The Ezra Klein Show - Trump Kicks Down the Guardrails
Episode Date: November 19, 2024I’ve been watching since the election to see what timeline we’re in. And Donald Trump’s first wave of selections for appointees were pretty straightforward. But then came the turn: Pete Hegseth,... a former “Fox & Friends” host, to helm the Pentagon; Tulsi Gabbard for director of national intelligence; and the real gut-punch, the former representative Matt Gaetz for attorney general.In the parts of government that can be weaponized most dangerously — the military, the intelligence services, the Department of Justice — Trump is putting true lackeys and loyalists in charge. I fear we’ve entered the bad timeline.Anne Applebaum is a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian, a staff writer at The Atlantic, and the author of a new book, “Autocracy, Inc.: The Dictators Who Want to Run the World.” In this conversation, we discuss how she’s been processing Trump’s picks, what to make of Elon Musk’s role in Trump’s inner circle, the indicators to look out for when governments slide in an autocratic direction, the appeal and excitement of autocratic regimes that often get missed in our history books, the relationship between autocracies and futurists, the politics of performance and more.Book Recommendations:Moneyland by Oliver BulloughOffshore by Brooke HarringtonAmerican Kleptocracy by Casey MichelThis episode of “The Ezra Klein Show” was produced by Elias Isquith. Fact-checking by Michelle Harris, with Kate Sinclair and Mary Marge Locker. Our senior engineer is Jeff Geld, with additional mixing by Isaac Jones and Aman Sahota. Our supervising editor is Claire Gordon. The show’s production team also includes Rollin Hu, Kristin Lin and Jack McCordick. Original music by Pat McCusker. Audience strategy by Kristina Samulewski and Shannon Busta. The executive producer of New York Times Opinion Audio is Annie-Rose Strasser. And special thanks to Switch and Board Podcast Studio. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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Think back two months.
Imagine it's September.
You're reading the substack of some resistance-era liberal.
They're ranting about the dangers of the orange man coming back.
Imagine what a second term is going to be like, they write.
You're going to have Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for HHS secretary.
Tulsi Gabbard is going to lead the intelligence services.
Matt Gaetz is going to be the attorney general.
Maybe he's going to make a Fox and Friends host secretary of defense.
I think most people reading that would have said, oh, come on.
Donald Trump might be a menace.
He is a menace, but that's a parody of what a Trump hating liberal
imagines a Trump administration was going to be.
Let's be real about this. parody of what a Trump hating liberal imagines a Trump administration was going to be.
Let's be real about this.
But here we are in the real.
And that is not what a Trump hating liberal imagines a Trump administration is going to be.
That is what Donald Trump imagines a Trump administration is going to be.
It is what he is trying to make it be.
One of the hardest things about covering Donald Trump is that it is hard to talk about him without sounding unhinged.
And that is because he acts in ways that are, by any reasonable standard, unhinged.
It is this remarkable transference Trump is able to effectuate.
He makes his opponents look like rabid antagonists by making them respond to a reality that leaves
no room for neutrality. No room for a wait-and-see
open-mindedness. He creates a wild reality, and then you sound wild simply describing it.
For me, the Rubicon here was Gates. I've been watching to see what timeline we're in. I don't
think I've been anything but clear-ed about the dangers of Donald Trump.
I did a whole pre-election piece arguing that Trump's primary
trait as a person is disinhibition.
But that in his first term, he was inhibited by a Republican party, by a
White House staff, by a civil service that effectively inhibited him.
They kept the worst things he wanted to do from happening.
And the thing that I warned about, the thing that I worried about, is that in the second
term that wouldn't be there.
And so I've been watching to see, well, what does the second term look like?
What kind of people are in it?
What is he trying to do?
And this looks like the bad timeline.
What we're seeing here is that in the areas of government where Trump cares most about
full control, the military, the intelligence services, the department of justice, he is trying to
do what he could not do last time.
He is trying to put true lackeys and loyalists in charge.
People who have no loyalty aside from their loyalty to him.
No patron aside from him.
No viable path in politics or public service aside from him.
And these are the parts of the government that can be weaponized most dangerously.
And even if Matt Gaetz is rejected or withdrawn, as he very well may be, the intention is there.
Trump's other lackeys and loyalists can certainly find him a hatchet man who isn't known around Washington for allegedly having sex with a 17-year-old and for burning every
bridge he had in the traditional Republican Party.
I've heard some people say that the saving grace of these appointments is that these
people, at least in the agencies they are trying to run, they're inexperienced.
They're ridiculous.
They're incompetent.
They won't get anything done. They might even fail to win confirmation.
That is not a saving grace. That is a signal. In other countries and at other times,
when would-be authoritarians try to consolidate power, they do so by placing fools and jesters
into positions of extraordinary power.
The absurdity is a cloak.
The fact that they are underestimated is a feature.
The loyalty they have to the strongman is the thing.
And no one is more loyal than someone that the rest of society looks down on.
No one is more loyal than someone who would never get this kind of chance, this opportunity, this power under any other person.
Anne Applebaum is a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and author who is also a staff writer
at The Atlantic. She is an expert on authoritarianism, both in its past and present forms, and the
author of a new book, Autocracy, Inc. The Dictators Who Want to Run the World. As always, my email, azorclineshow.nytimes.com.
And Applebaum, welcome to the show.
Thanks for having me.
You know, somebody was saying to me the other day that when I'm back on Twitter, they know
things are really bad.
And that's how I feel about having you on this show.
When you're back on the show, things are really quite bad.
I'm sorry to have put you into a horseman of the apocalypse bucket, but here you are.
Thanks for that.
Is it a backhanded compliment?
I'm not sure.
It's a condemnation of the space we find ourselves in.
So a lot of people I know, I think myself too, have been on a bit of an emotional rollercoaster
in the past few weeks.
I think Trump winning was greeted with a surprising amount of resignation, probably compared to
2016.
Then the first appointments from him that we began to hear about were kind of straightforward
ones.
Marco Rubio for Secretary of State, Elise Stefanik for the UN, Susie Wiles for Chief of Staff, a Government Efficiency Commission
with Ramoswami and Musk. And then you started to get this turn. Pete Hegseth, Fox and Friends
host for Secretary of Defense, Tulsi Gabbard for Director of National Intelligence. And
the one that really felt like the gut punch was Matt Gates for Department of Justice.
And all of a sudden these people had been feeling kind of resigned, I think tipped back
into that total overwhelming alarm, that resistance feeling they remembered from 2016.
I'm curious what your pathway through this has been.
So for me, Trump's campaign was one of the most extreme campaigns we've ever had in American
history.
And the last set of appointments was an indication that if he can, this is what he will do.
I mean, the point of appointing Matt Gaetz is so that Matt Gaetz will break the rules
of the Department of Justice instead of using it to look for people who are breaking the law in accordance with the Constitution,
he will use it to prosecute or persecute or harass Trump's enemies, the enemies of the people.
And so when I saw that, that's what I thought. I thought, right, this is the explanation.
He was using that language for a reason because it represents what he really thinks.
There was a tendency, even among people who weren't going to vote for him, but among a
lot of people who did vote for him, including some that I know, to say, this is just the
way Trump talks.
He's crazy.
He just talks like this.
It doesn't have any meaning.
I think what we've learned in the last 48 hours or 72 hours, I'm losing track of
how many hours it is, is that no, he does mean it.
He wants to break the intelligence agencies by appointing Gabbard.
He wants to break other kinds of government agencies, which would explain the appointment
of Kennedy.
He is interested in going after generals who he feels dissed him or didn't respect him
or didn't obey him the first time he was president.
And that was why you would appoint somebody like a Fox News host to be Secretary of Defense.
So I think he's now doing what he said he was going to do.
This reminded me of when Trump forced Sean Spicer to go out in 2017 and say Trump had
had the largest inaugural
crowd ever, which we could see was not true from photos.
And a point people made was that this kind of thing is a loyalty test, making people
do something that they know is going to humiliate them, that they know is going to go against
both their values and the way they have traditionally seen themselves and acted in the world. And the Gates pick in particular felt like that on a larger scale.
Felt like Trump forcing this on Senate Republicans who do not like Matt Gates,
who view him with complete contempt.
And forcing on the Republican Party more broadly.
Trump could have picked a hatchet man whose name nobody knew.
He picked the one who would outrage not just Democrats,
but actually Republicans, and in doing that, force him to really choose a side.
Yeah, I think that's right. Very often, this is what, if you look at other autocratic regimes
in other places, very often it's the forcing of people to adhere to a conspiracy theory or say
things, as you say, that are patently untrue.
That's the loyalty test.
And hitherto in the Republican Party, the loyalty test is, are you willing to say that
the 2020 election was stolen?
That's functioned as the loyalty test up until now.
But you're right.
I think that the appointment of Matt Gaetz is another maybe more severe one because Gaetz
is somebody who can break all boundaries.
He breaks the definition of what an attorney general is supposed to be, what kind of person
it is.
And also that he would be, because he has no other allies, he has no friends in the
Republican Party, he would be loyal only to Trump.
He would not have any other loyalties, not to the party, not to the Congress, not to the Constitution. He would be loyal to Trump. He would not have any other loyalties, not to the party, not to the Congress, not
to the Constitution. He would be loyal to Trump. And so I think that's another piece
of the story too.
You've mentioned Trump has been very clear in his intention to go after his enemies to
seek vengeance. In a world where you have Matt Gaetz or someone who is not as well known,
but is similarly loyal to Matt Gaetz running DOJ. What might that actually look like? What
grounds would he go after his enemies on how would he run that
through an American court system? To what degree is that
something that is actually in his power?
So some of it might not go through the court system. You know,
there could be an IRS investigation. That's happened in American history before,
by the way, so it's not like, you know, it's unheard of. There could be a set of congressional
hearings that were designed to harass somebody or to make them uncomfortable. There could
be an attempt to take away a television license. There could be libel suits or other kinds of lawsuits.
This is the playbook that was run against people
who were doing research into disinformation
and content moderation.
That was a combination of lawsuits
plus a congressional committee,
plus a certain amount of just plain online harassment.
You could imagine Trump using some arm of the government to investigate or attack someone
or put them on the front page.
And then you could imagine a kind of MAGA online army harassing them as well.
And that's, for example, what happens in Mexico.
The previous president of Mexico, López Obrador, used to have these
huge press conferences where he would have enemies of the day and he would attack somebody
and put their picture up and quotations from them on a screen. And then what would happen
the following day is that person would be overwhelmed and deluged by the president's
online bot army, some of which may have been controlled by the president, some might have
just been volunteers, you know, people who admired and liked him.
There could also be an FBI investigation.
There could be a DOJ prosecution.
And remember, the FBI has huge powers, by the way.
I mean, it can tap your phone.
It can look at your email.
It can talk to all your friends.
It can recruit informers.
But some of it could just be harassment.
I mean, you know, if they wanted to, the government can waste your time.
It can make it difficult for you to do your job.
It can create chaos in your life.
But if somebody were doing it in a deliberate and systematic way
and focusing it on Trump's enemies,
then you could disable people.
You could make it impossible for them to live their lives
and do their jobs.
I've been thinking about something Hannah Arendt wrote in The Origins of Totalitarianism,
another one of these books that when you begin quoting it, you know things are not going
great, which is it, quote, totalitarianism in power invariably replaces all first rate
talents regardless of their sympathies with crackpots and fools whose lack of intelligence
and creativity is still the best guarantee of their loyalty."
Talk to me a bit about that quote historically and then how and whether you see it applying
in the moment.
AMT – So, of course, the quote comes from a book in which she talks about history.
She talks about the history of both of the Nazi regime and also of the Soviet regime.
And those were both one-party states where there were loyalty tests and where people
were given jobs and promoted into power, not for being good at something, for being an
excellent manager or a superb policymaker, but were given jobs because of the level of
their loyalty to the leader.
And that is one of the things that characterizes an authoritarian regime.
I mean, you know, if you look around the world now and you look at both authoritarian and
semi-authoritarian regimes, you see that's how it works.
I lived in Poland between 2015 and last year when we had an autocratic populist government
that didn't develop into full-blown authoritarianism,
but it did replace people according to whether or not they were loyal, and they succeeded
in integrating the quality of the civil service and of the state.
I think this gets to a deeper problem, which I think will also begin to play itself out,
which is what is the purpose of government?
Why do we have a civil service?
What do all these people in Washington do?
Are they there to solve problems, to improve the lives of Americans?
That's why we send them there.
That's what we're paying them to do.
Or could they be used in a different way?
Could they be used to do the bidding of the president to you know in some countries?
It's to make the president rich or in other countries
It's to make the president popular or it's to carry out policies that are one way or another
You know in the interest of the president and so one could talk about using
the FDA to approve and disapprove drugs in a way that benefited friends of the president or
FDA to approve and disapprove drugs in a way that benefited friends of the president or which benefited the president's policy interests.
If the point of the Department of Justice is not justice, you know, and is something
completely different, then Matt Gaetz is the perfect person for it.
If the point of the FCC is not to regulate communications, but to punish the president's enemies in the
media, then it too begins to have a different purpose.
And that's why all of these questions about personnel and again, what's the purpose of
all these institutions that we have, all these three letter agencies in Washington, what
are they for?
Are they for Trump?
Are they for Americans?
One read I had of the procession of appointments, the sort of divergence from the normal Republicans,
the people who looked like a hypothetical Ron DeSantis administration, and then the
swerve, was it Trump was happy to do normal appointments to listen to the advice of the
people around him for the things he didn't care about all that much, state and UN and ag
and so on. But when it came to what he did care about, whether he controlled the
military, whether he controlled the Justice Department, whether he controlled
the intelligence services, he wanted people who would be absolutely sure
those agencies and bureaucracies would do what he wants.
And clearly people around Donald Trump would have said, you know, this Matt Gaetzing is
not a good idea.
This is going to look bad.
You might not even get him confirmed.
Probably a very similar thing with Pete Haggiseth.
You can like him on Fox and Friends just fine, but you don't typically, it would be very
weird if Joe Biden had elevated a cast member of Morning Joe to run
the defense department.
And so he's clearly stopped listening to advice here.
And I suspect it's because he really cares about this set of things, which to me, when
I looked at it, honestly, as somebody who tries to be honest with myself about what
timeline we're living in, you know. Trump really trying to consolidate authority over the military, the justice department
and the intelligence services is the darker timeline, is the more authoritarian timeline.
Yeah.
I mean, it's important to say, I think maybe here that most democracies nowadays in the
world, there's some exceptions, but most of them don't fail because of a coup d'état
or a military coup or, you know, colonels and rushing into the presidential palace
and shooting up the chandelier.
That's not usually what happens.
What usually happens is that an elected legitimate leader enters office with a
goal of taking over the state, of changing the nature of its institutions
and using them to benefit him so that he doesn't lose election next time.
I mean, if we were talking about Russia, we would be talking about the power agencies.
This group of intelligence, security, military, and justice,
these are the agencies that control both surveillance as well as controlled use of violence.
These are the agencies that have the tools to investigate and prosecute people.
They're the agencies that, yes, I think if you're truly bent on retribution, which he
repeatedly, repeatedly said that he was repeatedly, these are exactly the agencies you would care
about.
Retribution is a useful word here because the thing that you will hear
from people around Donald Trump is, oh, you liberals are fine with the neutrality
when it's us in power, but this is what you did to him. And to play out their
narrative for a minute, Trump came in, there was this long-running
investigation of his ties to Russia, complete with many
leaks from within the intelligence services.
There was a sense that the Defense Department and the military were in some cases not really
following Donald Trump's orders, were fooling him about troop deployments.
And in the DOJ, Trump feels he left office and was prosecuted in a way no previous president
had been, a classified documents prosecution from within the DOJ, right, from the federal
government, but also a prosecution in New York on a fairly novel legal theory or an
unusual legal theory to sort of bump up his hiding of payments to Stormy Daniels into
a campaign finance felony.
So to them, this is turnabout, that the neutrality that you and I are discussing here wasn't
there.
It was more bureaucratically hidden.
Everything went through more of a process, but that these exact agencies were turned
on him and his presidency.
And this is simply the opposite of that.
The difficulty is, and here I will not convince probably any supporters of the president-elect
who are listening, but the difficulty is that Trump was violating rules and did appear during
the campaign to be a national security risk.
And there was Russian intervention in the campaign in the sense of there was a Russian
propaganda campaign
that was using American social media
and that was fully proven.
It was in the Mueller's report,
it was in the Senate Intelligence report afterwards.
And on January the 6th, he did break the law
in an unusual and violent and startling
and unconstitutional way.
And one of the criticisms that we're going to hear of the Biden
administration well into the future, maybe it will be in history books, is that Biden's Department
of Justice was too meticulous and was too slow and failed to convict him for what was a breach of the
law and a breach of the Constitution that we all saw. The documents were moved from the White House and kept at Mar-a-Lago. Again, there is no precedent in American history
for that scale of removal of secrets and then lying to the FBI about it. It's very hard
to know how it would have been possible for the FBI not to investigate it. We're going
to have to draw a line between what were legitimate investigations
which were launched after dubious or criminal behavior and investigations that are going
to be based on completely false evidence.
But I concede, I agree with you, that this may not satisfy the president-elect supporters.
A dynamic that seems intrinsic to Trump, but I'm curious how common it is in your international
historical research, is that by acting in extraordinary ways, criminal ways at times,
but also just outrageous ways, ways that break norms, rules, procedures, he forces institutions
that want to be neutral and want to have nothing to do with turning on a current or former president
to make choices that either allow him to get away with extraordinary behavior or make the institution itself seem partisan, polarized, a tool being wielded against Donald Trump. You can look at this with the prosecutions against him. You can look at it with the social media companies that had to make this choice after
the 2020 election of whether you banned Donald Trump, which is a wild act, or you allow him
to potentially incite mob violence and insurrection on your platforms. This goes for the intelligence
agencies that have to think about what is happening if there appears to be organized foreign interference in American elections. And then I think this
is true for the press in a way. It's a bit of an impossible bind.
Yeah, no, I agree with that. And remember that all of that was accompanied by a drumbeat
of attacks on those institutions. We know, this expression, the deep state, that has been repeatedly used by Trump and
by everybody around him.
I mean, what is the deep state?
The deep state is civil servants and ordinary Americans who get paid a lot less than people
in Silicon Valley and go to work every day because they think they're doing something
good for their country, but they've been characterized and demonized as somehow
enemies again, you know, they're the enemies within or the enemies of the people.
And you can make a same argument about the media.
I mean, if the leader of one of our political parties and he went, of course, he was the
president for a term as well, repeatedly says that tells people the media is lying, the
media is lying, you know, the purpose of that rhetoric, along with that behavior that
you've just described, is to reduce trust and to make people feel less affinity for, and not to
see the value of those institutions. Unfortunately, I think it's something you've said before is that you found the role
that Elon Musk has played in the election and now seems to be playing in the nascent
second Trump administration, particularly striking and telling.
Why?
First of all, I mean, if you've spent as much time both in Russia and writing about Russia
as I have, you immediately see Musk as a new kind of oligarch, a kind of Russian oligarch.
And again, some of these things are matters of degree. There have always been business
people who are close to power or who are friends with the president or who are insiders in
the White House. But I don't think we've seen someone with the kinds of conflicts of interest that Musk
has being a direct advisor to the president and leading some kind of commission.
I mean, actually, we don't know what the commission is yet, what it will do or kind of powers
it will have, but leading some kind of commission whose decisions could presumably have direct
impact on Musk's
companies.
So he would be therefore directly making government policy that affects the way his companies
work and maybe how much money he makes.
Matthew Feeney And just to note something interesting on that, this commission is being
built as an outside government agency because typically if Elon Musk wanted to become Treasury
Secretary,
he would have to divest.
Of course.
There are all kinds of rules about what you can be doing and not doing well working for
the government.
And so they're building this space for him where it doesn't seem to be that the committee
will be very powerful in a statutory way, but it can be very powerful in terms of an
advisory way.
And they're building it so he doesn't have to make the decisions another rich guy would make going into government, right?
Gary Cohn had to make a bunch of decisions about leaving Goldman Sachs in order to be
the NEC director, and Musk is operating now in this ambiguous role where he gets to play
both sides of the field.
Right.
Well, that's the kind of role that you would expect a billionaire to play in Russia.
They would be on the one hand owners of a private company, on the other hand a government
insider making policy, and you can't distinguish between them.
We have actually inside the US government this whole set of rules and norms and even
institutions, inspectors, generals, and rules about conflicts of interest that
are specifically designed to prevent that, specifically as a way of avoiding corruption
and keeping the state relatively clean.
I haven't done a thorough look.
I'm going to sometime in the next few weeks look back into US history and see if I can
find some more distant precedent.
I don't think since World War II, at least there's been anybody with that kind of role.
I mean, there's another thing that also has made Musk unique and that is going to have
big international significance, I think, in that he has changed the definition of what
a social media platform is as well.
Hitherto, social media platforms have been arguing that they are not publishers, they
are platforms.
Anybody can put their stuff on them and their job is simply to distribute that material
and they aren't actors with an ideology.
That's what they claimed.
Musk has now very, very openly and clearly transformed Twitter into a political tool.
He used his algorithm and decisions about who was boosted and who got blue checks and
so on on his platform in order to elect someone president.
So he has proved that you can do that.
And now one of the questions is also going to be, and this conversation has already started,
I've heard it from around the world, is will he now begin to do that in other countries? Will he be an actor in the French elections? Will he be an actor
in the German elections? That's now going to become an issue that Europeans, I think,
and really anywhere where Twitter is legal, and it's not legal in a number of places,
including Russia and China. But having done that, he's also given himself another kind of power. So he's not
merely, you know, Rupert Murdoch publishing news the way he likes to see it on the Wall
Street Journal. He has an algorithm that is distributing news so that it determines what
people see in a way designed to influence them and change the way that they perceive
the world. If the election had had a different outcome, we might have had a national conversation about
whether that's what we want social media platforms to be.
But of course, now that conversation won't happen.
I've been trying to think about Twitter after the election and what analogy it fits into,
because it's a very common part of a society descending into some kind of more authoritarian or competitive authoritarian
system that you will have the party trying to consolidate power building or taking control
of media operations.
And Musk has always been very clear that he bought Twitter in order to take control of
a very, very influential media platform for the right.
And he used it in that way in the election.
And on the other hand, Twitter is not something that he exactly controls in that fashion.
He certainly boosts himself very, very high on it.
And some right wing influencers seem to be getting a bump from him.
And it's also a very chaotic place.
And it's hard for me to look at the election and see a huge Twitter effect.
When you, you know, when you look at the swings in the election, it doesn't seem to me primarily about where
people are using Twitter.
And there's also this other, I think, dynamic of just it remains a contested space.
So both how do you think about that?
And then also somebody who is on Twitter, how do you think about being there?
I mean, I'll answer that one first.
I'm now very ambivalent.
I really thought up until almost a few days ago that it was worth staying there and that
the things in the arguments that I care about, it's worth publishing my journalism or boosting
other people's journalism, which is mostly what I do on Twitter.
I thought it was worth it.
And actually now I'm wondering.
It's not that it will affect Musk's bottom line if I leave or don't leave.
I mean, those arguments are a bit silly.
But if the primary purpose of it, as I believe, is now to try to shape narratives, to try
to shape the way people perceive and read journalism, then I have to ask whether, first
of all, what I'm going to learn from it. Am I going to, then I have to ask whether, first of all, what
I'm going to learn from it?
Am I going to see what I want to see?
Am I going to read the people I want to read?
And second of all, if every time I post something, I receive in response a kind of torrent of
invective and insults and, you know, is that really worth it?
Have I achieved anything by doing that?
I don't know the answer yet.
I mean, we'll see.
I think you're right though, your broader point about authoritarians seeking to control
the information space, I mean, I actually think Twitter is only one piece of that.
Remember that when Musk bought Twitter, it was part of a kind of campaign that had different
aspects.
There was a congressional piece of it, Jim Jordan's so-called weaponization of government
committee.
There were campaigns in other places against the so-called, you know, censorship industrial
complex.
There was a campaign against social media moderation, against the idea that there was
such a thing as extreme speech, you know, against the idea that platforms could have
a policy about disinformation and stick
to it and carry it out.
And so in a way, what we saw in 2024, I mean, everybody I know who does research on disinformation
and on online propaganda, everybody said that the 2024 election in all forms was much, much
worse than the 2020 election as a result of this long campaign.
And Musk was a pretty central figure to that.
If you remember the Twitter files, he allowed so-called researchers to cherry pick Twitter's
documents and to try to prove that Twitter had been censoring people.
I mean, it wasn't, they didn't actually ever prove anything and it wasn't remotely professional.
Nevertheless, it was part of that argument.
So in a way they, you know, he won that argument.
I'm not saying hypocrisy is the worst political sin, but it is always a telling one.
It is such canon on the right that the media treated the Hunter Biden laptop story and
the Twitter specifically in choosing to throttle what they thought at that time might be some kind of foreign government hack.
The Twitter and choosing to throttle it
had really shown itself as weighing in on one side,
had shown that these institutions were deeply biased.
During this election, there was a hack
that many people believed was from the Iranians
that was able to pull out some of the JD Vance
vetting documents.
And the media and also
Twitter under Elon Musk and virtually all these groups didn't run with the story, right?
This was getting passed around, it was getting pitched to different media groups, and they
decided to go nowhere with it. And there was none of that outrage. There was no fury that
this wasn't being dumped on the internet immediately.
That's just one piece of hypocrisy.
But no, no, the whole argument, the whole idea that there is a censorship industrial complex that doesn't exist
is an enormous piece of hypocrisy.
I mean, the people who have been censored and whose lives have been made more difficult by this campaign
are academics, researchers, people who write about this subject.
I can recommend to everybody who's listening to Renee DiResta's excellent book, which
is called Invisible Rulers, which is about exactly this.
Those are the people who have had their free speech suppressed, but you don't hear Elon
Musk coming to their defense.
Matthew Feeney There is another dimension to the Musk-Trump partnership, which is the resources of the
richest man in the world being put at the service of the most powerful man in the world
for a share of that power.
And we've talked a bit about Twitter or X, but there is also Musk now building this pack
where the explicit idea of the pack is that it will
fund primary challengers against Republicans in the House or the Senate who don't fall
in line with Trump's agenda, right?
When you're talking about the institutions they're trying to compromise, among them is
the Republican Party, which is a pretty compromised institution already.
But there is no amount of money that a House or Senate
member could raise. No amount of money a political party could raise that is
anything compared to what Elon Musk can spend. I mean, he is the richest person in
the world by quite a margin, as best we can tell. And in these races, you know,
they're expensive in terms of themselves, right? Millions or tens of millions of
dollars.
Kamala Harris amazingly raised a billion dollars,
but it's all nothing to Musk.
I suspect that looks pretty familiar externally,
but that explicitness of cooperation
between someone so rich and someone so powerful
and the transactional, the clearly transactional nature
of it, which may over time endanger it, right?
We'll see if everybody feels like they're getting what they wanted
out of the bargain. But that feels, again, like a way this has shifted going forward,
right? Musk is really offering himself up as a Praetorian guard, and Trump seems to
have, you know, shook his hand and taken the deal.
Yeah, I mean, in many countries, one can see exactly those kinds of relationships, but again, most of those countries are not democracies.
And that we would have that developing here is not a sign that we're going to be Nazi
Germany.
It's a sign that our democracy has already declined.
That this is now possible is a sign that we are in decline and a form of more autocratic or illiberal
government is already with us.
There's a question of possible and the question of desirable.
So there's been this broader swerve of tech titans towards Donald Trump.
In 2016, it was really just Peter Thiel in terms of bold faced names in that industry.
Now it's obviously Elon Musk, but it's Mark Andreessen, it's David Sacks.
And even the ones who are clearly not totally on board have made a different kind of piece
with Trump.
Mark Zuckerberg speaks about him much more positively.
Jeff Bezos held back the Washington Post endorsement of Harris and very warmly congratulated Trump
on his victory.
What do you make of both the actual embrace of Donald Trump, right?
The people who've moved to wanting this man to be president who didn't support him in
2016, and the people who seem to want to be in a much more transactional rather than oppositional
space compared to where they were before?
I mean, some of that was people judging that he was probably going to win.
And somebody like Bezos has so many different business interests that intersect with the
government in so many different ways.
He felt he needed to make some kind of statement in advance that showed he acknowledged that.
And I think that-
But he didn't feel the need to do that in the first term, right?
He owned the Washington Post then and was in favor, as I understand it, of the democracy
dies in darkness rebranding.
He felt able to sort of be in opposition then and clearly does not want to be there now.
I think people are more afraid of Trump now because, as I said, we started with this language,
the extremism of his language, the anger that he expresses, the specific threats that he's
made.
I think these are at a very different level from before.
In 2016, he was considered to be maybe he was a joke or a charlatan and it wasn't really
clear what he wanted to do. I think people had a pretty good idea from what he was saying,
what he would or could do. And I think that that's a piece of the story. You know, I can't
analyze every single one of these men. I mean, some of them may have had political reasons
for supporting him. I mean, they I don't know, they don't like woke culture or they didn't like the mandatory vaccines. I mean, I can't speak for all of them. They
may have different arguments. But clearly the, you know, there was an expectation of
a different presidency, of a different kind of presidency, and everybody felt like they
needed to accommodate. And then of course, had Harris won, they would have paid no price
for it. It wasn't like Harris was going to take revenge on Jeff Bezos for pulling the endorsement
in the Washington Post.
Is there a historical resonance here?
And here I'm talking about not the people making accommodation, but the many, many,
many people who have moved into full-on embrace.
I think there can be a tendency to say, well, you know,
Trump is in many ways such a regressive
and reactionary figure.
Somebody very much treated as a joke.
When Trump discusses things like crypto or AI,
he does not discuss it with a high level of knowledge.
And on the other hand,
when I look at past movements like this,
when I look at fascism, when I look at communism, when
I look at Nazism, and I'm not saying these are all the same, but when I look at other
forms of extreme nationalistic movements, they've often had a pretty strong futurist
wing.
There's a version of that with the Chinese Communist Party now, a frustration with liberal
democracy, a frustration with the crowd and all the slowdown and annoyance
that comes with having this many voices in a system.
When you see this sort of futurist embrace of someone like Trump, are we seeing something
new or are we seeing something old?
No, no, that is old.
You know, absolutely.
I mean, you know, Hitler and Stalin were both obsessed with science and they both had their
different wacky theories. And, you know, Marxism Stalin were both obsessed with science and they both had their different wacky theories.
And you know, Marxism itself was meant to be scientific.
You know, it was a proven theory that was like a plan by which you could change the
world and make it different.
And you know, Mussolini was very explicitly linked to futurism, which was the same kind
of idea.
So, you know, in that sense, it's not surprising.
And we've heard Peter Thiel say things like this before, and others in that world, that explicitly democracy is,
it takes too long for things to happen, you know, decisions can't be made, you know, it gives too
much power to people who are poor or people who are uneducated, and that holds back the wealthy or
the aristocratic or the successful.
Those kinds of arguments have been with us since democracy began.
But yeah, you hear that very loudly and clearly from Silicon Valley.
Of course, you're right, it is an oddity that that movement or that set of ideas has attached
itself to Donald Trump, who is not himself at all interested in science or able to speak
about it in any serious way and you know, whose understanding of
Renewable energy is something about windmills not working when the wind stopped blowing, you know, so but nevertheless
Yeah, they do appear to have built around him an idea that they can skip things. They can move ahead fast
I mean, it's you know Musk's commission is a commission on efficiency of government, right?
and he it's going to be staffed by high IQ people
he was advertising for on Twitter.
And by that, they're hoping to give opportunities
to bright people to change things.
I mean, I think they're gonna discover
that making government work and making business work
are very different things.
But yeah, I mean, I think a desire to have something faster,
I mean, or something more technologically rapid, I mean, yeah think a desire to have something faster, I mean, or something more, you know, more technologically rapid.
I mean, yeah, that's an autocratic impulse that you've seen in a lot of other times and
places.
I've been reading this Alexander deGran book on Italy under Mussolini.
And there's a point he makes, which is that fascism operated not in a unified way, but
in a hyphenated way.
You know, Catholic fascism, and that was distinct in its ways from this monarchist fascism,
and there was a futurist fascism, and you can kind of keep going down this list.
And the way that the government worked in practice was not that these strains had to
merge into anything coherent, but that they each got their own fiefdom.
And when I see the way Trump is stalking the government, you know, RFK here and Elon Musk
there and Marco Rubio there and Tulsi Gabbard there, you know, it feels resonant to me that
you have to serve Trump.
You have to maybe buy into a particular story about America and its enemies, particularly
its internal enemies.
But once you do that, anything goes and everybody gets their peace. Yes, and in addition to that, some of this
will also be the politics of performance. You know, policy is not being made in
order to fix a problem, but policy is being made to demonstrate that we are
fixing the problem or to satisfy one of those constituencies.
So that's another aspect of many authoritarian governments, where Victor Orban is a kind
of master of this.
At one point in 2015 where there was a migrant crisis on the borders of Europe, he put up
a series of billboards all around the country, very strict instructions
to migrants about what they are not allowed to do, the rules of the Hungarian state and
so on.
All the billboards were in Hungarian.
In other words, nobody who was not Hungarian would have understood them.
The purpose of putting up the billboards was to make Hungarians who were worried about
immigrants feel that the government was doing something.
It's also the case about fascism and communism and many of those regimes, that at the time
they seemed very chaotic and it's really in retrospect we've given them a narrative or
we've made them consistent or we've said that Hitlerism was all about nationalism and we've
tried to explain it away that way.
Some of what Hitler was doing was popular because he was giving lots of jobs to young
people.
I mean, there will be many reasons why many constituencies trying to serve, including
some that are where he's tossing them a bone rather than doing anything real.
I really struggle with how to talk about this and how to even integrate this history into
the way I think about the present, because I do think there's this reality that when I really struggle with how to talk about this and how to even integrate this history into
the way I think about the present.
Because I do think there's this reality that when you use the word fascism, people's thinking
shuts down.
Nazis even more so, communists certainly to some degree.
Some of these leaders, some of these movements, they really just exist in the American lexicon
now, not as complex things that actually happened that people liked when they were happening in many cases, but as slurs.
Yes.
And so these sort of nationalist authoritarian movements that I think have symmetries or
echoes or shades of what's going on with Trump, to talk about them is almost to commit a kind
of etiquette violation, and at the very least to get sidetracked onto
these other arguments.
Yeah, no.
So I've had a lot of arguments with people with the word fascist.
I've tried to not use it just because it makes people think of the Nazis and it makes people
think of movies they've seen about the Nazis.
And that's the image that they have in their heads.
And as I said already, most modern autocraticocratic, or liberal governments don't look like that
at all.
There are no storm troopers, there aren't mass arrests.
Instead, what you have is the slow takeover of institutions, the elimination of alternative
or independent media, the takeover of courts is usually a big part of it.
And that doesn't mean that in our case, in our case, having conservative courts,
but having judges who do what the president wants, which is something very different from being a
conservative judge or an originalist or anything like that. And so I try not to use the word. I
mean, it's hard to escape it precisely because, you know, as I wrote, he's using that language.
I mean, he himself does it. And, you know, he, you know, John Kelly was using it about
him because John Kelly had this conversation with him about Hitler's generals. So Trump himself
brings up those analogies and that makes us fall into them. But I agree that it can be unhelpful
because it creates the wrong expectation. It makes us think they're going to be brown shirts and
stormtroopers, whereas, you know, I don't think it's going to look like that at all.
But I also think we flatten them in our own minds.
When you hear fascism, certainly when you hear about Nazis, right?
But let's stay on the fascists for a minute.
What you hear is totalitarian evil, disaster, World War II.
What does that miss?
I mean, people like Mussolini, right?
We miss that they were popular. Hitler was very popular. Mussolini, right? We miss that they were popular.
Hitler was very popular.
Mussolini was very popular.
I mean, there were opponents as well.
But these were regimes that, obviously this changed at a certain point, but who certainly
in the beginning, they weren't in power and they didn't stay in power because they were
using force and beating up their enemies, although there was some of that.
But they were also, you know, it felt to people at the time like they were responding to some
need.
And, I mean, you could certainly say the same of communists.
I mean, the people didn't fight in the Bolshevik revolution on the side of the Bolsheviks because
they were being coerced to do so.
They did it voluntarily.
They thought they were fighting for something good.
And I've written pretty extensively about that world, and I always tried to understand
not just the people who were oppressed by the regime, but also the people who supported it.
What did they think they were doing? Why were they there? After the Second World War,
in Eastern Europe, there was this sense, if you're somewhere like Poland, for example, or Hungary,
there was a sense that the pre-war system had collapsed and failed.
So the world of the 1930s was gone, and the war had erased the whole institutions, it
had erased the aristocracy, it had erased the whole political and economic system, and
therefore we need to start from scratch.
And therefore communism, to a lot of people, seemed like a brand new ideology that would,
you know, we could build something from scratch at the moment. And a lot of people
adhered to it for that reason, and not merely because they were evil or because they were
cowardly. I mean, eventually, many of them were evil and cowardly, and those regimes did a huge
amount of damage. So I'm not making an excuse for them. I'm just saying that, yes, you're right,
they were attractive to people in those countries at that time for reasons that are now hard
to understand because we know how it ended.
But at that time, they didn't know how it was going to end.
There is this tendency, I think, in certainly more mainstream media, very much in liberal
media, to describe everything around Trump as dark, right?
Very dark tone at the end.
And there's obviously truth to that. And it also misses a lot of excitement and joy at his rallies, right? Very dark tone at the end. And there's obviously truth to that.
And it also misses a lot of excitement and joy at his rallies, right? When I would tune
into them, they didn't just feel dark to me, they're carnivals, right? The darkness is
part of the appeal, but only part of it. And I wonder about it even in this phase of it,
right? There's an excitement to chaos, to unpredictability, to things happening faster
and in ways you wouldn't have seen coming.
Right? Wait, RFK Jr. is going to be HHS secretary, right? Like Matt Gaetz is somehow involved in this.
Elon Musk is doing something, right? It really turns government into a show. There have been all
these characters in recent years and suddenly the characters are getting bigger roles and right,
and here's the next season and the next season, you know, boots up and people are doing different things and what's going to happen.
And I'm curious about that dimension of its appeal in other countries historically in
your work, just this sense of all of a sudden government gets really interesting, right?
As a turnover from the sort of aged Biden administration at the end there, right?
You know, just sort of people doing the government and it's not working quite the way you wish it were, but you know, people are
doing something, I guess. And then all of a sudden, like the show restarts, right? The curtain is
pulled. And, you know, all these famous political entertainment figures and media entertainment
figures, you know, Fox and Friends host are now doing things. That's certainly the feeling now. I mean, I also think people often miss the fact
that the MAGA movement is a movement. Like, it has its own symbols, it has its
own language, it's a thing people are part of, they feel connected to one
another, people are actively part of it. They aren't just passively part of it.
And they have their own worldview and their own things that they read that
other people don't read and a sense of being an insider.
That's very important. But what's also going to be interesting to watch is
the moment when, and I don't know when it will come in a month or a year or three years,
I don't know, when people get tired of this season, right?
They get tired of this moment or when there's some kind of failure, when there's a foreign policy failure
or domestic failure, whatever it is, and the inner circle needs to change the story.
I'm certain this will happen.
And then maybe they'll begin a campaign.
So then that's when the campaign against migrants will begin, or the campaign against universities,
if they want to kick up rather than kicking down.
So they will also be
thinking in these terms, I'm sure. You know, how do we keep the entertainment? How do we change the
story? How do we keep people involved and onside? How do we keep America polarized? Because that's
going to be important to them staying in power too. You know, how do we keep finding enemies that
will fit into the next storyline? So they will be dependent on that need going well into the future. The amount of thinking surrounding Trump feels like a material and substantive difference
to me in 2024 than in 2016.
Trump was such a surprise.
MAGA was not at that time a movement.
He was a renegade candidate who took over the Republican Party
and then won unexpectedly.
They were totally unprepared.
And now there's been years of a movement which actually
does have ideologists, right?
JD Vance is one of them.
But it has many journals, right?
It has all these groups ranging from Heritage
and Project 2025 to the America First Institute that have been trying to vet people, but have
also been thinking about how to take over institutions, how to then use those institutions
to take over other institutions. You mentioned universities, media is another of them. There
is so much more ideology now than there was before, and so many more people who have
joined to try to do something they've actually been thinking about.
How does the maturation of the ideologizing and planning and strategizing and sort of
movement thinking around Trump change either either what you think is gonna happen
or what you think could possibly happen.
Well, certainly the existence of cadres,
which weren't there before,
and of people who claim to be able to speak for Trump
is already different.
I mean, there was nobody to call up last time
to find out what he was gonna do
because there wasn't anybody who knew.
And now there's almost too many people. I mean, I know lots of people who've been trying to find out what he was going to do because there wasn't anybody who knew. And now there's almost too many people. I mean, I know lots of people have been trying to find out what they think
about Ukraine. And there are several different, sometimes even radically different schools of
thought and different people claiming to speak for him, who actually have contradictory views.
But you know, it may be that, you know, I mean, I don't think Trump had an ideology in 2016. He
had a set of instincts. I'm not sure he has an ideology now, actually.
But he has a set of things that he believes, right?
I mean, he likes tariffs, he doesn't like Europeans, he thinks our allies are ripping
us off.
And yes, now there are competing groups around him who want him to mean different things.
There's the heritage version and there's a Mike Pompeo version and there's another version.
Choices will be made and sooner or later one of them will emerge victorious.
But I suspect the one that emerges victorious is not going to be the one that sounds most
rational or coherent to some academic scholar, but it's going to be the one that serves Trump
and does what he wants it to do.
It brings him retribution or it destroys his enemies or it changes the institution that
he wants changed.
How about the other side of this?
Something that feels notably different to me right now is when Trump won in 2016, there
was this immediate counter response, right?
What gets called the resistance, but you had the women's march and very early on in the administration, people actually are out in the streets, right? What gets called the resistance, but you had the women's march. And very early
on in the administration, people actually are out in the streets, right around the Muslim
ban. And you can feel the absence of that now. Matt Gaetz getting named for AG was the
first time I felt even any of that vibration in the media. But the resistance feels quite
exhausted, defeated, broken. The Democratic Party doesn't feel like it lost in a fluke.
It feels like it lost.
It is in a way that I think is healthy, doing a lot of reevaluation.
But there is an exhaustion among Trump's enemies that there is not among his friends right
now.
I'm curious, one, if you agree with that and two, how you think that will play out.
Yeah, I agree with it.
I mean, I do think it's mostly to do with the nature of the election.
I mean, in fact, it was a close election if you break down the numbers and you look at
how close it was in the three blue wall states.
But it certainly felt on the night like it wasn't close.
I mean, it was over much earlier than anybody thought.
I mean, there were a lot of groups and people who are ready to go to fight an attempt to falsify the election, but who weren't
ready for that rapid, you know, that clear anyway, a victory. I mean, I think there's another thing
that happens, which is, and this is another phenomenon in authoritarian states, that people
are sometimes angrier at the opposition movement that loses than they are at the regime.
And this is not quite the case with America, okay?
So I'm now, I'm just telling you about what it feels like in other places.
That the loss of the, you know, when you have a movement and it conducts a mass demonstration
and then they lose at the last minute and a lot of people go to jail, there's a lot
of bitterness and recrimination against the leaders of the movement rather than the dictator who crushed it.
And actually another thing that often happens is that particularly when you have an autocratic
political party in power is that the opponents very quickly become easily divided.
They disagree on strategy.
In order to defeat the autocratic movement, you need a pretty wide range of people, you
know, from the center left to the center right.
And a lot of people who were previously enemies have to find a way to work together, and that's
sometimes uncomfortable.
And so you can be fragmented for a long time.
I mean, that's actually, for example, that's what happened to the Hungarian opposition
for years.
I mean, maybe changing now, but that instead of figuring out a way to fight as a united
front and become a majoritarian political movement,
they wound up squabbling with each other.
And the regime has ways of encouraging that.
You know, it can offer people money, the ruling party is so much wealthier than the other parties,
that it can buy people off and play games and so on.
But that's another thing to watch out for and be careful of.
I mean, of course, there should be introspection and people should ask why they lost and, you
know, people should develop theories of how to do it differently next time and so on.
But beware the tendency for opposition to be divided and dividable by the ruling party.
One of the ways I see people disagree about how to read Donald Trump, which I do think
comes out of the first term, particularly the period before January 6, is yeah, there's
a lot of rhetoric.
He appoints crazy people, but in the end, he doesn't end up doing all that much.
He's not competent, he's not focused, et cetera.
I was saying earlier that it's important to me to be attuned to what timeline we're in.
So what are the things you are looking for that signaled you the difference between Donald
Trump and his allies run the government now, and they're going to try to do the kinds of
things that somebody who believes what he believes would try to do.
And Donald Trump and his allies are trying to break the system and rebuild it into something
different, something they control, something that cannot really be taken from them, right?
Something that is a more fundamental transition for the American political system than just
the party I personally don't like is in power and is using that power in ways that I personally
would prefer they didn't.
Danielle Pletka So I would watch government agencies and institutions,
and as we've been discussing, who runs them
and with what purpose?
Are they still being run to benefit the American people or are they being run in order to perform
some political narrative or in order to achieve revenge or retribution for the president?
I would look at judicial appointments,
looking not for whether somebody's a liberal or conservative.
I mean, that's actually in our system is a normal debate.
A liberal judge, a conservative judge,
how they interpret the constitution can be very different
and we are all deeply divided about that,
but that's not the kind of judge that would worry me.
The kind of judge that would worry me
is someone like Eileen Cannon,
you know, someone who seems to be there in order to do favors for the president or for his friends.
You saw a hint of this, by the way, a few days ago, and Musk talked about moving all disputes to do with Twitter,
with X, to a particular district in Texas.
And that was a strange decision and people were guessing that maybe it's because there
are some judges who he thinks are friendly.
I mean, that's a kind of red flag.
You know, I would also look at foreign policy.
I mean, even if you don't care about foreign policy, the significance of who we're allied
to and who our friends are in the world tells you a lot about us, and
it also tells you which way our government is going.
I mean, an America that remains aligned with Europe and remains a leader of democracies
around the world is a different kind of America from one that is allied to Russia.
If we are allied to Russia and we are now a state that is on the side of kidnapping
children and massacring civilians,
that makes us different from what we were before.
And finally, I would always watch very carefully, again, we talked a little bit
about Musk, but there's a broader issue about kleptocracy and corruption.
I mean, one of the things that happens when you lower guardrails,
so you remove these rules about conflicts of interest,
or you remove the rules about security clearances,
or you get rid of the inspector's generals,
or you muzzle the media, or you threaten people
and make them afraid to speak out.
Obviously, one of the effects of that
is to make repression possible
if they decide to go that route.
And that would be a more obvious thing to do.
But another effect of it is it makes it easier for people to steal things, you know, or to use the government
as a way of making money. I mean, there's a lot of issues about how transparent the
American government's relationship is with American business already, and the role of
lobbyists is already very huge. I mean, this is an element of American democracy that's
already declined pretty far. But you could push it a step farther.
And most of the modern authoritarian regimes, and this is one of the other ways in which
they're very different from the regimes of the 1930s, are what we would call kleptocracies.
So those are systems where the leaders are not only very politically powerful, they are
also billionaires.
So Putin is a billionaire, Xi Jinping is a billionaire.
We don't necessarily know how they're billionaires or why or how they got there, but they are
and, you know, and that's part of their power and that's part of what keeps them in power
because they have the money to be able to bribe people or to influence people or to
run influence campaigns or to buy people off in a way that Hitler or Stalin
or Mussolini didn't have.
So those are the kinds of things that I would watch carefully going forward.
If somebody is listening to this and they're terrified, what should people do, people not
on board with the idea of America sliding down in this direction, and who want
to do something more than read news stories and follow social media posts about it.
What is effective in the sort of international scenarios that you've seen, and what isn't?
The worst result or the worst consequence of this kind of government, if that's what
we're going to have, and of
course we still don't know yet, is that people become apathetic. They say, this is all so
overwhelming, it's so huge, I don't even know what's true and what's not true anymore, and
I'm just going to stay home. Try to overcome that. And it almost doesn't matter what it
is that you do. Involve yourself in
a local group, a discussion group, join a political party, run for local office, try
to be present in your community in some way. Do something that makes you active and that
makes you feel that you're taking part in the governance of your country. You know,
democracies were always meant to be political systems that involved ordinary
people in all kinds of ways.
And I think one of the other reasons why our system has declined as far as it is, is that
that has atrophied, along with all kinds of other institutions.
I mean, there's the famous thing about Americans not being in bowling clubs anymore and not
joining the Rotary Club and not participating in real life institutions because they're at home
watching TV or playing video games.
But there's also been a decline in civic activity and civic engagement.
And even if it's just for your mental health, even if it's just to make sure that you don't
feel that you are isolated and alone and unable to affect anything, try to join some group
or work with some group that is making change in your community, either politically or even
apolitically.
And that seems to me to be the best antidote.
And then always our final question.
What are three books you'd recommend to the audience?
I have picked three books that describe something that most people don't understand, which is
the secret world of money laundering and kleptocracy.
One of them is a book by a British writer called Oliver Bullock, and it's called Moneyland.
And it describes where the offshore world came from.
What is its history?
Where does it come from?
How did it spread so far?
How it works? And it's almost a primer. I mean, how did it spread so far, how it works.
And it's almost a primer.
I mean, it's written for somebody who doesn't know anything.
So it explains to you the basic rules.
Another kind of parallel book to read, it's a very short book, it's called Offshore, and
it's by Brooke Harrington, who is a sociologist who, in order to write the book, trained as
a financial advisor and so entered that world
and learned how it worked from the inside.
And she writes very well about the rules, you know, the way the system functions, you
know, but also the values of the people who are inside of it.
And then as a third book to the trilogy, I would say, Read American Kleptocracy, which
is a book by Casey Michelle, which talks about
much more specifically American focused, how grand corruption is already visible and already
at play in the United States.
And Applebaum, thank you very much.
Thank you. This episode of the Ezra Klan show is produced by Elias Esquith, fact-checking by Michelle
Harris with Kate Sinclair and Mary Marge Locker.
Our senior engineer is Jeff Gelb with additional mixing by Isaac Jones and Amin Zahota. Our supervising editor is Claire Gordon. The show's
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producer of New York Times Opinion Audio is Annie Rose Strasser, and special thanks to
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