The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 268. Live Not By Lies | Rod Dreher
Episode Date: July 8, 2022Rod Dreher is a senior writer and editor for 'The American Conservative.' He is the author of three New York Times bestsellers: 'Live Not By Lies,' 'The Benedict Option,' and 'The Little Way of Ruthie... Leming,' as well as the books 'Crunchy Cons' and 'How Dante Can Save Your Life.'In this episode, Rod Dreher and I discuss his latest book, 'Live Not By Lies,' the continuous emergence of Communism in the West, ideology as a substitute for religion, the importance of courage, and more. Thanks for watching.—Links—Follow Rod Dreher on Twitter: https://twitter.com/roddreherRead Rod Dreher's articles: https://www.theamericanconservative.com/author/rod-dreher/Order Rod Dreher's books, 'Live Note By Lies', and others on Amazon:https://www.amazon.com/Rod-Dreher/e/B00JV2IX3O%3Fref=dbs_a_mng_rwt_scns_share.—Chapters—[0:00] Intro[1:25] Live Not By Lies[2:32] A Story from Communist Czechoslovakia[4:55] Our Old Idea of New Totalitarianism[9:13] Czeslaw Miłosz and "The Captive Mind"[12:26] The Appeal of Communism[14:50] The Weaponizing of Original Sin[18:36] Applying the Story of the Kulaks[22:43] The Emergence of Woke Capitalism[27:37] The Line Between Good and Evil[29:48] Solzhenitsyn's Rules for Responsible Conduct[31:31] Scapegoating and False Morality[37:28] The Fragility of American Elites[42:06] Vaclav Havel, The Myth of the Green Grocer[48:34] Fighting for the Right to Be Unhappy[56:37] Ideology as Substitute for Religion[1:00:56] Heroism as Anti-Ideology[1:09:52] Preparing for Persecution[1:12:33] A Message from the Church to Men[1:13:39] Courage[1:18:04] Rod Dreher, "Live Not By Lies"[1:20:07] Jordan Peterson's Daily Wire+ Deal[1:21:15] Daily Wire+ Intro[1:21:54] History of Rod Dreher's Religious Belief[1:27:08] Sexuality as the Last Temptation[1:32:45] Kierkegaard's Three Stages of Life[1:34:45] Journey Through Catholicism[1:36:36] Becoming an Orthodox Christian[1:45:00] A Respite from the Political[1:48:11] The Purpose of Prayer[1:50:23] The Jesus Prayer[1:54:36] Closing Comments#roddreher #livenotbylies #aleksandrsolzhenitsyn #jordanpeterson #communism #christianity// SUPPORT THIS CHANNEL //Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/jordanbpeterson.co...Donations: https://jordanbpeterson.com/donate// COURSES //Discovering Personality: https://jordanbpeterson.com/personalitySelf Authoring Suite: https://selfauthoring.comUnderstand Myself (personality test): https://understandmyself.com// BOOKS //Beyond Order: 12 More Rules for Life: https://jordanbpeterson.com/Beyond-Order12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos: https://jordanbpeterson.com/12-rules-...Maps of Meaning: The Architecture of Belief: https://jordanbpeterson.com/maps-of-m...// LINKS //Website: https://jordanbpeterson.comEvents: https://jordanbpeterson.com/eventsBlog: https://jordanbpeterson.com/blogPodcast: https://jordanbpeterson.com/podcast// SOCIAL //Twitter: https://twitter.com/jordanbpetersonInstagram: https://instagram.com/jordan.b.petersonFacebook: https://facebook.com/drjordanpetersonTelegram: https://t.me/DrJordanPetersonAll socials: https://linktr.ee/drjordanbpeterson
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to episode 268 of the JBP Podcast. I'm Michaela Peterson. In this episode,
Dad spoke with Rod Dreyer, a senior writer and editor for the American Conservative.
As a veteran journalist for over 30 years, Rod's writing has also appeared in the National Review,
the Weekly Standard, the Wall Street Journal, and other publications. He's the author of three
New York Times bestsellers, Live Not By Lies, The Benedict Option, and The Little Way of Ruthie Lemming,
as well as the book's Crunchy Conds and How Don't Take and Save Your Life. In this
episode, Dad and Rod talked about Rod's latest book, Live Not By Lies, the
continuous emergence of communism in the West, ideology as a substitute for religion,
the importance of courage and more.
Enjoy the episode.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
Hello, everyone.
I'm here today with Rod Draer, a senior editor at the American Conservative.
He's a veteran of three decades of magazine and newspaper journalism. Rod has written
two previous New York time bestsellers, the Benedict option, and the little way of
Ruthie Lemming, as well as Crunchy Cones, and how Dante can save your life. Today, we are
opposed to discuss his newest book, Live Not By Lies, inspired not least by the great Alexander
Solzhenitsyn, author of the Goulagar Capelago, the book that helped bring down the evil Soviet Empire.
Good to meet you, Rod, It's been a long time coming
and I'm looking forward to discussing your book.
Yeah, thank you, Jordan.
It hasn't been a long time coming
because you of all people in North America
are an expert on totalitarianism.
And so I've been very eager to see what your take
on the book is and to have a fruitful discussion
with you about it.
Yeah, so the title lived not by lies.
It's a lovely phrase, a catchy phrase too,
for what that's worth, and I suppose that indicates some poetic genius.
Do you want to talk a little bit about why you picked that title,
where it came from, and also what motivated you to write the book?
Sure. Well, the title comes from an essay that Alan Zed assaults and eats
and sent out to his followers
just before the Soviets expelled him in 1974.
And in the essay, he told the people who followed him that, look, we can't go out on Red Square
and say exactly what we think.
We don't have that option in totalitarian Russia.
But what we can do is refuse to say what we do not think.
This is the power we have to refuse to speak lies
or to refuse to ascent to lies
when they are spoken around us.
And I think that that is a very valuable lesson for us today,
living under very different conditions,
you know, in the 2020s,
but we are living in a time of a different kind
of totalitarianism.
And that brings us to why the book,
what I began to write, the book, the Genesis of the book.
Around 2015, I received a phone call from a man,
a physician at the Mayo Clinic, who said,
listen, I have to tell somebody this,
I have to tell some journalist, I have to tell some
journalist this. He said his elderly mother lives with him and his wife there, and she had
immigrated to America after she was released from prison in communist Czechoslovakia. She had
spent four years in prison there and was tortured for being a Vatican spy. Why did they call
our Vatican spy? Because she refused their order to stop going to church.
Well, the lady came to America, she married,
she started a family.
But now, at the end of her life,
she was telling her son,
the things I see happening in America today
remind me of what I left behind.
Well, what was she talking about?
She's talking about the fact that people are terrified to say what they really think.
She was talking about how people could lose their businesses or lose their jobs simply
for having the quote unquote wrong opinion.
She was talking about how mobs were generated for ideological reasons to drive people to
the margins of society.
She was talking about the way language is being falsified
in service of an ideological agenda.
And she was talking about the way that not only the state,
but also private institutions are making people think
of themselves in terms of group identities,
not individual rights.
And that all of this seemed to be part
of a totalitarian mindset.
Well, I thought, Jordan, that what this old lady said was kind of outrageous.
You know, my mother is old. She watches a lot of cable news. She's afraid of things too.
But then I began to ask people whenever I would meet them on at conferences or when I travel,
if I would find out that they're from the Soviet block,
they came to the West from the Soviet block.
I would simply ask them,
are the things you're seeing happen here in North America
consonant with what you left behind?
Jordan, every single one of them said yes.
And if you talk to them long enough,
they would be so angry that Americans wouldn't believe them
because we just don't think it could happen here.
And the more I began to talk to them, the more I began to realize that the cause of this, or the basic cause of this,
is that our idea of totalitarianism depends on the Cold War. It comes from Stalinism. It comes in George Orwell's 1984, in which the all-powerful state forced totalitarian ideology on people
by making them afraid and by inflicting pain and terror on them.
But we don't have that. Now, we don't have gulags. We don't have secret police yet, anyway.
We don't have bread lines and all the things that we associate with the Soviet Union.
So why is this totalitarianism? Well, I came to understand that this is a softer form
and a different form, a form that has more to do
with Aldous Huxley's brave new world
than with Orwell's 1984.
It is a totalitarianism built on comfort and status
and well-being.
And we can't really see it because we're looking to the past to tell us what
totalitarianism is. But these people, these emigrates who lived through it, they sense it. They
are our canaries in the coal mine, and we better listen to them. So I wrote the book to not only
talk about what they were seeing happening in our time and place that reminded them of totalitarianism, but also I traveled to Central Europe and to
Russia to talk to people who didn't immigrate, people who stayed behind to
resist, and I wanted to find out from them what should we and the West do to
prepare ourselves for what is to come and to live lives of integrity rooted in
the truth and rooted in courage.
So I was just in Eastern Europe talking to people in Romania and Hungary and Albania and Estonia,
other Eastern European countries. And it's clear that people there who battled the communists for years, and younger people
who know of the history of communist totalitarianism in Eastern Europe, look at the West and think
the same way that the emigres that you described are thinking, that the web of ideas that increasingly possesses, let's say, the radical left and
is spreading into the culture at large, bears an iri and uncanny resemblance to the system
of ideas that swamped the Soviet states and so much of the world during the Cold War.
And the Eastern Europeans are very apprehensive about that.
And I would say for good reason.
I also, so that's an interesting commentary
on the opinions of people who have actually moved to the West,
the people who've lived through this
see the same thing happening again.
And then on your comment about the top down
versus bottom up model of totalitarianism,
might have been, I wouldn't say exactly a flaw
with Orwell's 1984 because
it's hard, your hard press to describe that book as flawed in any way.
But I think also because we knew of the Stanford prison experiments and also we're looking
for an easy explanation for what happened in Nazi Germany that it's comforting for people
to believe that a totalitarian state is basically made up of people yearning to be free who are oppressed, but basically honest by a small minority of
people willing to use coercion and terror.
And there is a small minority of people willing to use coercion and terror.
However, in a true totalitarian state, and this is Solzhenitsyn's genius, the totalitarian element of that is
actually the willingness of every single person, virtually without exception, in the entire society
to lie about everything all the time to absolutely everyone, themselves, their wife or husband,
their children, their parents, their siblings, the people they work with. And so it is, and this is something that reading Soljynitsin really convinced me of.
And of course, part of the reason I was attracted to your book, it is the idea that, that
root to totalitarianism at the individual level is the willingness to knowingly falsify
your speech and perception and action,
to knowingly do it too, not just to do it by accident,
but to know it's wrong and still do it.
That's the pathway to hell.
Yeah, you know, John Cheswell-Meewos,
who was a former communist who defected from Poland
in the 1950s wrote an excellent book
in the early 50s called The Captive Mind.
And in it, he tried to describe
to the West why people fell for communism. And he said that a lot of people in the West have
this false idea that people did it solely because they were coerced. He said, in fact, there is
among everybody, it's part of our human nature, this deep internal longing for harmony and happiness.
A lot of these people in Eastern
Europe, yeah, they were, they were invaded by the Soviets who occupied them after the war,
but a lot of them were exhausted by the war and they thought communism would give them
a sense of wholeness, it would give them a sense of meaning and purpose to their lives.
And so they submitted to it also and Applebaum, who's a historian of the Iron Curtain, said that most people in this part of the world, because I'm coming to you now from
Blutipest, most people in this part of the world didn't make a deal, a conscious deal with the
devil to a embrace communism. They were just tired and worn down by constant propaganda and
just wanted to have a normal life. And if that meant having to submit to the lies, well, they were willing to do so.
Well, so there's another element of that that's interesting as well.
So we could go two directions on that.
The first is that under many conditions, the human proclivity to go along with the
dictates of the group is actually an admirable proclivity. And so, you know, parents of teenagers often say to their teenagers,
well, if your friends jumped off a bridge, would you jump to? And the answer to
that is actually generally, yes. And to make it even more complicated is that
that's exactly what teenagers should be doing because they should be
substituting integration in
the peer group for dependence on the parents.
And so whether or not they fit in is of cardinal importance to a teenager who's developing
properly.
And so people should go along with the crowd in some sense, because that's what it means
to be civilized into a broad community.
The problem with that is that sometimes the crowd is a mob and sometimes
society has gone off the rails. And so then what do you do? And the answer to some degree
as well, you develop past being a teenager into an autonomous individual who's an autonomous
contributor to the group. And then hopefully you have enough, what would you say, moral integrity to stand
for what you see and think when you're called upon to do that. But that's, we don't know
the preconditions that allow people to do that. And then on the communist front, I would say,
so you talked about people being worn out, there is also that, and this is one of the things that
distinguished communism from Naziism, let's say, and made it even maybe more pernicious.
The Nazis basically said, well, the world, that's for the Aryans, and the rest of you can go to hell and we'll be happy to to aid in the flames, let's say.
And there's not a universalism associated with that. There is a a definite exclusion and it's pretty bloody obvious
On the communist front though, and this is maybe what made it such a powerful substitute in some sense for for Christianity
There was the notion that what we were working for was the universal
Brotherhood of man and this Intense inclusiveness where everyone could live together peacefully and so people were also led down the garden path by that presumption and found out that lying
in the service of future utopia
turns out to be a pathway to hell,
just like lying in the service of an exclusionary fascist state.
Right, I was sitting in a Russian family's apartment
in Moscow when I was in Russia reporting the book.
And I'd spent the last three days,
the prior three days, out visiting the monument
for the dead from political violence
and hearing just incredible stories of atrocities
and suffering.
And I was sitting there my last night in Moscow
having dinner with the family.
And I said at the beginning,
I just don't understand how anybody could have believed what the Bolsheviks
were preaching.
The father at the head of the table, these were all Orthodox Christians who were anti-communists,
but he said, you don't know how people did this?
Let me tell you.
And then he goes on this long discourse, about 300 years of Russian history, about incredible
exploitation and cruelty by the Zars, by the ruling class, even by the Church.
And he said by the time you got to the end of the 19th century, when people began to lose
faith in the established order, people were ready to believe anything that gave them a sense
of relief.
And then the father ended by saying, look, I'm not saying the Bolsheviks were right, they
were evil, but you can see where they came from.
And I think going forward to our own time, when you live in a situation as we do today
in the West where people are radically atomized, there's this deep, disrespect and casting over of hierarchies and institutions.
When you have people who want to transgress with the sacred transgression and so on and so
forth, all of these points that Hannah Arrent said were precursors to totalitarianism.
Well, it's no wonder that people, otherwise intelligent people, are willing to accept insane
ideological ideas because they think
somehow they're convinced that this is going to bring about a better world.
Well, it's also the case, I think, that we all bear the burden of, in some sense,
original sin in relationship to the atrocities of the past. And the left has been very good at weaponizing this. And so when we're accused
in our Western privilege of unjustly benefiting from the conditions of our birth,
there's some truth in that, and there's some truth in the claim that those unjust conditions
were purchased to some not small degree at the cost of the blood of others.
And so then that produces a moral conundrum in people, which is, well, I know that I've
been thrown into this world with arbitrary benefits.
Now, arbitrary burdens as well.
And that's important to remember, arbitrary benefits.
I'm healthy.
I'm reasonably wealthy.
I'm of a race that's had some advantages,
let's say. I'm born in the United States, et cetera. And it could have been otherwise. And
look at all these poor people who are struggling with nothing. And how much of that was purchased
at the price of slavery and atrocity. And those are all extremely good questions. And I've been
trying to think through that more recently to help people defend themselves
against accusations put forward about such things by the radical resentful who will manipulate it.
The way that you atone for the unequal distribution of talents is to accept that you have some responsibility
to make the best possible use of the advantages that have been granted to you.
And so I think the only way that people can defend themselves against the accusations of unfair
and atrocious privilege thrown at them by the utopian resentful types is by striving
to live a life that says moral as paying for their privileged demands.
And there's an ethical element to that that's deep, right?
That deep enough to really be regarded
in some sense as religious.
Right, right, to whom much is given, much is expected.
Exactly that, yes.
And, but you know, as I was listening to you talk,
I was thinking about my late father
who was born in deep rural poverty in South Louisiana
in the Great Depression.
And this was a man who didn't have indoor plumbing in his house until he installed it as a senior
in high school in the early 1950s.
But he was able to benefit from the GI Bill after the war, and he was the first in this
family to go to college.
And he built middle-class existence and sent his kids to college and so
on and so forth. But when I was reading Russian history about the Kulaks, the prosperous
peasants and how Stalin and Lenin singled them out for extermination, I think a people
like my dad, those who knew what you could do through hard work and self-discipline and
using your talents in the right way.
That's why Stalin had to get rid of the Kulaks because they stood as living
disproves of the Bolshevik ideology, which is the only way anybody gets ahead is by cheating.
Yeah, well the story of the Kul-Akshade sent a chill down the heart, chill into the heart
of anybody who has any dignity, discipline and sense.
As I really threw myself in imagination into the Kool-Akshade world, thinking about the
little town that I grew up in.
My parents were very much of the same sort of people that you describe
your father as. So imagine that in a little town, there's an emerging from poverty, there's
a smattering of people who are clambering their way towards a reasonably prosperous upper
working class or middle class existence, right? And they're doing that because they work bloody
hard. They're disciplined and dedicated. And maybe they get enough capital to hire someone to help
them house clean and maybe to hire a couple of hired hands on the would of being the farm at that
time. And let's say they're the first people in town to do that. And everyone else who's striving
away mightily to attain the same end admires their efforts.
But there's a small codery of Machiavellian psychopaths
on the fringe who are jealous as hell of them
and who are primed and ready to regard their attainments
as theft.
And then a swarm of intellectual Bolshevists
ride into town and say, hey, you know, anybody
who has more than you is an exploiter and a thief.
And the moral thing to do is to take what they have.
And if not kill them and rape them, then at least ship them somewhere where they can't
do any more harm.
And then you ask, well, to whom does that message appeal?
And he might say, well, to egalitarian utopians, but how about, no, how about to the Machiavelli
and fringe psychopaths who've been waiting for an excuse to rob and pillage and now have been
provided with it by the convenient doctrines of idiot intellectuals. And then imagine yourself in a town like that where those
insane, vicious, cruel, resentful bullies now have the weapons, the upper hand, and the moral authority of the government. And that was deculocization. Yep. Yep. That's true. And it's just breathtaking
to see something similar happening today. Again, thank God we don't have a Siberia.
That's why I call this soft totalitarianism as opposed to the hard version of the Soviet Union.
But we still have a system now put in place not only by the government, and maybe not even mostly by the government,
but by every major institution in Western life, the media, the universities,
the military, big business, woke capitalism, and so on and so forth, which adopt this
same foolish egalitarianism.
And they will marginalize those who stand against it, those who stand against it, and
can prove that they're good because by the quality of their work. You know, I think that there's some, there's a relevant passage that Martin Latsis, he was the head
of the Czecha, the precursor to the KGB in Ukraine back in the early years of the revolution.
It's a passage from one of his writings that applies to us today. Latsis said, told the agents
to go down into Ukraine
and judge people not on the basis of whether or not
they had actually spoken out against the Soviet order,
but rather look at their class file,
look at where they were, who their people were,
and then punish them on that.
That, he said, is the basis of the red terror.
And this is what you get when you have a system and an ideology that privileges people
or judges people on the basis of group identity, not individual, the quality of individual
character or individual work.
This is something that is pushed in our own culture today, not from the bottom up, but
it's coming from the real revolutionary class, which are the intellectuals
who have marched through the institutions. Well, it is the intellectuals, but you pointed to
something too, which is really, to me, almost staggeringly incomprehensible. And that's the
emergence of woke capitalism. And so I look at these CEOs like the CEO of Disney. And I think,
And so I look at these CEOs like the CEO of Disney. And I think, are you actually so daft that you don't notice that you're empowering a fifth
column within your own organization?
Do you actually not understand that equity means in the final analysis that you get to
get shot first?
Do you not see that the unequal distribution that characterizes the capitalist enterprise,
and at least in principle, based on more going to those who work harder, although it's an
imperfect system, is exactly the opposite of what the equity agitators are striving for,
and why is it that you're enabling that within your HR departments, within your own corporation?
And so, I mean, we can point our fingers at the idiot professors and we should,
but then what the hell's up with the evil capitalist overlords?
Like are they so clueless that they can't even,
what do they want?
They wanna not take responsibility
for the fruits of their own success
that they wanna play both ends against the middle
or it's just blindness.
Like I don't understand this.
No, it's guilt.
I remember when I worked in newsroom,
for most of my career, Blindness. I don't understand this. No, it's guilt. I remember when I worked in newsroom. Guilt, yeah.
Most of my career, the people who were pushing equity,
so-called equity and diversity at hiring,
which often meant hiring people who weren't good enough
to do the jobs that they were being given,
this was all being pushed by white upper management
who were trying, in my view, to atone for their own anxiety or to get
to discharge their own anxiety about their privilege. And the people who were
paying the price for were those people who were truly capable farther down the
chain there because you would never see these white upper managers resign to
make place for a person of color or a gay person or a minority person.
No, they were making other people deal with their own, the upper management anxieties and
sense that they were frauds. And I think it was also a form of indulgences in the middle age,
the medieval Catholic sense of indulgences, if they would use their power to put
sense of indulgences, if they would use their power to put the oppressed in places, in positions within the company, then they felt that they had somehow gained holiness or gained.
Yeah, well, do you think we should be cynical or sympathetic about that or both? So, imagine
working on the argument that we were developing earlier is that as you pointed out, if you've been given much much will be asked
from you and let's say that if you're a
middle class upper middle class manager of a decent corporation in the United States a lot has been given to you
And so what that means actually is a lot is being demanded of you even by your own conscience, right?
Because you look around and you see your wealth and you see your opportunity.
And you contrast that, say, when you walk down the street
and see a homeless person, you contrast that
with the privation that still exists around you.
And if you're a vaguely decent person,
that sets up an unease and a disquiet in your conscience.
And then you might say, well, in order to expiate that unease,
you have to live as morally as you are wealthy.
And failing that, then you're going to do...
You're going to take maybe the Renés Girard route and look for scapegoats.
You're going to look for someone else to sacrifice so that you act morally instead of bearing that burden on yourself.
So, but, you know, it's a tricky thing, right? Because on the one hand, you can...
So, but, you know, it's a tricky thing, right? Because on the one hand, you can admire the fact
that the pangs of conscience are requiring action
on the ethical front.
But then you have to be cynical about the fact
that while you're trying to take an easy route out
by making someone else pay,
instead of actually doing the work that would free you
from the pangs of your own conscience
in the face of your privilege.
Yeah, and I think I'm glad you brought up her nature arcs.
I quote them in the book is saying that the proper and morally justifiable concern for
victims was turning rather into a permanent inquisition and a system of totalitarian command.
Gerard saw this in 20 years ago. And now we're living with it.
So this was, as you were saying earlier,
why communism was more easier to accept than Nazism,
because communism really did take the proper concern
for victims, but they created hell on earth
by taking it too far.
And I think Jordan that one of the key missing points here
is Christianity. Christianity is a religion that concerns, it stands up for the poor and
the victimize. It takes a side of the victimize. But Christianity also has buried deep within
it. The point that Sultzenitson made like this, that the line between good and evil does
not pass between
social classes or identity groups, it passes right down the middle of every human heart.
Any oppressed person can easily become the oppressor tomorrow, because human failure, human
frailty, original sin is common to human nature. And we saw this in the communist world where those who really did suffer a lot under
the regimes they overthrew became even worse oppressors themselves.
Well, so here's the moral hazard that goes along with that guilt that you described. So imagine that you're now, because you have
privileged, you're concerned about those who have
been victimized and who have less.
And so then you could take the steps necessary to be properly philanthropic, productive and
generous with your time and your resources, or you could take an easy route, and this
is the scapegoat route, you could identify the oppressors who have oppressed the victims
and who are actually responsible
for their existence.
And those oppressors are not you.
They're someone else.
And then your morality consists in ferriting out the oppressors and damning them and mobbing
them and chasing them away, which is essentially what happened, let's say, with the Kulaks
in the Soviet Union.
And so the cost of not,
it's the problem of placing Satan as far as I'm concerned,
is that you have to have a place
where you, where you localize evil.
And it's convenient to localize it in others
and it's ethically justifiable to identify oppressors
who produce victims and convenient if
they're not you. But the proper locale for Satan, and I think this is part of the whole Judeo-Christian
enterprise to specify this properly, is that that is in fact inside your own heart, and that what
you should do to constrain evil. And that's really what we're talking about in this podcast
period, is to take on the moral burden that produces
atrocity in the world onto yourself. And Solshen Hitson's advice was, well, you start by not lying,
that's the first thing you do. Let me read out some of his rules for responsible conduct.
It's like a bill of responsibilities. We can think of it that way instead of bill of rights.
think of it that way instead of Bill of Rights. I will not say right affirm or distribute anything that distorts the truth. I will not go to a demonstration or participate in a collective action,
unless I truly believe in the cause. I will not take part in a meeting in which the discussion
is forced and no one can speak the truth. I will not vote for a candidate
or proposal I consider to be dubious or unworthy. I will walk out of an event as soon as I hear the speaker
utter a lie, ideological drivel or shameless propaganda. Well that would produce a lot of abandonment
to a lot of meetings right now. I will. I know, we'll not support just journalism
that distorts or hides the underlying facts.
And so, Solzhenits and this is one of the things
I so greatly admired about his work
and also about your book.
His diagnosis was that it was the willingness to knowingly
deceive yourself and other people
that generated and supported the totalitarian catastrophe.
And that your primary obligation was to cease participating in that.
And so, and that does place the tempter, the deceiver.
And so, the Prince of all lies, let's say, Lucifer himself in your own heart and puts on you the moral weight of
engaging in that battle in the psychological or spiritual space.
And that also, see, this is one of the reasons I dislike modern universities so much is because
what they do instead of helping students develop their moral character, or even talking about such a
thing, as a moral character, is that they teach the students to identify the perpetrators and then to protest
against them.
And then that can easily, so easily, transform itself into this scapegoating and mob culture
that we have now all operating under the flag of a moral banner.
Right.
Because they don't see the capacity for evil within their
own hearts. And reason is, it's sadly, it seems to be empatine against this sort of thing.
I think, Jordan, that one of the most important events, cultural events of our time happened
on Yale University's campus in October 2015. You'll remember this when the students got so angry
undergraduates at Nicholas Christakis and his wife,
Erica, simply for saying they thought that the students
should be able to make up their own minds about
the kind of Halloween costumes to wear.
You'll remember this became a huge blowup on campus.
And on YouTube, people filmed this confrontation
on the quad there, Princeton,
between Nicholas Christakis,
this liberal, distinguished professor with white hair,
baby boomer, and these kids.
There was Nicholas Christakis trying to use reason
to engage these young people in dialogue. They didn't
want anything to do with it. They were screaming and crying and cursing and demanding that he
apologized for his lack of care. It went nowhere. As you recall, Yale University, the administration
cited with the students. That was a collapse of authority right there, but it also
signaled the collapse of rationality. And this was repeated many more times in
other universities over the subsequent years. But when it happens to the elites
like that, in the universities where the elites are formed and elite networks
are formed, that is when the revolution really takes off.
Yeah, well, it was appalling on the part of Yale to side with the students and not with the
professor. And that was a that was a sign of a catastrophic collapse. And also of the inability
of those who hold the reigns of tradition, let's say, to defend themselves against the even the most unsophisticated
accusations of group guilt because people are guilty, especially if they're conscientious.
You know, the other thing that bothers me about the universities a lot, there's many
things, but one of the things that Jean Piaget noted, the developmental psychologist, you
know, he was interested in bridging the gap between religion and science, say, that was the fundamental motivation for his entire life's work, by the way, very few people know that.
That's one of the odd things about geniuses, you know, is that we tend not to take the true motivations that seriously because it's too disturbing, but Piaget pointed out that the last stage of cognitive moral development in adolescence, in late adolescence,
was something that he described as the emergence of the messianic impulse. And so imagine that
when you're a mid-age teenager, 15, 16, something like that, your primary concern is get away from
your family of origin, start to establish independence, but do that by
becoming a stalwart member of your in-group, right?
So you move your allegiance from the family to the broader community, and you do that with your friends. But then there's a step past that where you're trying to sort out what your
ethical obligation is to the to yourself and the broader community at large, which is something like the purpose specifying the grand purpose of your life and that
produces especially among ambitious and perhaps better young people is the desire to do something important with their lives.
And then they go to university and instead of being
chastised I would say in some real sense, which is to be taught,
look, you've got lots of potential, but you don't really know anything. You've got 15 years of
apprenticeship in front of you before you're the kind of tool that won't cause trouble when it's
applied. And so just sit back and subject yourself to the long apprenticeship that's going to discipline you,
get your life together, mature, learn how to work, learn how to be productive, and then go out and
do what you can to improve the world for the better. They're taught instead that the mere
existence of their youthful outrage, which is compromised in its integrity by their resentful
sense that they're at the bottom of the hierarchy, which in some sense is true.
That's all harness to the ideological demands of the resentful faculty, who I think are
mostly irritated because they're not making as much money as bankers.
It's a really pathological system of interplay.
And so the faculty members can
can absolve themselves of moral blame by pointing at the evil of capitalists who are dispoiling the world That's convenient for them because of course those evil capitalists have more money than they do and they should be more rewarded
given their genius and they can sick the students on them. That's the scapegoating that Gerard
that Gerard described.
And then it wraps up the whole problem in a neat little bow except that it's the students
who, like, it's a catastrophe for those students at Yale to have got away with being a
demented neurotic mob and undermining the authority of a distinguished professor.
It's like, what the hell were they paying for at Yale if it wasn't the opportunity
to subjugate themselves in an apprenticeship sense to distinguish professors? Is that
all just a lie? Well, that's what Yale said. It's status. You know, I joined a few years
ago, a friend of mine from Europe, a journalist, was at Harvard on a Neiman fellowship. You
know, very prestigious journalism fellowship, where they bring about 25 journalists from
around the world and 25 from
the United States to Harvard to spend a year taking graduate classes. Well, I happen to be in Boston
when this guy's fellowship is ending and I took him out to lunch to ask him, what have you learned,
the biggest lessons you've learned at the most prestigious institution of higher learning in
the United States? He thought about it for a second and said, how fragile the American elites are.
I said, that's interesting.
Can you help me understand that?
He said that when they started classes in the fall semester, professors would say things
to the students, like these are graduate students, right?
Like, class, we're not going to talk about this issue
or that issue today because a couple of you came to me
ahead of class and said it would be too triggering,
so we're just not gonna talk about it.
My friends said all of us Europeans look at each other
like, wait, is this guy serious?
But he was serious, and this happened in class,
after class, after class.
The Europeans said by the end of the semester,
he realized how fragile
the next generation of leaders of America would be because they are so weak that they can't
deal with the anxiety caused by issues and questions and ideas raised that they would be
required to grapple with. On the other hand, he said, every single one of them believed
that they had a natural right to move into
positions of leadership. The guy ended by telling me, look, I get to go back to Europe. I don't have
to live with this, but the safety and security of my country depends on a strong America. We're not
going to have a strong America because your ruling class is so corrupt and so weak and they will
use whatever power they are given to suppress
anything that causes them anxiety.
Yeah, well, and they're also possessed of the idiot progressive postmodern notion that
all reality is just ideas anyways, and so you can avoid difficult discussions, and then
you avoid the difficulty, because after all, the real world where the actual difficulties
are doesn't even exist.
And when you're in a university bubble and you're a protected faculty member,
you can actually get away with that idea for quite a long time, because in some sense,
there are so many walls surrounding you from the real world that you can dance blindly,
you know, on the way to your own grave without even noticing that you're doing something pathological.
Yeah, but look, Jordan, it's happened. It's gone beyond the universities now as we know.
Just before we came on to record this, I sent you a tweet from the Toronto Police Department saying,
this woman has gone missing. And it's a 27 year old man with a beard. And I mean, he's clearly a man.
He calls himself Isabel.
And now you're in trouble.
Now how you're in trouble.
Well, it's what is a woman as I've heard asked by the Daily Wire folks.
But what's crazy about this is it made me think of Orwell's line in 1984.
He said the party's final and most essential command was that you deny the evidence
of your eyes and your ears.
This is happening on a widespread basis.
That's the true test of loyalty.
Yep, yeah, loyalty to the system.
And then reliability and yeah, reliability and hypothetically moral integrity, all of that.
If you sacrifice your own eyes to the cause, then how could there be any
evidence that you're anything but morally superior?
Right.
Well, a man named Patrick Benda and the Czech Republic, his father and mother were legendary
dissidents.
Dad went to prison under communism for his dissident activities.
He told me that you have to remember that even
before communism came into power, 20 years at least before, all the intelligentsia had
gone over to socialism or communism, and if you wanted to have any part in the intelligentsia,
you had to make that conversion too.
Well, clearly the same thing has been happening in our societies with regard to gender ideology, to critical race theory, and all these other elements of woke ideology. If you want to get
into the intelligentsia, you have to believe that, but not only the intelligentsia,
if you want to get into law school, into medicine, into the US military for God's sake,
and into big business, you have to affirm these lies. So one of the big lessons of lived out by lies
came from Vatslav Havl, the first president of a free Czechoslovakia
and a playwright who led the opposition in Communist Czechoslovakia.
He wrote this famous parable called the The Myth of the Green Grocer.
He said, imagine there's a little greengrocer
in your communist country.
And like every other business owner in town,
he puts up the sign in his window
that says workers of the world unite.
Nobody believes it, but they put that
communist slogan there because they don't want trouble.
Well, what happens one day when the Green Grocer
decides to take that sign down from his window?
Well, the secret police come. They arrest him that he loses his business.
When he gets out of jail, he's got to work as a street sweeper. He's humiliated.
His family loses privileges and on and on. He really pays a price for his dissent.
But what has he gained by that? Pottle says he has shown the world that it is possible to live in truth,
the living integrity
if you are willing to suffer for it.
And if enough people do that, said, Hobble, then everyone will start to question all the
lies the system is built on, and it has to start with people who are willing to suffer
for their homes.
Okay, so let's interject there just for a second.
One of the things I used to tell my clients
when they were facing a conundrum was,
you're trapped in an illusion
because you want to keep your job
although you hate it because you're afraid of the alternative.
But you're discounting the risk
of maintaining your current course.
You're used to that and the risk has been discounted.
And you're suffering under the delusion that there's a pathway forward maintaining your current course. You're used to that and the risk has been discounted.
And you're suffering under the delusion that there's a pathway forward that does not
involve suffering. And that's simply not true. What you have is the option of picking
your suffering. And so the problem with the green grocer who puts the slogan up in his
window is he thinks that he's avoiding suffering, but he's not. He's
delaying it and amplifying it for his future self.
Once you understand that, because people have commented, they tell me, well, you're so
courageous. And I think, well, no, you don't understand. I'm just afraid of the right thing. I know that there's catastrophe to
the right and catastrophe to the left and catastrophe straight ahead, let's say. But I also know
that conflict delayed is conflict multiplied. And if I have to pick suffering right now because
I'm going to say what I bloody well think and suffering later way more intensely with
way more other people because I refuse to say what I think,
I'm going to pick the former and I'm not going to dilute myself that there's some safe path that
involves lying because there isn't. And that's another thing. Well, another reason I liked your book
is, and this is Solzhenitzens, what would you call it? His key insight in some sense is that
you think that lying protects you. That's wrong. And
you think, well, how could it possibly protect you? What you're trying to do is to adapt
to the world. And if you lie so that you're no longer adapted to the world, then you're
going to run into sharp objects and fall into holes, non-stop. And the blinder you are,
the sharper the objects and the deeper the holes.
And when you really understand that, like once I understood
Solzhenitsyn's connection between lying in the totalitarian state,
I mean, I had come at that for other reasons as well, but he was a big contributor to that
realization. I thought, well, there's no way I'm going to say things that are false because that's clearly that's the road to hell.
Not metaphysically, not philosophically, actually, really, for sure.
This will happen. And as a clinician, this is one of the things that also terrified me.
I never saw anyone ever get away with anything.
The chickens always came home to roost. People paid for every sin. Sometimes
it took them years to draw the causal connections. But a lot of what therapy was was, well, let's
see if we can figure out something went wrong. Let's see if we can figure out when. Let's
see if we can figure out why. Let's see if we can figure out how to undo it.
You remember in Solje Nitson in the second part of the Gulaigar, the second volume of
the Gulaigar, the Galapagol, I think.
He said that when he was in prison and decided that part of the reason he was there was because
he was a sinner because he made mistakes.
He decided because he had so much time on his hands that he would go through his entire
life with a fine tooth comb, try to recollect every single time he violated his conscience, and
then see if he could figure out how to atone for that in the present.
And that's basically the psychotherapeutic process.
It's like, where did you go wrong?
How did you lie?
How can you set yourself back on the appropriate path?
And I think that's the fear of God that's the beginning of wisdom in some sense. It's like,
what's the old idea? There's a book where everything you've ever done is written down.
If that book, that's reality itself.
And you do not have the power to twist or distort reality without it snapping back at you in ways that you can hardly possibly
imagine. And remember what Sultan Eidson said, bless you prison. Right. He suffered
horribly in prison, but he said, bless you prison because it brought him to that salvation.
It brought him out of himself. Yeah, well, then he was also honest enough by the way when he did say that to
say, I do say that knowing that so many innocent and good people died in those prisons and were tortured
beyond recovery and did not have the benefit of that eventual redemption, right? Because that's
suffering, that's suffering, that's a real, that's real trouble. It's not, and there's no
suffering, that's suffering, that's a real, that's real trouble. It's not, and there's no necessary
proof that if you undertake to suffer for the truth that you won't pay the final price,
the problem is you're going to pay a price for the alternative too, and so will everybody else. And that's another metaphysical issue in some sense. What's worth death or what's worse?
Death or hell?
And I would say if you think it's death,
all that means is you haven't been to hell yet.
Hmm, that's powerful.
You know, and I think that one aspect
of this new totalitarianism we're dealing with
is the fear, not only no fear of hell,
but fear of being inconvenienced, fear of anxiety.
Here in Budapest, when I was in this city,
we're searching the book.
My translator was with me on the tram,
and she was a young woman, a young Catholic woman,
married with one little boy at home
and another on the way. And as we grew to the city on the tram to do an interview, she said, you know, Rod,
I really struggle with my Catholic friends here. She herself is Catholic. When I try to
tell them that my husband and I have been fighting lately or my little boy is really causing
me a lot of sleepless nights because he's not sleeping well.
They say, oh, you've got to get a divorce.
You've got to put your child in danger.
Go back to work.
You've got to be happy.
She said, I tell them, wait a minute, you don't understand.
I am happy.
But, you know, a happy life also entails some struggle.
She said, they don't understand it at all.
I looked at her and said,
Ana, it sounds like you're fighting for your right
to be unhappy.
She said, that's exactly it.
Where did you get that?
And I brought my phone out and went to chapter 17
of Huxley's Abraved New World,
where John the Savage, who confronts Mustafa Ma'am,
the world controller of this perfect state,
where everybody, all their needs are taking care of,
they're entertained at all times, they get lots of drugs, lots of feel good drugs, lots of porn, et cetera, et cetera.
He brings in the dissident, John the Savage, to say, why wouldn't you join this? We give you
Christianity without tears. And in the end, John doesn't want this. He wants real life. He wants
reality, even with... Well, so let's think that through for a minute. That's actually pretty straight
forward in some sense. So one of the things Solzhenitz said about hedonism, he said,
the doctrine that life is for happiness is invalidated by the first sound of the jackboots kicking
in your door. And so then the question is,
well, what do you do in the face of suffering when your philosophy is hedonic, is hedonistic?
And the answer is collapse. And that means that happiness as a name is shallow and weak.
It cannot withstand suffering.
Obviously, because when you're suffering,
you're not happy.
And if the purpose of life is to be happy,
then suffering, when you're suffering,
your life has no meaning.
And then if you're suffering
and there's no meaning in the suffering,
then you're really suffering.
That's really hell.
But then you think, and this is something that's really hard
in me, I talk to my audiences,
especially to the young men.
Say, look, first of all, don't aim at being happy
because that's just not gonna work,
especially when the storms come
and barbarians are beating at the gate,
you can just forget about that.
And there's gonna be times into your life
where you're suffering so much you can't believe it.
And so you're gonna need something
to hell of a lot more robust than happiness
to get you through that. And then you might say, well, what's more robust than happiness
or maybe even what's more robust than pain? And then you could say, well, how about adventure?
How about adventure? How about we go out and sail the uncharted seas? You know, how about we go
and Jesus, I talked to a guy the other day. He's a driver for me down in the
How about we go and Jesus, I talked to a guy the other day. He's a driver for me down in Nashville
where I am, ex-military guy, special forces guy.
Tough as a bloody boot, now works as a cowboy out in Montana.
You know, a real character, perfect bloody American archetype.
He knew we wanted to be in the special forces
when he was five.
So I talked to him for like half an hour,
trying to figure out what motivated him, you know?
And he told me probably 10 stories about his life, all very colorful and deep
anecdotes, battle and rescue and physical privation and discipline.
And every 10 minutes, he said, I was looking for a new challenge.
And then I was looking for a new challenge.
And then I'd already done that. So I was looking for a new challenge. And then I was looking for a new challenge. And then I'd already done that.
So I was looking for a new challenge.
And for him, life was nothing but a sequence
of impossible mountains to climb.
And that's exactly what he wanted.
And that's what I think we all want.
You know, in the story of Abraham,
when Abraham is perfectly happy
and his father's tent eating peeled grapes
and, you know, having his diapers changed,
even though he's 80 years old.
And God calls him out to adventure.
And it's very catastrophic, right?
Cause Abraham encounters tyranny and starvation and war
and conspiracy to steal his wife and his own proclivity
to lie cowardly.
And this is all like in the, that's his first sequence
of adventures.
And you think, well, what the hell is going on here?
It's certainly not the case that God called him out to be happy.
And I think the right moral to draw from that story is that God, so to speak,
has called us out for something far greater than mere happiness.
Far so much greater than happiness that happiness pales in comparison.
He's called us out for the adventure of our life that's of sufficient moral integrity
to justify the suffering.
And that's something.
And if you tell people that, if you let them know that, you know, well, that makes them
stand up and cheer, eh?
Because deep in their heart, they know that's true.
And especially a demoralized young man.
They're not doing it from churches today, from church leaders. God, quite the contrary.
They're hearing that spirit of adventure calls you to be a patriarchal
dispoiler of the planet.
And that demoralizes young men, and that's, of course, exactly the point, because
demoralized young men aren't oppressors, although yes they are.
And they're not dispoilers of the planet, although yes they are, and they're not dispoilers of the planet, although yes they are.
And so, so happiness, it's like, you know, that's just,
that's just happiness is a side effect of moral venture, you know,
and if it comes along, you should be bloody thrilled.
But as a name, it's for, it's for narcissistic three-year-olds
as a name.
You know, join the last chapter of the book is a pretty hopeful chapter,
interesting about the point you've just made. I met when I was in Bratislava in Slovakia,
a young photographer named Timo Krishka, and Timo was a toddler in communism and it's so he was
brought up with much more freedom and material, many more material benefits than his parents
and his grandparents.
But he said that the higher he rose in his profession
and the more money he made, the more anxious he was
and the less happy he was, well, he set out at one point
to go do a photography project by interviewing
the elderly people in his country, Christians
who had been sent to the Goulagans
Lovacia for their faith.
And a lot of them still lived in real poverty today, and they had suffered terribly for
their faith.
But he said, as he went to take their picture and hear their stories, he saw people who
were deeply at peace and de-happy.
One man even told him that solitary confinement was one of the happiest
times of his life at retrospect because there he communed with God and he knew he had union with God.
Timo Toma Yendeyen, this really changed him because he realized that he himself and was the
tyrant in his life because he had been seeking happiness and riches and all that. Whereas he should have
been seeking God at like these old people who had suffered had. I think this is a kind of Christianity
that young people can respect, but nobody respects this moralistic therapeutic deism or the social
gospel kind of woke Christianity. It's going into the dustbin of people. Now it's just in it's going into the dustbin of people. Now, it's just another form of woke idiot utopianism,
the kind that finds devils everywhere except in the soul,
and that's concerned with group redemption
and not with the trevils of individual progress
towards the divine, let's say.
And that is what the churches can offer.
Let's talk about that a minute.
So you talk in the book too,
as ideology as substitute
for religion. And I had smart students at Harvard in particular, but also at the University of Toronto,
when I was lecturing on my book, Maps of Meaning, I was trying to put forward an antidote to
ideology. And the students would say, well, why is your conceptual system not just another ideology?
And that's a very complicated question.
And it's a postmodern question in some sense, right?
Because all systems of knowledge are nothing
but structures for the imposition of power.
And there's no way out of that.
And so there's no such thing as an anti-ideology wisdom.
There's just another ideology.
Now, I don't believe that's true.
But you've talked about ideology as a substitute for religion,
and so why are you convinced that the religious claims that you abide by and put forth are
not merely another form of ideology and another, what would you say, mask for the manifestation
of power?
Right.
Right.
Because I believe that they are rooted in transcendent truth and truth that have withstood the test of time.
I'm an Orthodox Christian, Eastern Orthodox Christian.
The roots of my confession go back to the very beginnings of Christianity.
And it is a form of the faith that I believe is true to human nature and true to the way the world is constructed. I was recently interviewing Ian McGillcress,
so I know you've interviewed him or he's interviewed you
in England, he's a psychiatrist who is not
a religious believer as far as I know,
but he talks about the mind and the brain hemispheres
and the making of the Western world.
And he has talked about, he told me that if he were to convert
to Christianity, he would become Orthodox,
because he believes that Orthodox Christianity
gives the best account for reality,
for the way humans move in the world
and take in the world.
I think also that, and it is.
So why did he say that specifically of orthodoxy?
Was it emphasis on ritual?
It was the emphasis on the idea that you have to have a balance
between the left and the right.
The right hemisphere is the noetic,
where noetic information comes in.
And Ian's construct, Western religion has become too left-brained.
It's become too logical to caught up in creating a lot of things.
Well, Sam Harris has come to the same conclusion in some sense, despite himself, because Harris
is the ultimate rationalist.
And I would say for very positive reasons in some regard, because Harris is deeply concerned
with atrocity.
But that was so unbalanced that he turned to
a meditative Buddhism that has completely amorphous deity in some sense at its base.
Amorphous enough so that Sam's corrosive rationality cannot take issue with it, and he finds
solace and respite in the meditative practice.
And now he spends most of his time developing his meditation app and teaching meditation courses. That's a good example of the sort of thing that Ian is pointing to.
Yeah, but I think too that ideology tends to be very, very brittle and tends to be a left-brain
construct that tries to impose a purely human rationalistic framework onto messy reality.
Yeah, well, that's a tower of babbling. Right. That's the that's a tower of babbling.
Right.
That's the warning of the tower of babbling.
The ideology can't deal with contradiction with the ultimate mystery and paradox of human
life.
And I think Stephen Pinker had a quote that was in the New York Times today as we're talking
where he was talking about wokeness and why wokeness is ultimately going to fail. He said it is a
an algorithm for constant for permanent in
position because none of these artificial constructs can deal with
messy humanity and with human freedom. I think that Christianity
can deal with human freedom. It has ultimate right and ultimate wrong, but it also recognizes that
humans are frail, and it calls for mercy, calls for us to be humble and to recognize that every one of
us is a sinner, every one of us is capable of being the grand inquisitor if given the right
opportunities. So one of the things that struck me mostly from reading Jung in his school,
that struck me mostly from reading Jung in his school, and their inquiry into the archetype of the hero, was that there was something in the hero narratives that was counter-ideological
in the deepest sense.
And so, an ideology is a Luciferian enterprise, and it attempts to bring the entire purview
of reality under an axiomatic system, under the dogmatic dictates
of an axiomatic system, and woe to you if you challenge the axioms, let's say. That
makes you a heretic and worthy of being mobbed. And so you might ask, well, what truth might
we find that can be regarded as transcendentally axiomatic, that's also not Luciferian.
And I think that Christianity,
you see this in the prophetic tradition in Judaism as well,
but Christianity insists that there are two...
There are insists on the existence of at least two elements
that have that nature.
And one is that the highest should most properly serve the lowest.
And so that the hallmark of true sovereignty is the willingness of the elite, let's say
the talented, the productive, the blast, the gifted, to justify the unequal division of talent by serving to ameliorate the catastrophic suffering of the dispossessed.
Now Nietzsche warned about that, right? He thought that
Christianity would devolve in some sense into the woke nightmare that it has devolved into, but I think he failed to give the devil his entire
Do and the notion that the highest
Is the highest because it voluntarily
serves the lowest. That's a deadly idea. And I don't think it's an ideological idea at all. I think
it's an idea that removes the paradox of human existence. And so there's that. But then there's
another insistence in both Judaism and Christianity. And I'm not saying it's limited to those doctrines, by the way, that the way to deal with suffering is not to avoid it or to circumvent it with
a shallow hedonism, but to face it intensely head on and voluntarily in its full manifestation.
And so one of the things I've realized about the passion story,
which Jung regarded as an archetypal tragedy,
and in some sense a limit case, right?
A story so tragic that you cannot write a more tragic story,
is that it drags the observer,
and so that's all of us in the in Christendom,
through the entire catastrophe of human existence, right?
So it confronts you with the mob, the mob that's after you, that you are also part of.
It confronts you with moral relativism in the face, in the shape of Pontius Pilate.
It confronts you with the oppression of the totalitarian state of foreigners, let's say,
in the guys of Rome. it confronts you with the
betrayal of your best friend. It confronts you with the willingness of the crowd to punish the
virtuous and free the criminal. And that's the story of Barabas and Christ. And Pasha told me
other day, Jonathan Pasha, that an alternative name for Barabas was Jesus, and that what the crowd did was pick
the political revolutionary over the spiritual leader. And that's perfect. And then it confronts you
with the reality that we all face our own mortality and too early. And the fact that sometimes the
innocent and virtuous are punished. And so it, and then of course, there's the horrible, tragic, torturous death, all of that.
And that's all signified by the image of the crucifix.
And what, what, what we're doing to ourselves,
even though we don't know what I'm speaking mostly
psychologically, although somewhat theologically,
is that we're exposing ourselves
to the ultimate catastrophe of human existence.
Well, simultaneously manifesting
the faith, the faith that if we face that unflinchingly, that will resurrect us instead of
killing us. That's quite powerful. It's something, man. It's something. It's something
I've been puzzling out for a long time, but particularly for the last six months.
I'm gonna write about that in my new book.
And when I talk to my audiences about that,
and I would especially say this has an impact
again on demoralized young men and say,
look, we don't know the limits to the expansion
of your personality if you're willing to face things
without deception.
That's a variant of that radical honesty we're already talking
about. Don't live by lies. Well, life is right with injustice, atrocity, and suffering.
And so what do you do with that? Do you avoid it? There's good physiological evidence by
the way that if you take two groups of people and you subject one group to a stressor involuntarily,
and you get the other group to take on the stressor voluntarily,
that the pattern of psychophysiological response is entirely different.
It's entirely different emotionally, motivationally,
and in terms of the damage it does.
And so the involuntary imposition of a threat is stressful and damaging,
but the voluntary acceptance of a threat is invigorating and reviving.
Two different spirits.
That's a good way of thinking about it.
You know, I, and I, this might be a little bit off topic, but you're talking about young
men and, and suffering.
We have seen in the Orthodox church and are seeing and increasing influx of young men
and to orthodoxy.
And what we find that they say is that this is a form of Christianity that challenges them as
men because it gives them a fight. That orthodoxy is about asceticism. It's about fasting in season.
It's about overcoming the self. The great saints are those who have overcome themselves and maybe even given
their lives for the truth. But I find that to be so much more exciting and challenging for me
rather than the insipid social justice warrior forms of Christianity.
Yeah, well, it's clearly the case that the church is the modern churches, and this is probably
most true of Protestantism. But, and perhaps least true of the Orthodox at the present time,
is the churches are asking far too little, not far too much.
The church should ask of you everything,
and to make it easy to be a believer is completely counterproductive.
It's the most difficult thing to manifest,
and to be a believer, I mean, to manifest the faith necessary
to confront the iniquities of existence existence because faith doesn't mean the willingness to abide by doctrines
that you regard as untrue as we've described today.
It means instead to risk yourself on the off chance that if you confronted life, honestly,
you could thereby transcend the suffering that's intrinsic in life.
And that's faith, right?
Because you can't do this.
This is Kirk-A-Gard point of this out quite clearly, which is why he believed redemption was an individual enterprise,
is that you cannot be supplied with enough evidence to convince you that fourth right contact with
reality is the best path. You have to stake your life on finding out whether or not that's true.
There's no way out of that. Now people can guide by imitation, right?
And by example, that's what the saints do, let's say.
Well, that's what Christ did, let's say.
That's what the martyrs and the confessors
of the communist bloc did.
And some of these people are still alive.
And it's just such a scandal to me
that in the West, we've completely swept it under the rug.
I was telling some of the crew here before we started tonight
that when I was in Hungary,
our interview to woman named Maria Whitner.
Maria Whitner was, she's very old now,
she was a hero of the 1956 resistance
to the Soviet invasion.
This young woman took a gun
and went into the street to fight the Soviets and she suffered
for it in prison horribly, but she's tough as nails and would do it again.
These people are still among us today, Jordan.
I met a bunch of people in Eastern Europe, people in Estonia, for example, who were heroes
of the anti-Soviet movement.
Some of them from the time they were very little kids, unbelasied, you pointed out.
People who are both unbelievably tough in ways that people in the West can hardly imagine. And also characterized
by that piece that you described earlier, you know, this sort of, because they've been through
things so bad that the normal vicissitudes of life seem like outright pleasures by comparison.
You know, I dedicated my book to the memory
of a Catholic priest named Father Thomas Love Kolokovic.
And he's an important figure,
not only of his own time,
but a prophet for our time.
And I'll tell you why.
In 1943, Father Kolokovic was living in Zagreb
in Croatia, his home country doing work against the Nazis
and the underground.
He got a tip that the Gestapo was coming for him. So he escaped the country, went to his mother's home country doing work against the Nazis and the underground. He got a tip that the Gestapo
was coming for him, so he escaped the country, went to his mother's home country, Slovakia,
and began teaching in the Catholic University in Bratislava. He told his students,
I have good news and bad news for you. The good news is the Germans are going to lose this war.
The bad news is the Soviets are going to be ruling this country when it's over and the first thing they're going to do is come after the church.
We have to be ready. So what he did was put together the small groups of Catholic students to pray, but not just to pray, but to talk about very seriously what was happening in the world around them and to make concrete plans for how to act to get ready for what was coming. Within two years of that man coming to that country,
these small groups existed all over the country and a network to prepare for living in the
underground and prepare for persecution. Now, here's an interesting thing.
So he confronted that straight on.
Yeah, yeah, he did. And he knew what was coming because he had studied in seminary the Soviet mindset
because he wanted to be a missionary to the Soviet Union.
Here's the interesting thing.
The Catholic bishops of Slovakia hated him doing this.
He was scaring people, they said.
It's never gonna happen here.
Calm down, father, but he didn't calm down.
He kept working.
Sure enough, everything happened just like he said Father, but he didn't calm down. He kept working. Sure enough,
everything happened just like he said when the iron curtain fell over that country,
they came after the church. The reason that the underground church was so strong in Slovakia is
because this visionary priest, Father Kolokovich, saw what was coming and he gathered people around
him to form groups to prepare. I believe Jordan, very firmly that we are living
in a collocovic moment in the West today,
and the visionary Christians, and not even Christians,
people who can understand, who can read the signs
of the times and who have courage,
whether they're Jewish, Muslim, or of no faith at all,
need to understand what's happening
and start coming together now to prepare.
This is part of the message that these people...
Yeah, well, Rod, one of the things that I'm planning to do is to make a video sometime
in the near future.
It's preposterous and presumptuous of me to do it, but I'll probably do it anyways.
And that's a message to the Christian church.
And that is, and it's very much in keeping with what you just described.
The church should be reaching out to young men.
It should be saying very straightforwardly, and I mean in the most straightforward sense,
your noble ambitions are welcome and necessary here.
You can come in and help us clean up our mess.
We can help you clean up your mass and we can
move forward, stall, workly, and confidently into the future. And I think the time for that
is right because there is no institution. There is no institution at the moment that overtly
welcomes young men. It's quite the contrary. It says, while you're part of the patriarchal
oppression, you're a dispoiler of the planet, your ambition should be squelched. Maybe your sexuality itself is counterproductive.
And so the churches have this great opportunity to say, hey, they don't want you.
We'll take you. And maybe we can muddle through this together, or you can help
revive the institution. More abundant as it always has been and always will be. And we can model through this together, or you can help revive the institution more abundant as it always has been and
always will be.
And we can give your youthful vision and enthusiasm, some
traditional guidance.
There's a moment here that could be gripped by, well, I hope
the Orthodox managed it.
I'd like to see the Catholics and the Protestants do it too.
I would too, because we're all in this together.
This is one interesting thing I learned from this research is that the people who went
to prison, the Christians who went to prison realized when they were there that they weren't
there because they were Catholics, they weren't there because they were Orthodox or Protestant,
they were there because they were Christians and they formed bonds of fellowship that reached
across of confessional lines. In a similar way, I learned in Prague
from Camilla Bendiva, who is the wife of Vatslop Dendra,
one of the inner circle around Vatslop Hobel.
She told me that even though she and her husband
were very conservative Catholics,
they had no trouble at all working with the hippies,
Hobel and the other hippies who had no religious faith
and led really complicated sex lives. They had no trouble working with the hippies, hobble, and the other hippies who had no religious faith and led really
complicated sex lives. They had no trouble working with them because these people had courage.
And that was the rarest quality you ever found under totalitarianism, courage. And the most
Christian she said to me, kept their heads down and conformed because they didn't want trouble.
But she knew that she and her husband were better off
aligning with those who did not share their politics
necessarily and did not share their religion
but who did have courage.
I feel the same way about what's happening in our country.
This is why I would rather stand in the foxhole
with Barry Weiss, a secular liberal Jewish lesbian
or Breton Heinzstein and Heather Haing who are atheist
and on the left and others who don't share my religious or political convictions, but
who have shown courage.
I just feel the same way about Dawkins.
And Harris for that matter.
Yeah, because the thing that we all face now is greater than what divides us.
We have got to stop this
before it triumphs. And I feel... Yeah, well, two things on that front. I think that the same might
be said on the Abrahamic front is that the traditionalist Jews, Christians, and Muslims should
recognize very rapidly that they have a lot more in common than then they have at the moment
Dividing them and that the system of ideas that we're talking about and not necessarily those who carry the ideas
But the system of ideas that we're talking about is an enemy that's of such greater magnitude than these
Internessine conflicts that they're not even in the same conceptual. And so there's an opportunity on that front as well. Say, while we can get our act together, notice that we worship
the same God and are all flawed enough not to be able to interpret that with 100% accuracy.
Yeah. And you know who some of them, the bravest people in the UK standing up to Wotness
are Muslim parents who don't want this. Right.
Right.
It's in the schools.
I'll tell you another story.
A few years ago in California, after a Bergerfeld legalized gay marriage, there was a bill
filed in the California legislature by the head of the LGBT caucus that would take away
cal grants from so-called bigot schools.
These are direct grants to under-privileged,
impoverished students who could use them at any school
in California, public or private, that was accredited.
Well, this bill would have taken away
the possibility of using them at religious schools.
It would have affected disproportionately poor,
black, and Hispanic kids.
Well, I friend of mine who's part
of the Christian
University system there tried to get a group of administrators
to go around to the big churches in Orange County,
the White Evangelical mega churches,
to say this is gonna destroy a lot of Christian colleges
in the state, forcing to violate their conscience
or shut down, we've got to fight this.
He told me that not one of those
mega churches, those white rich Republican mega churches would take this stand because they were
afraid of being called bigots. The reason that Bill got defeated and the legislature was Black
Pentecostal Pastors of South Central LA and the Latino Catholic Archbishop of Los Angeles.
So we are seeing immigrant communities who are
not buffaloed and bullied by the woke who are willing to stand up if we will just listen to them.
Yep. Yep. Well, so I've been talking today for all of those who are listening with Rod Draer
about his newest book, Live Not By Lies, I would say, inspired by the writings of the great
Alexander Solzhenetson, we've been talking about the battle of ideas that is currently dividing
and threatening, not only the West, but the entire world, and what we might all do as individuals,
and really as individuals, to wander away from the path that leads to hell and the proposition before
us is something like, at minimum, cease to say things that you believe to be untrue,
cease to act in ways that you know to be wrong, start with that, and perhaps pick up your
damn cross and carry it uphill, something like that, right?
Forth rightly and nobly.
And that's really the pathway out of this.
If totalitarianism is the some consequence of individuals' willingness to abdicate their
responsibility and lie, and I think we've learned that in the aftermath of the communist
catastrophe and the Nazi experiments, I think we've learned that.
Now if we applied it, maybe we could avoid doing
the same thing again. I guess we're going to find out. Yeah, you know Jordan, I, you'll remember
that Sultzenietzin said in Gula Garkepelego that if you had gone to all the nice liberal
intellectuals of 1890s Russia and said to them that within 30 years medieval torches would be
reintroduced into Russia. They wouldn't
have believed it. They would have thought it was absolutely impossible.
Well, in a similar way, if you had gone 40 years ago to liberals in North America and said
that within 30, 40 years, we were going to see the sort of things that are being done to
children and the name of transgenderism.
And we would see people who are clearly men being described by police departments as women
and so on and so forth.
They were else.
But here we are.
Yeah.
So, okay, so for everyone who's listening, I have recently inked a new deal with the DailyWire, DailyWire
Plus dot com.
And part of that is to continue these discussions with my guests for an additional period of
time behind the DailyWire paywall.
And that might be annoying to some of you.
Sail of the E part of it is an attempt to foster the daily wires growth. And part of it is also to provide me with the
opportunity to have a hosting system, let's say, for my content that isn't as prone to the
vagaries of the new woke doctrines. And so I would encourage you to continue listening
to my conversation with Rod Draer on dailywireplus.com.
conversation with Rod Draer on dailywireplus.com.