins to take apart the system.
and take away the things that ensure free elections can continue.
And I started watching that happen in multiple countries at the same time.
And I saw this authoritarian instinct started to come back.
And that's what I write about now.
Are these just election cycles?
Or is there something bigger at play here?
Because, you know, I spend a lot of time reading articles from decades ago or hundreds of years ago.
And in all times in history, it seems that there were problems.
But it seems that the, I don't know, the democratic system has a remarkable way every four years of clearing out what people weren't happy with and putting something new in.
Is this time different to the past?
What feels different to me is for the first time in several established democracies, most notably the United States, but not only, you have political parties who come to power with the explicit idea that they will alter the system in order to make sure that they can stay in forever.
The pioneer of this idea was Victor Orban in Hungary.
He was elected legitimately with a big margin, and then what he did was slowly seek to capture the state.
So what a democracy needs in order to survive, in order to maintain its stability, it needs a few neutral institutions.
You know, it needs independent courts.
It needs an independent electoral commission.
It needs independent media.
In the modern world, it needs a meritocratic bureaucracy.
So people are hired and fired to measure pollution or worry about traffic and road construction
who aren't cousins of the ruling party.
They aren't somebody's friend, but they're actual experts who understand how to do things.
So you need those things to be in place in order to ensure that each time there's an electoral cycle, it's a fair election.
And you see people who were elected who once they had power decided to take those institutions apart.
You know, if you think about democracy, it's actually a very strange system, right?
So you win an election, and in a democracy, you have to preserve the rules so that four years from now, your bitter enemies can contest you and maybe beat you again.
You know, you lose an election.
You have to say, okay, we're allowing our rivals to stay in power, but we trust that the system will remain fair.
so four years from now, we can also contest them again. So it requires a certain level of
agreement about the nature of the system. And when that begins to break down, then you begin to have
imbalances and then you begin to have elections that seem unfair to people. And then you begin to
have a completely different kind of national conversation. And we can see that has happened
in several places. And of course, most notably in the United States. And because the United States
is the largest democracy because it's played the role of leader of the democratic world.
The influence of America on other countries is pretty profound.
And so this idea that democracies can possibly break down is suddenly both horrifying people,
but also interesting to other people who say,
all right, if you can do it in America, you can do it here.
There's a part of me that just thinks that could never happen in America.
And that's obviously a bias that I have being 33 years old.
and not knowing a ton about history.
But I'm sure there's lots of people that think this is some sort of theoretical idea.
But it would never happen in America because we would never allow America to not be a democracy.
We wouldn't allow a Russia situation where you've got Putin sitting in power for two decades or whatever.
Sure, but there are systems in between Russia and liberal democracy.
You could have democracies that aren't fair.
And actually, I'm afraid to tell you that in the United States, there is a history of that.
So in the American South, before the civil rights movement, you very often had in effect in the southern states.
You had these one-party states where, you know, the rules were pretty rigged.
Everybody knew who was going to win.
Not everybody was allowed to vote.
So black people were allowed to vote, or it was very heavily restricted.
It was hard for them to vote.
And that existed in the United States, you know, between the Civil War and the 1960s.
You had very undemocratic parts of the United States.
And I think some of the people who are in.
Washington right now and the Trump administration are working from that history and from that
historical memory. What is your biggest concern in this regard? Well, I have two concerns.
One is that inside the United States, the deterioration of American democracy, I mean,
it's already happening, right? So it's already creating a class of people who no longer feel they
have a stake in the political system and who won't vote, may never vote and will be
outside of politics and outside of the national conversation. That can lead in the direction
of violence, that can lead in all kinds of negative directions. We see the development of new
kinds of paramilitary in the United States that we never had before, the development of ICE.
We've never before had a single national police force wearing combat uniforms, wearing masks,
not subject to the normal restrictions of local police forces. We also have a rise in
high-end corruption. The president, people around him, companies close to him seem to have access
to ways to make money and are making money out of doing politics in a way that was also not possible
at that scale in America before. And that's sort of one whole set of concerns if you want to
go down one of those roads. There's this map in front of us on the table. I realize some people
can't see because they're listening, but there's a map on the table in front of us. Could you just
explain what this map shows and why it's significant? The map shows the level of
of democracy around the world. And of course, the thing that's immediately notable to me is that
those who made the map don't count the United States anymore as a liberal democracy. So at a liberal
democracy meaning a state where, as I said, the electoral rules are clear, where the electoral
system is set up not to favor one party or the next. And instead, it's described as an electoral
democracy, which is somewhat less free. You see similar systems in South America. In Europe, you
mostly still have liberal democracies. In Australia, Japan, South Korea, you still have liberal
democracies. And then most of the rest of the world are some form of autocracy, either very closed
and very repressive, like China or like Russia, or they are in a democratic gray zone. So there are
states that could really go in either direction. I mean, they're still open. But it's true that if
you'd looked at a map like this a decade ago or two decades ago, it would have a lot bluer, the blue being
democracy and the red or reddish being autocracy. So you do see an absolute process of democratic
decline that's been written about by many people over the last few years. I think I believe very much
that states influence one another. People follow and imitate and copy their neighbors.
Do you think it's possible that in our lifetimes, the U.S. might become an orthocratic country?
So the U.S. could become a, what I think on this map is described as an autocratic gray zone.
So you could imagine the U.S. as in effect a one-party state. So a state where one political party has control and the other just can't win national elections.
You already have this system of, we call it, gerrymandering, where electoral districts are being written in such a way as to favor one party or.
than another. The effect of that also is that once you have people who don't really have to
contest elections anymore, then you have corruption. Because if you're going to win anyway,
why do you have to worry about your constituents? Then you have worse government and worse services.
Because if you don't have to have an electoral contest, then, you know, you can pursue your
own interests. You can do favors for businessmen who will help you in other ways. And we see this
decline of democracy already at the state level. And of course, there could be a danger at the
national level of a fixed system that made sure only one party ever wins. And then you would get
all these pathologies that we already have at the state level. And we're beginning to have them
even now. And remember, we have right now a president who refused to accept the result of an
election in 2020 and who staged what was intended to be an electoral coup. It failed. But, you know,
the idea that he wouldn't do it again or nobody would ever dare to.
to do that or nobody would block an election. I think it's pretty naive at this point. I mean,
it happened already. And so, of course, it can happen again. Do you think he's going to try and
get a third term in office? I don't think so because I don't think he wants one. But I think it's possible
that people around him will try to shape and affect the elections in a way that makes sure that
a Republican wins. Or maybe his children?
It's very possible that one of his children will run for president.
Because there's a way to control power in America, you know, when they talk about MAGA,
which is, I guess, a collection of people now.
You could say J.D. Vance is part of MAGA and the kids and Trump.
So maybe they'd want to keep it within MAGA.
Maybe that's the...
They might or they might want to keep it within the family.
I mean, look, what is MAGA now?
You know, what is different about Trump's second term from Trump's first term?
So one of the things that happened after January the 6th, after the attack on the Congress, was that many of the people who'd been around Trump, Republicans, people who do foreign policy, people who do domestic policy, left.
They said, right, this is too much for us.
You know, we're American patriots.
You know, we can't support this kind of attack on our political system, and they departed his presence.
But that exactly that moment, that attack on the electoral system, attracted other people.
So for different reasons, people who disliked the American political system, who don't like democracy, don't like liberal democracy, thought it was leading America in a left-wing direction.
Some of them have political reasons they were attracted to Donald Trump because they said, right, this is somebody who has the nerve to try and overthrow the system, and we like that.
And they're not all the same.
They have different views.
So there's a tech authoritarian group who want influence over the American political system because it's good for their businesses and because they don't get the point of democracy anyway and they think they should be in charge.
There's a kind of Christian nationalist group who think the United States should not be a secular state.
It should be a Christian state.
And they are interested in taking over the system with that.
And then there's a traditional MAGA group who think the United States should be run by the people who used to run it, you know, the kind of white Christian.
people of a certain kind, and they want to bring the United States back in that direction.
So there are different views, and they don't all agree with each other, but they do agree that
the system requires radical change. And that's the difference between the first and second term.
So Trump's first term, I think he has never cared much one way or the other for American democracy.
He personally sees himself as someone who should be allowed to act in any way he wants.
He doesn't like any kind of constraint. He admires foreign leaders who have.
no constraints. But he was one way or another constrained in his first term by the system. And
now he's surrounded himself by people who are seeking to help him avoid those constraints.
And that's new.
I think when we have these conversations, we assume that everybody agrees that democracy is the
better path. Sure. And that they understand the downsides of an autocracy.
So there are different kinds of autocracies, to be clear, and some are more repressive
than others. The main thing that you would notice, the first thing that you would notice,
would be the absence of the rule of law.
Rule of law means that judges and courts
in the legal system make decisions
based on the Constitution or on the laws.
And in an autocracy, you have ruled by law.
And that means that the law is what the person in power says it is.
And so if you did a program, for example,
and someone on your program said something
that was offensive to the leader of the country,
you could be arrested.
and you could be put on trial.
And instead of the court saying, right, we've looked at this case, and according to the law,
we have in the law it says we have freedom of speech and you can do whatever you want,
somebody could ring up from the Kremlin or from the White House or from, you know,
whatever is the leadership of your country and say, no, actually we want this guy in jail
and we don't care what the courts think.
And that's the big difference.
Here I'll tell you a real story that happened in Hungary when Hungary was going down the road
in the direction of a one-party state.
You can be the CEO of a company, and people can come and knock on your door, and they can say, we would like you to sell us a majority share in your company.
And you say, no, why should I let you do that?
My company, I built it.
I invested in it.
I don't want to sell it.
And then, okay, so what happens the next day?
Somebody breaks the windows of your house.
A few days later, your children are harassed on the way to school.
People who work for you start having legal problems.
This or that, you know, some kind of mortgage.
issue or some, you know, and suddenly your company encounters regulatory issues. There's a tax
inspection. And one by one, the state finds a way to harass you, to harass your company, your workers,
so that eventually you say, okay, I give up, I sell, and I'm leaving the country. And this happened
to somebody I know. Sounds like anthropic in the United States recently, where anthropic, the AI company
refused to give the United States access to its AI under certain conditions. And then very quickly,
Pete Hegseth did a post, I think, and Donald Trump did a post basically saying that they were going to
restrict their ability to work with the government?
We aren't used to the idea that the government decides which companies thrive and which ones die.
So once you have an autocratic state that can do what it wants legally, then it can decide which
companies succeed.
It can base government contracts, which are very important in every country, not on who's the best
company or not on some kind of blind procurement process, but on who's your friend, or who's
donated to your political party or who's in the case of the United States, who's invested in your
company.
So one of the things that we have in the United States for the first time ever, I think, is a
president who is actively doing business in countries and in areas that are of interest
to the people he's doing business with.
So, for example, the Trump family does business in Saudi Arabia.
It has a deal with a Saudi company called Dar Al-Kan, which is a sort of development company,
and that company has close relations to the Saudi leadership.
The Saudi leadership is interested in deals with the United States,
but I mean political arrangement with the United States,
and the money is going into the Trump family coffers in order to make a better arrangement
for the country of Saudi Arabia.
So that's a way in which, because we have a declining democracy,
and because we have an increasingly kleptocratic system,
decisions are being made by the President of the United States,
by the White House, not based on what's good for Americans,
but on what's good for his company.
And if you look at Russia, that's exactly how the political system works there.
If you look at China, China's more complicated.
It's a bigger country.
It's more sophisticated.
But even there, you have, again, decisions made not for the welfare of the Chinese people,
but for the ruling party.
the Communist Party.
And we have two jars of money here.
This was Trump's net worth when he went into office.
$2.3 billion, reportedly.
And this is his net worth now, just two years later.
$6.5 billion.
Looks like being a president is a profitable job.
That has never happened before.
This is completely new in American history.
There have been presidents who,
there have been whiffs of corruption around them.
There's been, you know, presidential relatives
who've tried to trade off the president's name,
but we've never had a president running businesses while in office.
And as I said, in such a way that the people with whom he's doing business
are hoping to benefit politically or in other ways.
And that's completely brand new.
And just back to your original question,
which is why is democracy better?
Churchill was the person who said that democracy is the worst system of government
except for all the others.
So it's multi-reasons why it's flawed.
You know, democracies have require an immense amount of tolerance.
There's always a lot of cacophony.
There's a constant flux and change that people find enervating.
But at the very least, what democracies can do is they can force issues like this into the public sphere.
You know, you're allowed, at least, in a democracy, to question whether this decisions are being made on the basis that they're good for everybody or they're being made for the benefit of the president.
I guess supporters would say, you know, Trump's not running the businesses himself.
It's just his kids' activity that is generating this net worth.
Yeah, but I mean, everybody knows that they're his kids.
And you wouldn't do it.
You know, why did the Saudi government invest $2 billion in Jared Kushner's fund?
It wasn't because they just like Jared Kushner.
It was because Kushner is Trump's son-in-law.
And now, of course, Kushner is the Trump administration's negotiator in the Middle East.
so he's negotiating with his business partners.
The appearance of conflict of interest is overwhelming.
And as I said, we've never had in American history,
or I think in recent British history,
we've never had that kind of conflict of interest so clear at that higher level.
Do you spend much time thinking about what's going on in the Middle East,
the wars and Iran and Venezuela and the bigger picture here of what's happening
and how this might link back to what you were saying about authoritarian-raiser,
It's all very confusing. I feel like we went through a period of relative peace through the Biden era,
and Trump obviously ran on this promise that he wasn't going to start new wars, and we seem to be
having a lot of wars. Russia and Ukraine still raging on doesn't seem to be nearer to any conclusion,
and now there's this war in Iran that threatens to be a never-ending war. Why? Why? What's going on?
There are several things going on. One of them is that in declining democracy.
and historically in autocracies is you have leaders who conduct wars as a way of consolidating
their base and consolidating their support. And so one of the things that Trump likes to do is if
he declares a war, I believe he had a different expectation of the Iran war. He's using foreign
policy. He's using these fighting of wars in order to consolidate his support at home. So that's a
part of what's happening. But some of this is nothing to do with Trump. You know, we are now living in a world
where the historical political system, the one that was built after 1945, some people call it the liberal world order.
I don't really like that term because it sounds kind of mushy. But the order that has existed since 1945, the one that was somewhat based on the UN that was based on a set of rules and treaties, that order has begun to break down.
And it's breaking down for several reasons. One, we've started to discuss already, which is changes inside the United States.
and the United States was an really important pillar of that order.
But it's also breaking down because the autocratic powers,
Russia, China, Iran, Venezuela until recently, and others
have been challenging that order for a while themselves.
They didn't like the American dominance of international politics in the conversation.
They were competing with America at a strategic level,
but also in what is really a war of ideas.
So let's go back to autocracy and democracy.
You know, if you are the leader of Russia or you're the leader of China, what is the thing that is most threatening to you?
And the answer is the language of liberal democracy.
So all this stuff that we find boring and we're used to and, you know, this idea of freedom of speech and separation of powers and rule of law, all those things that we have come to take for granted in our societies are a huge challenge.
to the political system in Russia or China.
You know, what is Putin most afraid of?
He's most afraid of a street revolution
of the kind we had in Ukraine in 2014.
So when people are standing on the street
and they have signs saying,
we're against corruption,
you know, we want democracy,
we want to be in the European Union,
we want to be integrated with Europe,
he's afraid of that happening in Russia.
Because if you live in an autocratic state
where you don't have freedom of speech,
where there is no justice,
where the government decides
what all the rules are. Then those ideas are explosive and exciting, the same way they were in the 18th century, when they first appeared in the Declaration of Independence.
And people can be motivated by them. People will go into the street for them. People will risk their lives for them. And the autocrats know that. And so really for the past decade since 2013, 2014, you see them seeking to spread those ideas, to promote them. I mean, we all know now about Russian propaganda campaigns. We know what Russian disinformation.
information looks like. There's a Chinese version, too, which we don't see that much in English,
but it appears in other countries. We see them seeking to undermine democracy, trying to spread
the influence of a different set of ideas. So the war in Ukraine is exactly that war. The Russians are
firstly trying to destroy Ukraine as a nation. They want it to disappear. They're an empire.
They want Ukraine to be their colony. And they understood perfectly well that by
challenging Ukraine by invading Ukraine. They were defying this liberal world order. They were defying
the rules of post-war Europe. Because in post-war Europe, there was a decision made after 1945.
We're not going to invade each other anymore. We're not going to have wars. Instead,
we're going to decide everything by diplomacy. Borders will not be changed by force.
And the Russians understood that they were breaking that norm. And they invaded Ukraine.
They also invaded Ukraine because the Ukrainians were using that language, that powerful, democratic language that we take.
for granted. And Putin said, if they can do it in Ukraine, then people could do it in Russia.
And so I need to crush this Ukrainian democracy movement. And so that war really is a fault
line between the democratic world and the autocratic world. So I think what you're seeing is
the breakdown of an older system that was more or less organized around by American rules.
Through history, which lasts longer? Democracy or autocracy? Oh, autocracies. They last longer.
Well, look, if you look back in history, most human societies in most times have been what we would now call autocracy, but they were whatever. They were monarchies. They were led by tribal leaders, by warlords. There have been very, very few liberal democracies, and most of them have not lasted. And I should also say the people who wrote the American Constitution knew that. And when they wrote it, they were reading the history of ancient Rome. There was a Roman Republic and it fell when it was taken over by Julius Caesar. So they all knew that story. They were
reading about the Greek democracies, Athens, which also fell. And when they wrote the U.S.
Constitution, they were thinking, how do we make this last? What can we put in it to make it
last? It's a longer story, whether you think they were successful or not. But everybody who've
created democracies, whether it was after World War II in Europe, whether it was America in
18th century, everybody understood that this was a fragile system. And they tried to put
checks and balances, you know, judicial, legislative and executive power. They tried to
tried to create systems that would ward off the impulse towards autocracy.
I don't know if you have the answer to this question, but where are people happier, on average, in a democracy or an autocracy?
So I have to tell you, I know a little bit about happiness surveys, and over and over and over again, the happiest place in the world is Finland.
Finland, Sweden, Denmark, Norway.
Scandinavia is very happy.
The reasons for that may not be anything to do with the nature of the political system might have other sources, but the happy.
But the happiness is certainly connected to democracy.
It's connected to stability and, of course, connected to wealth.
Just looking at some research here.
It says while wealth and economic stability are critical for happiness, regardless of the government type,
democracy provides additional structural benefits like participation, security, and lower corruption
that tend to lift a society's overall life satisfaction.
Well, democracies, by definition, are, at least in theory, the state is structured in a way to benefit everybody, right?
At least that's how it's supposed to work.
So whether it's a national health care system or whether it's a system of roads and railroads, you know, the state is building things that are designed to serve everybody.
In an autocracy, that doesn't necessarily happen. So in Russia, ordinary Russians have no influence on that decision.
They have no way of expressing their views. They can't say what they think. They have no ability to influence the state.
They can't say, well, actually, hey, we'd like to build a hospital instead of bombing another city in Ukraine.
And so they have very little ability to change the system.
And that, of course, creates frustration and unhappiness.
If that is true, and this is why I ask the question, if it's better for the people,
and at some degree, I think if informed people would choose it, which I think is, and I say the word informed,
because I understand in a lot of these countries where they don't have democracy,
that I'm now using don't have democracy instead of having to say that word again,
they limit the access to information so that people don't know what they're missing out on, I guess,
or don't have those potentially disruptive ideas.
they're not exposed to them on their phones or devices.
I would think a person would choose to live in a democracy
if given the choice and the information.
I would think so, although there are other, you know, there's a deep human need
for a sense of stability and security and hierarchy.
And hierarchy for some people.
And it's true that authoritarian seem to offer that.
You know, in a democracy, you do have this constant change.
of leaders. You know, there's more demands on citizens. You know, you have to participate.
If you care about your country, it's not just enough to vote. You need to be involved in politics
in some way. And autocracies, I mean, I think falsely offer stability. And so the argument of the
Russians and Chinese governments and the argument they make in those social media campaigns
that they run inside the U.S. or the U.K. or Europe is exactly that. Authoritarianism is stability,
safety, traditional values, hierarchy. And there are people for whom that's deep.
appealing. So I wouldn't discount that instinct. And when people like that are also able to control
information, when they control the security services, when they monopolize the use of violence,
they can be very hard to undo, even if the majority of the country wants something different.
It's almost high for me to understand how people in Russia are okay with the fact that the leader
has been there for several decades and isn't moving. But it's hard for us to understand because
in the UK or in America, there would be people on the streets.
It doesn't matter what they think.
Really?
Well, because they have no way of expressing what they think.
There's no such thing as public opinion or public debate.
There's no forum you can join where you can say what you could express your views in a way that's fair.
And if you do say, I think Putin should be, you know, it's time for him to retire.
You could be arrested.
And so people begin to adjust what they think.
And they begin to change their behavior because they know that it's dangerous to say things.
I mean, this is a phenomenon I found in the work I did years ago on the Soviet Union.
The propaganda said how successful we are and how much hay we've grown this year and how many bits of steel we've made and it was always fake.
And so the question was always, well, did people really believe that?
Did people believe in the system?
Do they believe in the propaganda?
And the answer was a little weird.
It was convenient for them to believe it.
In other words, in order to get on in life, you had to believe it or you had to say you believed it.
And at a certain point, what they really thought, like, deep in the back of their mind, didn't matter because there was no way to say what you think. And that's what you have in Russia again now. It's for me very tragic because there was a period in Russia in the 90s and 2000s when there was open debate. And people were speaking freely and clearly about the state of the country. But right now, it's once again a situation where expressing your views is dangerous. And so people just don't do it. And they try to stay out of politics altogether.
You know, politics is dangerous and ugly and nasty.
Like, just stay home.
And remember that this is something that's developed over years.
It didn't happen from one day to the next.
It was a decline that's been happening since the year 2000.
I've heard you say that there's five core tactics that autocratic leaders used to dismantle a democracy.
Could you walk me through the five tactics and maybe also link them to things that are happening now in the West,
which might be warning signs of the dismantling of one's democracy?
Well, corruption. We've done that one already.
Corruption you have in any political system, and you often have it in democracies too. But in an autocratic society, you have more corruption because the legal system is controlled.
And so what you have, for example, in the United States, the fact that Donald Trump has taken over our Department of Justice and has installed loyalists who are looking, among other things, for example, to prosecute his enemies just because of,
because they're his enemies. That means you have a check in balance. So normally, if there was
high-level corruption in the White House or in the administration, you would have people
inside the Department of Justice and the FBI who would investigate it. But now we don't have
that happening. Is that different from the past? It's different. It's different. I mean, we didn't
have anybody try to use the White House to make money in this way before. So hard for me to say
what would have happened in, like, I don't know, the Clinton administration. But we didn't have a
completely politicized civil service, completely politicized FBI, who would avoid, you know,
any kind of investigation. And so corruption is a particular symptom of authoritarianism,
and it's also a tool. You know, it's something that the president can offer people.
You get along with me, you don't criticize me, your business will prosper. You know, you will get
government contracts. Is that what we're seeing with all these big tech CEOs that seem to be
going frequently to the White House and saying wonderful things about him and
his support and having dinner with him and none of them speaking out. But if you looked at their
Twitter feeds a couple of years ago, they were all saying the most horrific things about Trump.
Yes. I mean, they've understood that, you know, if this is going to be an American administration
that you have to genuflect the president, you have to be sycophantic to the president in order
to get business deals, then they'll do it. If you have to donate to his White House reconstruction
fund, which many of them have done, then you'll do it. If you have to donate to his
inauguration, you'll do it. It's a question of who is supposed to be the beneficiary of government
regulation. It's supposed to be Americans. I mean, ordinary people, we're supposed to become more
prosperous. The beneficiary is not supposed to be, as I said, the president and his family and his
entourage. And that is a big shift in American politics. When I look back at someone like the CEO of
OpenAI's statements on Trump, if you go back to 2016, he said he was an unprecedented threat to America
and called him a potential disaster for the American economy.
He said he was irresponsible in the way dictators are
and compared his rhetoric to the big lie,
tactics used by historical authoritarians like Hitler.
He described him as erratic abusive and prone to fits of rage.
And then I see him side by side at the White House
saying nice things about him
and saying nothing critical at all.
It's one of the most bizarre things, actually,
about this whole administration.
You know, if I were that rich, like, what's the point?
of being rich unless if you can't say what you think.
Mm-hmm.
You know, I don't understand the value of it.
Can I hazard a guess as to why the like incentive structure they're trapped in?
What's your guess?
I think that being rich for these people is actually just a proxy of status.
And I think the thing that risks their status, which is what they care about more than anything else in the games that they're playing, is losing to their direct competition.
And it's quite clear to me that if someone like Sam Altman was to say anything negative about Trump, it would of course hurt his business.
But actually it would have something more, which is his status.
he would lose to Anthropic and X-A-I and Gemini,
to lose in your category of peers,
which all these sort of tech oligarchs
for this category of peers,
would help more than anything.
I think it would hurt more than losing a gazillion dollars.
It's just like losing the game.
Yeah, although there are two things about it.
One is it's very short-sighted,
because ultimately who will suffer
if there is a decline in the American political system,
in the American legal system?
I mean, it's them.
Maybe they've gotten used to paying,
play in a way? They have, but it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a
rules change. Ah, yeah, like like in Russia with the oligarchs, Putin can decide. That's right.
I'm sick of these oligarchs. I want different oligarchs. And that happened in China too. So it's a,
so that's one argument against it. The second argument is, and I think anthropic might have
figured this out already, and some of the law firms have figured it out. There's also a game to be
made by saying, no, I'm independent. We have our own corporate rules. We have our own legal
code of ethics and we're going to behave as patriotic Americans. And then you attract business.
And they may be doing well of it. And as I said, there's a, there's a parallel thing that
happened with U.S. law firms. There were some frivolous lawsuits and they settled them. And then
there were some who said, no, we won't settle. We won't do that. And the ones who didn't do it
have all won, you know, and they're all thriving. I mean, so there is also a benefit to be gained
both commercially and financially. And I would think even in that weird world of status by standing
up for what you believe in and by remembering the bigger picture. And the bigger picture is what
happens to the United States. I mean, the United States is your main market. It's where your
employees come from. It's the place where you're doing business. And if the United States
begins to suffer, then you suffer too. And so thinking a little bit like that might help some of them.
Is this just another three years of this sort of, you know, unusual behavior before we resume
business as usual in our democracies? I'm asked this by Europeans all the time. And my sense is that a lot of
things will not ever be quite normal again, either inside the U.S. or around the world.
I mean, I would advise, for example, I mean, if you're doing business with the U.S. or you're a security
partner of the U.S., I would strongly recommend that you have plan B.
You know, it's really time for NATO to have a plan in case the United States flakes out
to have a different security option.
You know, what happens to the U.S. after Trump is unclear.
First of all, the next president could be J.D. Vance, who I think is even more committed
to the project of making America into a one-party state.
Or the next president could be a Democrat we haven't heard of yet
who decides to use the broken system in order to take advantage of it in a different way.
I mean, I hope that won't happen, but you can't count it out.
I mean, once the norms are broken and once the laws have changed,
then it can be anybody can take advantage of it.
I mean, if Trump can use the federal bureaucracy to threaten media companies,
then why can't the next president?
And so, you know, certain things don't necessarily get fixed once they're broken.
On that point of global partners of the US now thinking about their own defense and themselves more, is that a pattern that you're seeing?
Just from my observations of, you know, we're sat here in London at the moment, but my observations of the UK, the UK used to consider ourselves to be the great alliance, sort of partner of America.
Special relationship.
We had the special relationship, which I never knew what it meant, but I always liked it.
It seems like that's gone out the window.
and the UK are now speaking a lot to President Macron in France
and it seems like we're having our own little European meetings
but around the world it seems that that's happening.
Canada don't seem to be a great ally of the US anymore
after they threaten to invade them.
What is happening from that perspective?
Are we becoming more individualistic
and breaking into our own little groups because of Trump's rhetoric?
What you're watching is everybody all over the world hedging.
Everybody is looking for alternatives.
So you now have an EU,
India trade agreement, which nobody would have bothered to do a few years ago. You have Canada
initiating a security relationship with the EU. You have conversations inside NATO about, you know,
realistically, if the United States weren't to help us in case of a Russian attack, what would we do?
So those aren't really public conversations, but privately, lots of people are having them.
Everywhere you go, you see these so-called middle powers. This is a term that Mark Carney of Canada
first started using. You know, Brazil, India, the EU.
countries begin, Japan, you see them beginning to make new relationships with one another.
You know, if the United States flakes out and we can't trade with them in a normal way anymore
because the president changes the trading rules every five minutes, then at least we'll have
a decent trading relationship with somebody else. I travel a lot. I've traveled a lot in
last three months, and everywhere I go, that's the main topic of conversation. Canada, Canada was
completely integrated with the United States. I mean, it almost didn't have an independent
economy. And now the Canadians are thinking, how do we benefit from our oil and gas wealth to
protect our sovereignty? Who else do we do deals with Carney? He's been to China. He's, you know,
also talking to India. With whom will we share, potentially share nuclear technology? There are these
conversations between France and Poland and France and Germany about a different kind of nuclear
umbrella. It's all pretty tentative, but it's moved much faster than I would ever expect it.
I think the breaking point for a lot of people in Europe was Greenland.
And I don't know if people have really focused on what exactly happened there,
but you had the President of the United States saying he was going to invade Denmark.
Oh, right, but there we go.
So the United States was saying it was going to invade Greenland.
So Trump was kind of hinting it in public,
and behind the scenes there were other signs that maybe they were really preparing to do it.
And so what did that mean in Denmark?
That meant that the Danes said, okay, we're preparing for U.S. invasion.
And this is a country that's very pro-American.
Lots of big Danish companies in the United States, including the ones who create the weight loss drugs.
Lots of Danish American travel, friendship, everything, security relationship going back to the Second World War.
Okay, the Americans are invading.
What do we do?
Do we blow up the airports in Greenland?
And they did start planning that.
Do we plan to shoot down American planes?
Are we going to shoot at American soldiers?
you know, are they going to shoot at us? And they had to suddenly imagine a real war with their closest
ally and how that would impact them and impact trade and impact NATO and so on. And not only did
they have to do it, their close allies in Europe did it too. So the Germans were consulting
with the Danes all through this period. You know, what if the Danes shoot down an American plane?
Like, how does that affect us? And everybody went through this kind of traumatic experience of
imagining a U.S. invasion of a NATO ally. And then Trump made a speech at Davos where he somehow
changed the subject and confused Greenland and Iceland a few times. And, you know, and it got put off.
But no one has recovered. Everybody remembers that moment and said, okay, this is a, this is an unstable
power. They could do real damage to us. They can't be relied on. We need alternatives. And so really
since then, and that was in January, since then, this is when you've seen.
seen this stuff you were talking about, you know, the visits to China, the visits to Canada,
the back and forth with India. You see everybody hedging and rearranging the way they think about
the world. If you're an American, is this good news or bad news that the rest of the world is hedging?
It's very bad news. Why? Because a lot of America's prosperity in the post-war period has been
based on the fact that America was dominant in global trade. And, you know, we make money out of our
European relationships. You know, we produce things that we sell all over the world. And actually,
you know, we import things from all over the world, and that's good, too. You know, the root of American
post-war prosperity is, are these relationships especially with Europe. And also the root of America's
security dominance. I mean, why are there NATO bases in Europe? It's not just to protect Europe.
It's also because from there, the U.S. can project power into the Middle East. It has, you know,
to Africa. It has a sort of window on the world from there. And once those bases are gone,
then the U.S. is suddenly cut off and far away in a way that it wasn't before. And there are all
kinds of other risks. You know, will the U.S. dollar go on being so dominant? U.S. makes
money out of that. Will U.S. goods go on being so valued? You know, in Canada, they boycott U.S.
products now. And actually, this was when I was in Denmark in February. I was shown an app.
You can take a picture of a thing you see in the supermarket, and it will tell you whether it's made in the United States.
And if it's made the United States, you don't buy it because they were so angry.
Even the dominance of American tech, which a lot of Europeans have belatedly woken up to as a problem, could be in question.
So Europeans are looking to do cloud storage in Europe and payment systems in Europe because maybe the U.S. is unreliable.
And so we're just at the beginning of what could be quite a big change.
And yes, Americans would feel that.
Coming back to this point about the war in Iran,
you said that Trump sort of misestimated what would happen here.
Yes.
Obviously flew into Venezuela and took Maduro out of bed.
And that seemed to go fairly well from what he might have been expecting.
But then he attacked Iran and this war seems to know no end now.
I mean, here's another feature of dictatorships is that nobody questions your decisions
and nobody offers you alternatives.
The people around you?
the people around you. So when he was planning the war in Iran, from the reporting that we know,
people did say, well, you know, Mr. President, you know, the Iranians are not like the Venezuelans.
It's a very embedded regime. And the Iranians had a plan already for what would happen if their
leadership was killed. They just, they had a sort of decentralized system. You know, that will kick into
place. You know, they have allies all over the Middle East. They have these proxy groups in
different parts of the Middle East. And famously, the control over the Strait of Hormuz, possibly.
And he was told that, but it seems he wasn't told it in a very definitive way.
Like some people said, well, maybe this might be the case.
But nobody said to him, Mr. President, this is a bad idea.
Because he's known if you said, Mr. President, this is a bad idea.
He might have said, well, get out of my sight.
Because he's not somebody who listens to other people's views or takes them into consideration.
I think that bothers me the most about Iran.
I have friends and I've been involved with organizations that do Iranian human rights.
The thing that bothered me the most was his utter failure even to talk to or about Iranians.
I mean, it is an unpopular regime.
It's one of the worst regimes ugliest on the planet.
And yet there seems to have been no communication with the, you know, democratic opposition in Iran, no communication, even with Pahlavi, the son of the Shah, the monarchists in Iran.
I mean, there are alternative governments.
There are alternative people who you could speak to.
And he never did that because his real interest isn't democracy.
you know, or making Iran into a better place, his real interest was in somehow dominating Iran
and getting them to give him a share of the oil revenues, which is what happened in Venezuela.
You know, so he's also not even thinking the way previous Democratic presidents thought.
So even George W. Bush, also somebody who made huge mistakes, you know, and so on,
you never heard George W. Bush say, what I want is to run Iraq and steal its oil.
They wanted to make Iraq into democracy.
which by the way it is now, but it was a long bloody pathway.
Trump doesn't even think like that.
He thinks my idea is to do some deal with one of the dictators and move on.
And actually, that's what's happened in Venezuela.
So Venezuela is still a dictatorship.
And it's run by the same regime as before, just led by a different person.
And he's been quite vocal about the fact that they're getting all the oil.
Yes.
It's a crazy thing to hear that you'd snatch up at.
You'd snatch a world leader.
and then the same day you talk about how you've got the boats stealing the country's oil.
I say the word stealing, but taking the country's oil.
Yeah, and it's not even clear what he means by that and so on.
But it was not the action of a 20th or 21st century president.
The midterms are coming up, and I was reading that Trump's approval ratings are in all-time low.
It's first time I've seen people that were sort of devoted supporters of his like Tucker Carlson coming out and saying,
apologizing for supporting him.
So this war in Iran seems to have really backfired in a way that I don't think he was intending.
And you can kind of tell by how Trump's feeling, because you just watch him in interviews.
And the line that he repeats 75 times is probably like in some respects the exact opposite of what's going on.
So when I watched him in an interview this week, and he was repeatedly saying, obviously he says how great the war is going.
So that makes me feel like it's not going well.
Yeah, that was the main narrative, but just like how well the war is going.
He keeps saying we've won, we've won, it's over.
One of the problems of having a president who lies all the time is that, you know, you just stop believing.
I mean, even if the war was over, you wouldn't believe it because his track record is not good.
I mean, look, I think the important thing to understand about Trump is that he's somebody who has no strategy.
He doesn't care that much about what happened before he was president.
He doesn't know the history of Iran.
He doesn't understand much about the history of the region.
And he doesn't really care about what's going to happen later.
He's interested in what is happening now.
And is he winning in the current moment?
What does winning mean?
Whatever it means to him.
Which is?
I'm winning the contest with this journalist.
Or I'm winning the argument about Iran.
Or like, we're winning the war.
Or the opinion polls are all in my favor.
So whatever is the situation, he has to emerge as the winner.
That's his narcissistic mentality.
That's not very good for strategic thinking.
because sometimes you don't win immediately.
Like you have to have a plan, you know,
and you have to have a long-term aim
and you have to have a strategy on how to get there.
But he doesn't think like that.
If you watch him, if you watch him perform on television,
whatever is this happening, he will convert it into that.
You know, I win it.
I'm 100% more productive using this app,
despite spending 50% less time typing.
And that might confuse you, but let me explain,
which is exactly why I invested in Whisper Flow.
They're also one of our sponsors on this podcast.
Whisperflow turns your speech into text,
so you can send it in any app or device at any time.
And I promise you, it doesn't seem to ever make mistakes.
This is the most accurate voice dictation I have ever used
after a decade of trying to get one to work.
Not only does it save me a ton of time,
it also corrects your speech if you change your mind mid-sentence
before turning it into text on the device.
I love it, and I know my team loves it too,
because when I posted it in our Slack channel,
asking if anybody wanted a pro version,
half the office said yes and they had it within an hour, which tells me everything.
This is the tool you and your team need to speed yourselves up and to capture those important
ideas so that they don't disappear.
Head over to whisperflow.a-a-I-S-S-S-Sheven to download it now.
That's W-I-S-P-R-F-O-W dot A-I-S-S-Sheven.
Much of the reason most people haven't posted content or built their personal brand is because
it's hard and it's time-consuming and we're all very, very busy.
and if you've never posted something before,
there's so many factors in your psychology that stop you wanting to post.
What people will think of you.
Am I doing this right?
Is the thing I'm saying absolutely stupid?
All of these result in paralysis, which means you don't post,
and your feed goes bare.
I'm an investor in a company called Stan Store,
which you've probably heard me talk about,
and what they've been building is this new tool called Stanley
that uses AI, looks at your feed,
looks at your tone of voice, looks at your history,
looks at your best performing posts and tells you what you should post.
Makes those posts for you.
You can also just use it for inspiration.
And sometimes what we need when we're thinking about doing a post for our social media channels is inspiration.
Building an audience has fundamentally changed my life.
And I think it could change yours too.
So I'm inviting you to give this new tool a shot and let me know what you think.
All you have to do is search coach.stand.org now to get started.
When you begin to see attempts to corrupt and shape elections, this is when you know your democracy is in trouble.
When the rules of the election are challenged, when there begin to be arguments about who can vote and attempts to make some people not be allowed to vote, when you try to alter the result in some way.
I mean, an attack on elections is a classic way in which democratically elected leaders undermine democracy.
So an example of this, OK, Victor Orban, who just lost an election in Hungary after 16 years, he had two-thirds control of, in Hungary, if you have two-thirds of the parliament, then you can change the Constitution.
So he continually altered the Hungarian constitution in order to give himself electoral advantages.
So changing constituencies and rebalancing the way votes were counted.
In the United States, I think we already talked about gerrymandering.
Gerrymandering is unbelievably anti-democratic.
and the fact that we have a kind of gerrymandering contest right now.
What's gerrymandering?
It's a great word, actually.
It comes from a congressman named Jerry in the early 19th century who drew a map, an electoral map,
which looked like a salamander.
And a gerrymandered map in U.S. terms is a electoral map that has been altered to favor one political party.
You know, the city of Nashville, instead of having a single Democratic representative,
instead of having a sensible constituency around the city that would vote for one member of Congress
has been divided into several constituencies that are designed in such a way that only Republicans win.
And once you have maps that are designed to favor one party or the other,
then you begin to get real democratic decline.
But there are other things happening in the U.S. too.
So there are fears that ICE, which is the paramilitary organization, created by,
by the president supposedly to go after immigrants,
that what if ICE troops are put on the street
during election day?
You know, would some people be intimidated from voting?
So there are fears that he will do that in some states.
There's something called voter ID he talks about a lot.
Yes, well, this is also very strange.
So, of course, in the U.S., you have voter ID
and most people have driver's licenses.
They want to change the law
so that you either have to use a passport or a birth certificate.
And most Americans don't have passports,
I think 60% don't. I don't remember the number, but it's very low. Many people have lost or never
had their birth certificates. If you passed a law like that, it would make it much more difficult
for some people to vote, especially certain kinds of people. So married women would have to show a
passport, a birth certificate, and a marriage license. Because you'd have to show the, because your
birth certificate name is different from your married name.
Okay, yeah.
And so many people believe this is a way to get fewer women to vote, and women are more likely
to vote Democrat. It's also part of a narrative. So the administration is trying to argue that
lots and lots of illegal immigrants are voting, which is a conspiracy theory. There's no evidence of
it. There's no evidence really of almost any illegal immigrants ever voting. And if you think about it,
if you were an illegal immigrant, why would you want to vote? Because it would just be a way of
attracting attention to yourself. But they seek to establish this narrative as a way of
disqualifying democratic votes.
They want to say that
votes, and Trump did this during the last election,
votes in cities are too high.
If they need to call for a voter recount,
they want to say that this is the explanation
for why they've lost.
And so part of the reason
why they're talking about voter ID is that.
So just looking at some of the data,
it says young voters, between 18 and 29,
roughly 24% of them lack
the documents that would qualify them to vote.
in minority voters, 11% of citizens of color lack these documents
compared to a smaller percentage in white citizens.
In low-income America, only one in five households earning under $50,000 has a passport.
And as you said, married women, 69 million women have birth certificates
that do not match their current legal name due to marriage.
Right.
So, okay.
I mean, it's risky because I imagine lots of Republicans don't have passports.
Yeah.
But I think they've calculated that it would suit them better.
So they're looking to shape the voting population in a way that will benefit them.
So they're looking to find ways to massage the outcome.
And that's a kind of classic, when you're in a country which is declining democratically,
one of the classic things that happens is the ruling party seeks to alter change who is able to vote
and how votes are weighted as a way of altering the outcome.
What's the third one?
Personnel.
Well, we talked about this one already.
Oh, the civil servants.
This is civil service.
In a modern democracy, so in a 21st century democracy, government does a lot of things.
It manages the road system.
It sometimes organizes health care.
It regulates the insurance markets.
It does all kinds of governance, pollution.
And all those people who do those jobs, it's very important that they be people who know how to do them.
So you want the person who's measuring air pollution.
You want that person to be an expert in air pollution.
You don't want them to be, you know, the president's cousin.
Or the person who is regulating the insurance market, you want that to be someone who knows about insurance markets.
And you don't want it to be the best friend of the vice president.
In corrupt autocracies, that is who gets those jobs.
Seeing this a little bit with the Fed, no?
He doesn't like Jerome Powell in the Fed.
Right. And so he's tried to undermine Jerome Powell.
He's sued Jerome Powell, or he was investigating him rather,
for some kind of fake financial scandal.
And he tried to put pressure on him to resign.
He tried to put pressure on him to change his policy.
And, you know, honestly, I don't know whether the person who will come in next will be more susceptible,
but he's certainly been chosen because Trump thinks he is.
And so what Trump wants is to have civil servants who are historically independent,
and that includes the chairman of the Fed.
It includes actually Department of Justice.
The Attorney General usually has some independence.
what you want is people who are acting in the interests of everybody
and in a functional democracy in the happy Scandinavian countries,
then at least most of the time, that's what they're doing.
And in a corrupt democracy or in a failing democracy,
then you have people whose interests are not everybody in the country,
but their interests are the president, his family, his party,
anyway, not American.
And so that's the danger of undermining civil service.
The fourth one is information.
Okay.
All dictatorships seek to control information.
In China, the entire internet since the 1990s has been constructed so that the government can control it.
There is no outside internet.
There is nobody who's active on the Chinese internet who isn't somehow known or accounted for somehow by the authorities.
And the internet is also connected to a whole system of surveillance cameras and other kinds of databases so that people can be tracked all.
all through the system and all through the country.
People do have VPNs in China and they do get out, but the majority of people are inside
the sun.
And that's probably the China is the most extreme form of that.
And Russia is actually now heading in that direction.
So Putin is now cut off Russian access to most forms of Western social media,
you know, Instagram.
And there were some amazing videos of really sad Russian Instagram influencers who were losing
their audiences because of Putin's changes.
So he's now heading in that direction.
But even inside the United States, which is maybe the loudest and most open democracy in the world, you can see the Trump administration seeking to shape the information space in new ways.
So we have federal regulators who are now willing to put pressure on television stations if the president asked them to.
We have the president putting his thumb on the scale of people who are acquiring new media companies in order to make sure that the new owners are somehow friendly.
to him.
Talk about TikTok.
TikTok, CBS, CNN, these are all media companies where the president is trying to get people
who are sympathetic to him in charge.
And this is, by the way, we all have this idea about censorship, that it's like there's a guy
in a room and he's crossing sentences out of a newspaper article, you know, and that's what
censorship is.
But actually nowadays, that's not how media control works.
So in Orban's Hungary, in Erdogan's Turkey, what happens is that the leadership,
encourages or helps business people or groups close to them to acquire media properties.
So they do it through the level of media ownership.
So who owns the media becomes the most important question.
And then the person who's in charge of the media can then influence in some ways what it's able to say.
So it doesn't give you complete control.
So actually in Hungary you still had a couple of very small but still existing independent websites
who turned out to be very important.
But you had an attempt to cruel,
because most of the television was controlled,
either directly or indirectly by Orban.
And it looks to me like Trump is trying to achieve something like that.
There's a piece of that that also involves culture and universities as well.
Pressure on universities so that they don't produce people who are too critical.
In the U.S., you've had the Trump industry,
took over the Kennedy Center, which is the most prestigious arts venue.
in Washington and tried to change its nature and tried to change its, you know, who could play there
and who couldn't. And the result is actually that it's now been shut down for two years.
You see this on both sides of the political aisle, both on the democratic side, in different ways.
But I think that both parties, when they're in for long enough, what we're allowed to say changes.
Yes, although the mechanisms have been different. I mean, I was involved in the argument, you know, some years back about this, you know,
I think it was incorrectly called cancel culture, but whatever, the argument that was happening inside universities and some press and other institutions about what you could and couldn't say.
And I thought it was, you know, that there was this peer pressure and sometimes institutional pressure on people and people were canceled.
That means they lost their jobs or they were kicked out of whatever group they were in because they'd said something the wrong way.
You know, I argued against that and wrote about it and so on.
What you have now is a little different.
You now have the president attempting to change media ownership.
And you're beginning to see what happens when the administration goes into universities and you can't teach this course.
You can't hire that teacher.
That was the deal that was given to Harvard.
I don't know, you know, some months back.
The reason why Harvard wound up refusing to deal with the Trump administration and when it started to sue them was because the administration was trying to actually decide who would teach what courses at Harvard.
I don't believe there's a precedent for that.
But I agree with you that it is an illiberal instinct to try to control speech.
And there's a left-wing version of it and there's a right-wing version of it.
And the people who are really in favor of free speech and they're vanishingly few
are the people who are willing to call it out on both sides.
And one of the things you often hear now from these so-called free speech warriors
is that they're perfectly happy to shout about the left canceling people
or left-wing rhetoric that they don't like.
but then they keep quiet when it comes from the other side.
Yes.
I was looking back through the history of this happening on both sides of the aisle.
And in Mark Zuckerberg's testimony, I think, in front of Congress,
he said that he was repeatedly pressured for months by the Biden-Harris administration
to remove certain content.
And then there's the whole Hunter Biden laptop story
where Zuckerberg confirmed that Mehta were asked to demote a New York Post story
by the FBI.
And then there's various other stories here about Twitter executives being emailed by White House officials and being asked to change things on their platform.
So there is a difference between someone sending you an email and saying, you know, look, this has been flagged by a monitoring group as maybe fake or as maybe Russian disinformation or as, you know, coming from some kind of foreign influence campaign.
And so, you know, it would be great if you took it down or demoted it.
And there's a difference between that and taking over the company in order.
that the president gets to dictate what's on it.
Nobody coerced meta into doing anything or Twitter.
Nobody said, you know, Twitter will pay a fine if you don't do X or Y.
In the context of people looking for foreign influence campaigns,
there were conversations about what was appropriate to print and what wasn't.
I think from what I've observed, it happens on both sides but in different ways.
I remember, was it Elizabeth Warren talking a lot about,
the Section 230, which I think protects some of the big social media companies from being sued
from what users posts. And I think she would repeatedly reference Section 230 and other
democratic lawmakers as a way to get the platforms to take a more aggressive stance on what they
called like hate speech and speech and disinformation. So Section 230 essentially allows the platforms
to escape the rules that newspapers, for example, have to abide by. So, so,
Actually, we do have regulations.
We have liable laws.
We have laws about terrorist content, for example.
So there are laws that regulate some parts of speech that we've agreed are good in order to maintain peace and so on.
And the platforms are exempt because of Section 230.
And so the platforms have argued that we don't control what's put up on our platforms
and we don't bear any responsibility for it.
I'm not sure that removing Section 230 is the best way to deal with this.
But making the online world conform to the same laws as the offline world seems to me kind of very basic.
It seems obvious to me that child pornography that's illegal if you have it in your house should also be illegal if it's published online.
It seems to me that people recruiting for ISIS that's illegal to do down the street from here, then it should also be illegal to do online.
And the tech companies have been trying in recent years.
This is an argument that's taking place both in Europe and the U.S. and elsewhere to get out of responsibility for just for conforming to the law in the countries where they're active.
And in one or two places there have been big clashes.
I was just in Brazil, which is one of the places where that happened, where the Brazilian law said something that was published on Twitter was illegal and they fined the company for publishing it.
Twitter didn't want to pay the fine, and there was an argument back and forth, and for a while Twitter was shut down in Brazil.
But it does seem to me that any given country, whether it's Brazil or Nepal or, you know, Ethiopia, and particularly democracies, I should say, you know, democracies have the right to say these are our laws. For example, these are our electoral laws. We have laws on election spending. And if the platforms violate those laws, they're in breach of the law. You know, so electing opinion is a very important one because if you're spending a million dollars on TikTok illegally,
that can be much harder to see than it would be if you were buying television ads.
And so finding a way to bring the social media companies into the legal system seems to be completely legitimate.
And in fact, I would even go farther than that, I would say that if European countries in particular don't do this,
then I'm not sure European countries will be able to maintain their sovereignty.
Will you be able to run an election in Germany or England?
if your electoral rules can be easily defied by platforms that are based in the US or China.
What such electoral rules might be defied by?
Laws about spending. Laws about advertising.
Everything is a trade-off, right?
And this is what I've learned from being a podcaster and interviewing so many people about so many things.
So I often just think all the time with every idea that I'm exposed to about what the trade is.
So as you were speaking, I was thinking about how does this become a slippery slope?
What's the downside of this trade?
So what do you think that would be?
I'm sure there's a, you know, of course there's a downside.
I mean, the downside is, you know, I don't know, country X has bad laws.
And then the platforms have to conform to the bad law.
Questions about speech are particularly sensitive.
You know, one person's terrorist speech is another person's free speech, right?
Yeah.
But somebody has to make that decision about what the rules are.
And I think the person who should make the decision are the people who should make the decision
are the elected representatives of that country.
Yeah.
And the decision should not be taken by Elon Musk.
It's funny because...
Or Mark Zuckerberg.
To some degree, it sounded like what Elon Musk says.
I remember watching him in an interview.
I can't remember who it was with, but he basically said exactly that.
He said, we'll abide by the laws of every country that we operate in.
And, oh, it was his interview with a CNN guy that used to be on CNN, Don Lemon.
And Don Lemon is pushing, is saying, there's hate speech on your platform.
And then he asks him what the hate speech is.
and I don't think he can say, but Elon's response to him is, we abide by the loss.
And Don Leon's pushing.
But there's a record of them not doing that.
So, you know, so that's just disingenuous.
I mean, it's true.
Hate speech is a, you know, it's a longer conversation.
I mean, how you define it, what you say it is different.
But some countries do have hate speech.
Germany has them.
So Germany decided after World War II, you know, to ban Nazi symbols.
I think Germany is a very, very successful electoral democracy.
And if they want to ban Nazi symbols, I think they should be a law.
latitude. I mean, in America, that wouldn't work, you know, and it's, you can't ban Nazi symbols
the United States. But I don't see why America should impose its rules on Germany. Like,
doesn't Germany have sovereignty? Doesn't Germany get to decide, you know, what the rules of its
national conversation are? Because in the U.S., racism is not illegal on the Internet in the United States
due to the First Amendment. Right. So I could be racist on X. Yes. And that is fine.
And many people are, if you spend any time on X. You will see it.
It's very hard to miss.
According to the laws, because it's not illegal.
But I think most people, a lot of people would say that the platform would have an obligation
to take down that racism.
Someone starts being racist to me.
Yeah.
Me on the internet.
I understand why a lot of people would say like, okay, that kind of behavior should be taken
down, but it's within the country's laws.
So do you think it's fun, like, this is a bit of a, I don't want to be a gotcha question,
but it's like, do you know what I mean?
I guess this is where the clash comes in because something can feel deeply immoral but be
illegal.
Sure, there's a difference between illegal legality and immority. And some, you know, historically, newspapers and other media have decided not to print racist material because it's immoral or because it's offensive.
Even social media platforms, I think, have a debate about how much ugly stuff they want to appear on their sites because if people see too much of it, they'll stop going on it.
I mean, I, you know, reduced my usage of Twitter because there was too much anti-Semitism and too much racism, and I didn't want to watch it anymore.
So, and I think many people, others have made the same decision.
You know, speech is a constant negotiation.
You know, what's acceptable, what's unacceptable, and the norms do change over time.
I will agree to that.
What the autocrats try to do is something a little bit different.
It's not in this gray area of hate speech and free speech.
It's controlling the system itself.
You know, what are the boundaries of what people can see?
What platforms they have access to.
So the Chinese don't really, you know, what they're interested in is, are you criticizing
the Chinese Communist Party.
That's the fundamental thing
that they're controlling for.
I was wondering, as you were speaking about this earlier,
if I'm in China, can I just get up and go?
Can I just leave?
Where would you go and could you get a visa to go there?
Good question.
The Chinese do leave.
I was just wondering if it's easy to leave China,
if you're a citizen of China,
or do they restrict you from going somewhere else?
I don't know, I'll go to Bali.
Could I not just go leave to Bali if I don't like it?
I mean, this is, this was a, you know,
this used to be a problem for people in the Soviet Union.
I mean, okay, theoretically you could leave.
You could get an exit passport.
I mean, I'm sure there are some restrictions on who's able to get passports and who isn't.
I mean, but say you were able to.
You'd need to go somewhere where you could get a visa, where you could work,
where you could set up a life, where you speak the language, where it's reasonable to imagine you could stay there for a long time.
I mean, immigration, especially given languages and professional qualifications, so it is not always easy.
not always practical for everybody. I mean, I have friends who are still, I have many friends who
left Russia, but I have one or two friends who are still there. And that's because they have
aging relatives or because they don't speak any other languages and they don't feel they'd be
at home anywhere else. I mean, there are many reasons why people can't leave, even if they don't
like their state or they don't like their political system. So what's number five? On our
blocks of... You've used the word power.
Okay.
control over power ministries and the use of violence.
Most autocracies, sooner or later, want to create some kind of repressive system that's also physical.
So it's not just control of the information space.
There's also some element of coercion.
So people who don't go along with the system don't get to just float around.
There's some way of threatening them physically.
Like ice?
So ice is not supposed to be.
be that. ICE is supposed to be an immigration enforcement institution. But the way it's been used
is well beyond the way any immigration institution was used before in the United States. So look at what
ICE looks like. They are masked. They are wearing military uniforms. They are often driving unmarked cars.
They're driving in vans. They're not driving in police vans. And they're not following the rules
of local police. They're not accountable to anybody. They're not accountable to the mayor,
you know, or to the governor of the state where they are. And that gives them a kind of impunity
and a kind of ability to behave badly. And they seem to be accountable directly to the Homeland
Security Department and to the president. And we've already seen how this can affect the behavior
of vice. So we saw during the protests and the arrests and the protests in Minnesota, we saw two people
were killed. And what was really horrifying to me wasn't just that they were killed. It was how
the administration reacted. You know, it was Vance and Nome and several other people immediately said
of the people who were killed, they were guilty. So instead of saying, this is horrible,
you know, that an American police force killed a, these were both U.S. citizens. I mean,
there have been other people killed, too, by the way, but these two were notable because they were
U.S. citizens. And they weren't immigrants. Instead of saying two people were killed,
this is horrible, we need to have an investigation, this must not be allowed to happen again.
The immediate instinct was to give them impunity.
Like, you know, we're not going to investigate this.
It's not a real problem.
You know, the instinct was to put them above the law.
And when you have a military force, and as I said, especially one that's militarized and looks like, you know,
they're dressed like they're in Fallujah.
When you have a military force that's above the law, then it's really a paramount.
military. If you have a police force that can harm ordinary citizens and not pay any price for it
and isn't accountable, then you're not serving Americans. You're serving the interests of
the ruling party. This is something that I've made for you. I've realized that the Dyer of a CEO
audience are strivers, whether it's in business or health. We all have big goals that we want to
accomplish. And one of the things I've learned is that when you aim at the big, big, big goal,
it can feel incredibly psychologically uncomfortable because it's kind of like
being stood at the foot of Mount Everest and looking upwards.
The way to accomplish your goals is by breaking them down into tiny small steps,
and we call this in our team the 1%.
And actually, this philosophy is highly responsible for much of our success here.
So what we've done so that you at home can accomplish any big goal that you have
is we've made these 1% diaries, and we've released these last year, and they all sold out.
So I asked my team over and over again to bring the diaries back,
but also to introduce some new colours and to make some minor tweaks to the diaries.
So now we have a better range for you.
So if you have a big goal in mind and you need a framework and a process and some motivation,
then I highly recommend you get one of these diaries before they all sell out once again.
And you can get yours at the diary.com.
And if you want the link, the link is in the description below.
Do you think this is potentially the decline of the, what one might call the American Empire?
I was looking at how long empires tend to last.
and I was before you came.
And there's this 250-year figure,
which is famously popularised by a British historian
called Sir John Glubb,
in his essay, The Fate of Empires and the Search for Survival.
After analysing empires from the...
I can't say that word.
Asesarians?
Assyrians.
Exactly what I said.
Assyrians, to the British,
Glub found that despite differences in technology, geography,
religion, and surprisingly shared a similar lifespan and life cycle,
Glob argued that empires typically go through a predictable sequence of stages over those 250 years.
The first one being the age of pioneers, outburst and conquest, the age of conquest, which is the military dominance,
the age of commerce, which is vast wealth creation, the age of affluence, comfort and a shift from duty to selfishness,
the age of intellect, focus on philosophy and education over defence, the age of descendants, internal division,
massive inequality and collapse. So if you view the United States as an expansion,
project from its very inception, pushing westward across the North American continent through
its power, then the math says, if you take it from 1776 to now, to 2026, it's exactly 250 years
old. So if you use Glob's 2,250 year lifecycle model from 1776 to now, political scientists argue
that we are in the age of descendants of the American Empire. This stage is typically characterized
by deep internal political division, vast wealth inequality, massive national,
debt and a cultural shift away from a shared sense of civic duty.
So, first of all, that's a pretty accurate description of what's happening in the United States.
However, you have just touched on something that I feel very strongly about, which is that I don't
believe in historical inevitability.
Interesting.
And I think is very dangerous.
So the idea that we are on a slippery slope downhill and we can't stop it because that's
the way history is going, or alternative to the idea that every.
everything is fine and it will continue to be fine because liberal democracy has triumphed,
which is what we thought in the 1990s.
Any time you think that something is inevitable, that takes away your willingness to act.
What happens tomorrow and next year is completely dependent on what we do today.
Whether the United States survives as a democracy or not, depends on choices Americans make,
things they say, the arguments they have, you know, the degree of civic participation.
not some historical rule that some very brilliant political scientist invented.
And as I said, I think this has happened before.
I think we had this moment of complacency after the fall of the Soviet Union in the 90s.
Americans and Europeans became convinced that everything was best in the best of all possible worlds.
And we didn't have to do anything in particular to maintain our democracies because democracy was the best system.
And we just won the Cold War and it was all going to be fine.
and we lost sight of the ways in which democracy was beginning to slip
and we were beginning to lose things.
And I think it was just a sense of complacency.
And above all, it was a sense of inevitability.
It's inevitable.
We've won the War of Ideas.
The War of Ideas is over.
And that's why we missed the rise of Russia.
We missed the significance of China.
And we missed a lot of those things because we were so sure that we were just winning.
Isn't that in and of itself a cycle?
It's a cycle.
But my point is that the science.
cycles aren't predictable. I mean, you can stop the cycle, you can reverse the cycle.
Countries can and do change their trajectory. I say I've lived a lot of my life in Poland.
First went there in the 1980s, my husband is Polish, so on.
Poland is a completely different country from what it was 30 years ago.
And it's a country that has really changed itself in ways that weren't necessarily predictable in 1990.
And so I do think countries change.
Is all of this downstream from something that doesn't change, which is human nature?
Therefore, if we understand human nature is the constant,
then one can almost predict these, there I say the word again, cycles
of how humans will go from there to do-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
Human nature is a constant, but there's so much accident in history
and so many random things happen that you can sometimes predict how people will react,
but you can't necessarily predict exactly what's coming.
You know, when Boris Yeltsin was drunk and sick
and had to choose the next leader of Russia, there were a number of choices he had.
And the person he chose was Vladimir Putin, who at the time was a very low ranking.
I mean, he was a FSB. He came from the KGB, and he was someone they chose because they thought
he would be loyal to the Yeltsin family, and he wouldn't prosecute them.
Nobody imagined him as a dictator or an imperial leader who would be seeking to reconquer
the former Soviet Union. And what if they'd chosen, for example, Boris Nemtsov, was another
leading Russian politician at the time.
I don't know that he was a perfect Democrat, but he was very open-minded,
and he would have been interested in integrating Russia with Europe.
Okay.
What if he'd become the leader of Russia?
We would be in a completely different world.
And there was nothing inevitable about that decision.
There are many random, completely out of the blue things that happen in history.
You can always say there's always some percentage of any population that's instinctively authoritarian, for example.
And there's always some percentage of any population that's instinctively liberal.
or extremely libertarian.
Because of egos and power.
Because of just the way human nature have the people have different.
But what is the balance of that group?
How the leadership of the country encourages or discourages one set of values or the other.
You know, that affects, you know, who's winning the arguments.
And so I don't believe in inevitable cycles.
Have you heard of Ray Dahlia talking about the sort of boom and bus cycles through history?
And when like a population becomes very comfortable, you have this sort of inversion,
goes the other way. Do you believe in those kinds of cycles?
You know, I suppose there is a phenomenon whereby, yes, as people become comfortable,
then Frank Fukuyama actually had in his famous book about the end of history,
he had a description of, well, what happens if we have, you know,
if everybody becomes a liberal democracy and everybody's pretty prosperous,
then the next thing that will happen is some people will get bored.
And out of their boredom and out of their desire for change,
they'll attack the system and want to undermine it, which is kind of what happened.
So there's, I suppose there's some, there's some huge,
element like that, you know, that there will always be some part of the population that feels
left out or feels discriminated against and wants a bigger voice or wants to run the country.
I mean, so you can see that.
I just don't think it's something that scientists can predict.
Is there a link between democracies and sort of rampant capitalism?
So in a democracy, I don't know much about this stuff, so I'm just asking a question,
but in a democracy, does it tend to be the case that you end up with wealth and equality
because you let everybody, you let free markets play out,
and then you're going to have these like tech oligarchs up here
that have all gazillions of dollars, a trillion dollars
and lots of people at the bottom of the rung.
Whereas in, I don't know, in China, I guess they somewhat defend.
I don't know.
Do they defend against?
No, I would say almost the opposite.
Oh, really?
So historically, democracies have, I mean, there have been different phases, right?
So I don't want to overgeneralize.
But certainly in the second half of the 20th century,
the democracies since the Second World War have tended towards equality,
including in the United States.
And at their most successful and prosperous moments, people, there was, if there was much less wealth equality than inequality than there is now.
And the countries we were talking about earlier, the happy countries, those are relatively equal countries.
And those are countries with big welfare states and a lot of redistribution of wealth.
And those are countries where people feel invested in the system, partly because they don't feel completely outclassed by a group of oligars.
If you look at the United States in the 1950s, that was a period of also huge, huge.
social mobility when lower middle class, middle class people began to get wealthier.
And there's this enormous wave of prosperity.
And that's a period when everybody is becoming wealthier.
And that was also a period when you have the, you know, very successful American democracy.
You have the civil rights movement.
You have democracy beginning to spread to new populations or to people who'd been excluded
before.
So you have a connection between equality and democracy, wealth, even wealth equality.
And one of the things that gives critics of the United States most
anxiety now is precisely what you just said. You know, the emergence of tech oligarchs who have
so much more power than any one politician and who even have the power to organize information
space, how long will that group of people want to live in a democracy where everybody gets a vote
and well to supposed to be distributed more evenly? There are some members of that community who have
become illiberal or anti-democratic for exactly that reason. If we don't believe in inevitabilities,
then what is it we have to look out for as those living in a democracy?
We talked about the five things there.
But is there anything coming up where you're worried that as a society,
we might overlook it or allow it,
which results in us falling back down into an autocratic society?
And is there anything we can do proactively now to defend our democracy?
We are lucky in that we live in societies where we can vote.
And so it's really important that we vote.
that we know who we're voting for, that we vote in all elections, including local ones.
When people become nihilistic, when they say they're all the same, I don't care who wins
the election, it's not worth voting because, you know, they're all corrupt.
This is what autocrats try to create.
So what does Putin want Russians to do?
Does he want them to be political?
No, he wants them to stay out of politics.
You know, what do the Chinese want?
They want their people out of politics.
And so whenever you see too many people who have received...
responded to that kind of negative inspiration, that's when you should worry.
And I worry a lot about the United States on exactly those grounds, actually.
Look at how the leader of your country talks about the press, how he or she talks about the judges, the judiciary, how he or she talks about the civil service.
A real Democrat respects those institutions and wants them to stay in place precisely so that democracy can remain, so that at the next.
next election, there will be a fair election.
Do you think the mainstream media are politicized?
Do you think there's political bias in the mainstream media?
Like the big titles?
You know, some of them have business models that are biased.
So Fox's business model is to appeal to the right-leaning part of the American population
and to encourage them in their biases and get them to watch TV.
There's some media that are now dependent on polarization and kind of live off it.
There are some who try to be neutral, but, you know, you're not.
Even neutrality is hard to achieve now because a neutral investigation that turns up something bad about the Trump administration will immediately incur the reaction on the part, you know, you're biased.
We've lost our assumption that press are operating in good faith.
So it's become much more difficult.
This is so interesting for me as a podcaster who I guess now is considered to be media.
The inherent incentives of media mean that like if, say I'm running.
ex-newspaper and I write a story and I've built up a base of people for whatever reason, right,
that want me to say something negative about Trump. I have an economic model and an incentive
structure that means that if I write that article, it's going to get 10 times the reach,
10 times the engagement, 10 times the subscribers. If I write the exact opposite article,
I know I'm going to get, so if I say Trump is amazing, even though I've built up a base
that I think a certain way, the article is going to get a fraction of the reached engagement
subscribers. So as a CEO of such a company, you're going to have to have to,
hire more and more people, create more and more output to receive the same rewards versus just
writing something bad about that particular person. So you become incentives. But the other factor is
that geographically, Democrats and Republicans in the United States exist in certain areas. So if I open
my office in New York or L.A., most of the people I'm going to be able to hire come with a certain,
like statistically come with a certain political view. So I do wonder if eventually, like, the fate of
most media organizations is they do get politically captured one way or the other.
You have to fight it.
You have to fight.
And as a podcast, yeah?
Because now I'm part of the media.
I now understand because I feel it.
So I feel that I see here with Kamala Harris.
I'm attacked.
I see here with Ivanka Trump.
I'm attacked.
I see it with Michelle Obama.
Attacked.
Gavin Newsom, attacked.
And I understand.
There's this great quote which I favored the other day.
It was like, you have to join a tribal.
You get killed by one.
But something, words to that effect.
And I get it.
I get why some of my peers in podcasting have sort of,
sought defense behind a particular tribe, because just taking the arrows from both sides is not
the nicest feeling in the world. No. No. I mean, it's funny, when you said mainstream media,
I don't even know who that is anymore. It's not so much about hearing from both sides. It's about
trying to establish what's true. Yeah. And so the job of what you do is a little bit different
from what journalists do. So journalists go into the world and they gather information,
and they, if they're good journalists, they try to figure out what actually
happened and then they bring it back and they write it down or they make a video about it
and they try and make sure that it's accurate, right? And so if you're devoted to that project,
then you seek to avoid political bias, but, you know, inevitably, you might wind up saying
the president is lying or the leader of the opposition is lying. And then you're immediately,
you know, in the world of people shouting at you and saying you're biased. But I do feel that
it's really important that this particular profession of the people who go into the
the world and try and establish reality that it continues to exist. I agree. There needs to be a business
model for that. I mean, for democracy to exist, for an accurate and meaningful national conversation
to exist, we need to have some people who are trying to figure out what's real. I agree.
And I think those people are incredibly important, which I think people think podcasters won't say,
because I think sometimes we're positioned as being like the rebels or radicals or whatever that are
like doing it from their kitchen. This used to actually used to be my kitchen. But I very much agree.
I very much agree that there are incredibly rigorous truth-seeking journalists out there that have this very unique skill,
which is not one that I possess or a test to possess at all, that they go deep for long periods of time without bias in search of the truth.
And then they deliver it to the world.
And I'm well aware that if we lose that, then I lose so many of the things that I fundamentally care about and that I've built my entire life and career on,
especially as like a young black man in business, who understands that there's lots of people.
that came before me that revealed things about the way society functions that have benefited me.
And so that I should, my way of sort of paying that forward is protecting the same privileges
as a podcaster.
Because, I mean, there is a danger that we go down a road in which, especially as AI develops
and we get more and more of our information online, that we lose touch with reality.
You know, if AI is only accessing what's available to the, you know, to the model online,
There's still a whole world out there where things are happening, you know, that's not online.
And making sure that we're constantly in touch with what's reality on the ground, what's really happening in Ukraine, you know, what's really happening in Iran, and not living on just what's available to us on our phones.
It's really important.
One of my fears is that the algorithms with AI are becoming better at knowing what to serve me in order to make me dwell and therefore it creates more ad dollars for the companies.
And so I might not just be living in a fake reality.
I might be living in a completely personalized one.
That's completely different from your own
because as I went on my phone this morning,
one of the things, the sections on my phone
is suggested for you.
Now, this is obviously showing me things
that are based on my past viewing consumption.
So if I viewed this person having a fight in the street,
I'm getting more people having fights in the street.
So now my perception is that everyone's having fights in the street.
And that means it's harder to connect to each other.
We are very much, I mean, I think this has really happened already
that we live in our own algorithms.
when you're asking the more fundamental question about the breakdown of democracy.
I mean, there's nothing more toxic to democracy than polarization.
Because if you live in a world where the people on the other side of the political divide
aren't just your rivals and you don't just disagree with them about taxes, you know,
but they are your existential enemies.
And if they're in charge, then, you know, the world ends,
then it's very hard to have a normal democratic debate or create a normal, you know, have a normal election.
Do you know what this is?
It looks like a very old newspaper.
It's a very old newspaper from a long time ago.
And you're in it.
Oh, gosh.
Oh, it's, wow.
That's a, that took a lot of research.
Yeah.
What is that?
That is, they don't even have these anymore.
That was a New York Times wedding announcement.
From 1992, I think.
From 1992, I have been married since 1992.
I'm still married.
the person who it was announced that I was marrying.
A Polish, he was then a journalist.
And now he's the Polish foreign minister.
We got married in Washington, but he was born in Poland.
It's a long story.
But anyway.
What's the photos of you here?
Interesting.
Oh, there's a nice one as well.
You're looking very presidential there.
That was a long time ago.
And then I've got another one of him and Hillary Clinton.
Right.
Politics has been a big part of your family's life in various ways.
I mean, it would be hard to deny that, yeah.
Is it stressful?
Because it's constant and it's more polarizing than ever before and it's divisive and it's a lot of energy.
Even talking about these things I find to be quite energy draining.
Yes.
I mean, actually it became more stressful in more recent years.
I mean, social media made it more stressful than it used to be.
The stressful part is living a part of your life in,
public. We try to not live all of our lives in public. This has been very useful to me as a journalist,
actually. You begin to understand the difference between what you look like in public and what your
reality is. So people react to you in all kinds of ways depending on where they've seen you on TV
or what stories they've read about you, some of which might not be true. And there's often a kind of,
you know, that the way you're perceived is not necessarily the way you are. And so I try to keep that
in mind when I meet public figures, you know, that I have a set of perceptions of them based on
what I've read about them, which I wouldn't have if I met, I don't know, somebody introduces
me to the next door neighbor. I wouldn't have that in my head when I met them. But when you
meet a politician or somebody who's well-known, you come with stuff. And I try when I meet people
to drop it as much as I can. Because you've seen that at home? Because I've seen it at home.
So, yes. I mean, we have compatible lives that are some
somewhat different. I mean, I have stayed well away from Polish politics. I don't play any role in it. I have a
different name from my husband, which, you know, I didn't change my name, and that also has allowed us to
be separate. And we share a lot of views, but not all. And so we, you know, we have kind of different
trajectories. But as I said, I find mostly knowing what it's like to be a politician helps me
understand them. Have you ever thought about going into politics yourself?
No. You can't have two politicians, one family.
You know, a lot of what I do is journalism or it's something, or journalist adjacent.
You know, I go and try and find things. I try and explain them.
I try and say what I think is happening.
And the job of a politician is quite different from that.
You know, it's to you arrive with a set of views.
You need to explain them to people.
You need to convince them.
It's a different way of thinking about approaching the public.
So I'm not campaigning for a cause.
Is there a particular outcome you're seeking with the work that you do,
with the books that you write and the conversations you have?
Is there one particular outcome, above all others, that you're aiming at?
There's an outcome that's general but not specific.
In other words, I'm not trying to elect any particular person to be president.
I do have a goal that is to remind people of why democracy is important,
why we need to maintain it, and to pay attention to the ways
which it's declining so that we can fight back.
I mean, I have a broad goal in that sense.
And that's not only inside the United States.
Why is this so personal to you?
It's the thing I've been fascinated by since I was in my 20s.
Why?
Because I think it's, I saw the Soviet Union when it was still the Soviet Union.
I was a student in Leningrad when it was still Leningrad.
I felt what it was like to live in a heavily autocratic society, even briefly.
and I have really spent the rest of my life trying to understand what it was, how it worked, why people went along with it.
And I've also spent a lot of time more recently trying to warn people against it, against going in that direction.
You know, it's also not the thing I thought I would be doing.
I changed, you know, if you're looking at my books, you know, I wrote three history books.
I wrote the Gulod book.
I wrote a history of the Ukrainian famine.
I wrote a book about how the Soviet Union took over Eastern Europe, how they sort of did regime change in Eastern Europe after the war.
You know, they're about things that happened, you know, in the distant past.
But I had a realization in about 2014, 2015, that I was living through a period of history myself.
In other words, there was a historical shift happening around me, and I felt the need to start recording it as a kind of eyewitness.
And so that book, Twilight of Democracy, was a description, I mean, it starts with a description of a party I gave.
And then the book is about how people I knew had changed.
I knew a lot of people who had been very radicalized.
I knew lots of people on the center right.
You know, we were anti-communists.
We were, you know, whatever, Thatcherites, Reaganites.
And I saw many of them become more radical.
And I thought, this is a really important moment of change.
And so I should record it as a witness.
And so that book is the first book that I wrote in the first person.
about something I'd seen. And that was just me being affected by the world. I live in maybe it did
matter that I was married to a politician because some things that you would have noticed in a
more distant way affected me personally. Maybe it was the particular circumstances of being
both American and Polish and seeing a similar pattern of things happening in both places. Either way,
I felt that something important was happening and I've really been motivated for the last decade to
explain it to people and try and understand it.
In that regard, what is the most important thing we haven't talked about that we should have
talked about, Anne?
What would regime change really look like in our countries?
Oh, in the West?
Yes.
Isn't it just electing a new person?
What would it feel like to live in a very different kind of society?
How would you feel living in a place where suddenly the values shifted?
They were different.
For better or four worse?
We think, for example, free speech is a value.
And we've been arguing about it here.
What does it mean?
What's hate speech?
You know, how do we measure it and so on?
What if you suddenly found yourself waking up one morning in a society where free speech was bad?
You know, where it wasn't, you didn't automatically assume that it was good.
We also have an assumption that there is some kind of meritocracy in our societies, right?
That if you try hard and work hard and maybe you're lucky and study, then you can be successful.
What if you found yourself suddenly in a society where that wasn't true?
And actually the only way to get ahead was to have a cousin in the ruling party.
Being able to imagine that and think about it is important for understanding this bigger issue of democratic decline.
Like what's the change of our system that we're trying to avoid?
And what does it feel like to people who experience that?
This has been a subject of a lot of my book.
So that book, Iron Curtain, is about it.
I've written a lot about Ukraine and what happened when the rule,
Russians occupied eastern Ukraine. They did this thing. They did regime change. They changed the
rules of the society. I think we don't reflect enough about what are the deep rules of the
societies we live in and what we would lose if we lost them. It seems unimaginable and it seems
quite far away. And that is, I guess, a privilege of having lived in a democratic society for my
whole life. That it's almost just seemed, I guess I said, like it seems like a theoretical
concept. But, you know, history, they say it doesn't repeat, but it rhymes. And I guess there's,
you know, I believe that even if we don't know the timeframes, I do believe that there are certain
cycles in history that are accelerate or come about because of human nature. And so I'm also well
aware that there are things that we can do or not do that could lead us to go down the
slope of a bad, a bad slope. So then you don't believe in it.
Well, it's interesting. I kind of believe in both, which is I think that there's this fundamental
human nature which drives us, which causes these cycles to occur. And actually one can even argue
that it's inevitable that eventually we miss the signs and we go down on the slope. But the timeframes
of that occurring, or if it occurs, we still have agency and control over that. Does that make sense?
Does that sound like a total contradiction? To believe in both human nature does cause these cycles,
but at the same time, today we have a choice. We have agency over whether we go in that
correction. Yeah. I mean, human nature is like, we know how it works. And so it offers us some
warnings, right? It's, you know, we, we know what we should be trying to avoid. As I said,
if you, if you focus hard on what it is that you don't want to happen, I mean, that's what
strategy is, right? And then you work backwards and you think, how do I, how do I make sure
to prevent that from happening? You know, then you, you begin to get a pretty clear idea of what's
useful behavior in the present. We have a closing tradition. And we're the last,
I guess leaves a question for the next guest not knowing who they're leaving it for.
And the question left for you.
What is the most challenging setback you've experienced?
And what's the lesson you want to pass on to others?
I suppose the most, I mean, the most challenging things I've experienced have been political shifts.
Where I, when I saw radicalization, I saw the rise of illiberal groups and movements,
including among people I knew closely and very well,
and figuring out both how to cope with them
and how to try to shift my thinking
in order to understand how to explain it
and deal with it.
That was probably the most important.
That was probably the most important.
How do you cope with them?
Someone in your life has a sort of a radical shift.
I'm very bad at it.
Really?
Interesting.
I am.
I mean, lots of people think that, you know,
you should be able to, you know, be friends with everybody and talk to everybody.
And I see that, I see some people are able to do that.
I find that I care too much.
Interesting.
It becomes hard for me.
Do you think you could interview as a journalist?
Do you think you could interview anybody?
Probably could interview anybody.
I mean, there would be some people who are hard to interview because they lie, you know, for example.
And then I don't know how to deal with that.
And you don't want to have an interview where you're correcting somebody the whole time.
I would certainly talk to anybody as a job.
journalist. Would you interview Trump? Yeah, I mean, he would have, he would pose exactly that
problem because how would you deal with the fact that he's saying something that's not true?
Would you then say, but Mr. President, that's not true and then go down that road of arguing
with him, or would you, or would you just listen and write it down? So you're worried it
wouldn't be productive? I'm worried it wouldn't be productive. That's also in my line, to be
honest, with people is, there's certain people that are really consequential, so you feel you should
interview them. But part of me worries that some of them wouldn't be, it wouldn't be productive
anyway. So I wouldn't get anything out of them that is new or useful or productive.
Right. I mean, I would talk to anybody with whom you can have an argument and who's reality-based.
And my other thing is just people that don't take things off the record because sometimes when we ask to interview people, they'll say, yes, but as long as you don't talk about this. And for me, that's a no-go.
Well, I didn't take anything off record. You didn't. Thank you. I appreciate that.
You have so many wonderful books. I head there's also a cookbook, which I didn't manage to locate, which is a bit of a diversion.
from your subject manner, but they are brilliant books.
And the reason why I was very keen for my team to reach out to you and ask you to come today
was because, not because just you write great books, but you're a real demystifying force
in a world that's becoming incredibly misty for many of us, in part because there's just so much
information accessible to all of us now.
But I highly recommend people go check out these wonderful books.
I'm going to link them all below.
And many of them are a continuation of the themes and subjects we've talked about or adjacent
stories from history.
But you're a remarkable storyteller, Anne.
And that's why I think people love listening to you so much.
So I really appreciate you taking the time today to help demystify all of this for me.
I actually have never had a conversation that is so centered on the subject of democracy.
I've heard people talking about it for the last 10 years as this sort of this thing that matters.
But this conversation has really opened my eyes to both the value of it, but also the risks and the slippery slope that causes societies to lose it.
So thank you so much for doing what you do because it's incredibly important.
And as a 33-year-old that's lived most of my life in the West, it's very easy to take democracy.
Chrissy as a subject for granted.
I think I have, to be honest.
Yes, well, it's normal.
It's the water we swim in.
We're the fish, you know, and the idea that there would someday not be water is unimaginable.
But thank you for asking such penetrating questions.
Thank you.
A couple of weeks ago, I was traveling through Ireland with my team,
and I was telling them how I don't love when things in my life sit idle,
whether it's my time, my energy, my health, or my investments.
If something has value, it should be working,
even if just quietly in the background.
And one of the most overlooked examples of this
was when you're travelling and you're away from your home.
Because when you're not in your home,
they just sit empty.
And they're not doing anything for you.
Which is easy not to think about,
but it's still a choice that you're making.
We're choosing not to get anything back
from something that has real value
because our home can easily play a part
in someone else's holiday experience.
Airbnb is one of my partners, as you know.
And hosting with them is a quick, easy way of changing that.
You make your home available for days.
that suit you and instead of it just sitting there, someone else gets to experience and enjoy your home
and your neighborhood and your city. Hosting on Airbnb, it also lets you make a little bit of
extra money on the side, which you can put towards your next holiday. Your home might be worth more
than you think, and you can find out how much it's worth at Airbnb.ca slash host.
