The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 309. Oil, Inflation, and the Way Forward | Congressman Mike Johnson
Episode Date: November 28, 2022Dr. Peterson's extensive catalog is available now on DailyWire+: https://utm.io/ueSXh Dr. Jordan B. Peterson and Congressman Mike Johnson discuss the current state of conservative America, the unders...tated importance of inherent value, the trumped up climate crisis and the all too real crisis facing much of Europe this coming winter. Rep. Mike Johnson is in his third term representing the 4th Congressional District of Louisiana. He represents nearly 760,000 residents of 15 parishes in the northwest and western regions of the state. Mike was first elected to the U.S. House of Representatives on December 10, 2016, by the largest margin of victory in his region in more than 50 years and is currently serving his third term. He earned his undergraduate degree in Business Administration from Louisiana State University in 1995, and then his Juris Doctorate from the Paul M. Hebert Law Center at Louisiana State University in 1998. Before joining Congress, Johnson was a partner in the Kitchens Law Firm and a senior attorney and national media spokesman for the Alliance Defense Fund, now known as Alliance Defending Freedom. He serves as the Vice Chairman of the House Republican Conference—the No. 4 ranked Republican in Congress—is a leader on the Judiciary and Armed Services Committees, and serves as an Assistant Whip for House Republicans. Last Congress, he served as Chairman of the Republican Study Committee, known as the "intellectual arsenal" and the largest caucus of conservatives in Congress. Prior to becoming elected to the U.S. Congress, Johnson served as a constitutional law litigator for nearly 20 years. - Links - For Congressman Mike Johnson: Mike’s website:https://mikejohnson.house.gov/ Follow Mike on social media:@RepMikeJohnson Listen to the Truth be Told podcast on all platforms or at:https://www.mikeandkellyjohnson.com/ - Chapters - (0:00) Coming Up(1:24) Intro(3:55) Eve of the election, predictions(5:20) Biden’s chaotic reign(7:54) Inflation at a 40 year high, causes and effects(10:00) US oil and the global climate “crisis”(13:34) Gaia before God, the new globalist religion(17:25) The ultimate agenda: control(19:22) The Republican response(23:05) Seven Core Principles of American Conservatism(27:35) Identity from the political perspective(32:26) The need of faith in society and for individuals(34:35) Foundational principles and why the left despises them(40:23) To look upon what terrifies us, why we must(47:08) The scientific view of faith, and why it’s wrong(54:12) Preserving what guides us(57:45) The vision going forward(1:01:39) Muddling through up hill, the energy front(1:03:49) The best way to serve the poor(1:06:56) Taking the opportunity, clarity unites(1:08:39) Practical steps to get involved in the political front // SUPPORT THIS CHANNEL //Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/jordanbpeterson.com/youtubesignupDonations: 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-for-lifeMaps of Meaning: The Architecture of Belief: https://jordanbpeterson.com/maps-of-meaning // 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 #JordanPeterson #JordanBPeterson #DrJordanPeterson #DrJordanBPeterson #DailyWirePlus
Transcript
Discussion (0)
[♪ Music playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in Mike Johnson, who is one of America's leading figures on the federal conservative front. Representative Mike Johnson is in his third term representing the fourth congressional
district of Louisiana.
He represents nearly three quarters of a million residents of 15 parishes in the northwest
and western regions of the state.
Mike was first elected to the US House of Representatives
on December 10, 2016 by the largest margin of victory
in his region in more than 50 years,
and is currently serving his third term.
He earned his undergraduate degree in business administration
from Louisiana State University in 1995,
and then his Juris Doctorate from the Paul M. Hebert Law Center at
Louisiana State University in 1998. Before joining Congress,
Johnson was a partner in the Kitchens Law firm and a senior
attorney and national media spokesman for the Alliance
Defense Fund, now known as Alliance Defending Freedom. He
serves in a very important position in Washington as the vice chairman of the House Republican
Conference. The number four ranked Republican in Congress is a leader on the judiciary and
armed services committees and serves as an assistant whip for House Republicans. Last, Congress, he served as chairman
of the Republican Study Committee,
known as the Intellectual Arsenal
and the largest caucus of conservatives in Congress.
Prior to becoming elected to the U.S. Congress,
Johnson served as a Constitutional Law Litigator
for nearly 20 years.
We're gonna talk today about his political career,
about his philosophical views.
He's also writing a book that's going to be coming out
in the next while seven core principles
of American conservatism,
and we're gonna discuss his vision for a renewal
of the conservative viewpoint in the United States
and perhaps more broadly.
So welcome to all of you who are watching and listening.
Well, hello, Congressman Johnson.
Thank you very much for agreeing to talk to me today.
Hey, Jordan, that's my great honor.
I'm a big fan, as you know.
Well, thank you.
Thank you very much.
So tell me, let's start by talking about
what the Republicans are going to do
with their newfound position.
Well, you and I are recording this just on the eve of the election. with their newfound position.
Well, you and I are recording this just on the eve of the election.
So we're not sure exactly how large our majority will be,
but I'll tell you and tell those that are listening and watching that we do anticipate here
on Tuesday that we'll have a sizeable majority in the House,
and they will have a majority of some sort in the Senate.
Now, we're projecting at least a one to two seat majority
for the Republican Party and a large majority in the House,
which means that the entire direction
of the country is going to change pretty dramatically.
What we've had, as you know, for the last two years,
is what is we referred to in our old civics classes.
And here in this country as unified government,
which means you got the same party,
the Democrats in this case,
in charge of the White House and both houses of Congress.
And so that is why, in our view, chaos is ensued.
You have had really a radical, progressive,
radical, leftist agenda that's been hoisted upon the country,
and we've had no way to stop it
because we didn't have the votes,
but that's all about to change. So, even though the Democrats obviously will still have the White House for another
two years, the hands of power and Congress are going to change. It's long overdue, and
you're going to see a new day in this country.
So what do you think has been from the Republican perspective? What do you think has been the
most chaotic element, or device development development or counterproductive element,
let's say, of the Biden administration?
And what does your party presume to do about it?
And what do you think is actually practically possible?
Those are all excellent questions.
I've been on the campaign trail now,
practically for the last year.
I ran unopposed amazingly enough for reelection, for
my, what will be my fourth term in Congress, but most of our seats were hotly contested
as you know around the country.
And we have felt this, what we refer to as the red wave, we felt it building now for some
time, because there's so much unrest and concern around the country.
There was a poll that just came out really over, I think it was last two days or so, where
it is estimated, the American Psychological Association, which is of interest to you, they
estimate that three-fourths of Americans are so deeply concerned about the future of their
country that it is causing them daily stress.
And that's a real statistic, according to them.
So there is a lot of concern.
And the reason is, because these are the results,
the completely foreseeable results of policy choices
that have been made by those who control all these levers of power.
And so the results have been disastrous.
There is quite literally a crisis on every front.
Every front, every issue of policy is a disaster.
President Biden has presided over that, the Democrats in Congress have engineered it,
and we are living through the results.
So, to summarize it easily on the campaign trail, to me, I've been saying for the last year
that it will come down to, and I think it has, to what I call the three eyes.
It's inflation, illegal immigration, and general incompetence. And the polling bears
that out. That those two top issues, of course, the economy is in a disastrous state right
now. The cost of living is unmanageable for most Americans. And the illegal immigration
problem is just an unspeakable disaster, catastrophe. And the incompetence is something that has
spread throughout everything they've touched.
The crime is soaring in the country and all of our major cities and around the nation.
Every single area, energy policy, we have a fentanyl crisis, we have a, for crying out loud,
we have a baby formula shortage crisis. We have military recruitment crises. I mean, it's just every area.
And so the American people are looking for a change.
They're going to give us that opportunity, and I believe we're going to deliver on it.
And so what do you think the true rate of inflation is at the moment in the U.S.?
What do you think that inflation is doing to ordinary people?
Well, we know by any objective measure that inflation in the U.S. is at at least a 40-year
high, when it actually boils down to real people, real families, they're feeling real pain.
The cost of groceries, the cost of gasoline, and again, all of this is the result of these
policy decisions.
Take energy policy, for example, in the U. US, at least 30% of our nation's economy
is tied in some way to our energy policy.
And you and I have talked about this offline
with amongst our friends and groups that we're involved in.
It is just really an insane series of decisions
that Biden and the far left in this country have made.
We were energy, not just energy independent,
but energy dominant when President Trump left the White House, because we pushed those
policies instinctively, almost reflexively, Joe Biden took office, and within the first
few days, quite literally, through executive orders, he reversed the policies that had given
us those great gains and achievements.
And so because of that, we've seen, we've reaped what that has sown.
And so now, not only did they, you know, of course, infamously cancel the keystone pipeline,
green-lighted Nord Stream 2 for Russia and Putin, which of course fueled his war machine
to go after Ukraine.
He put a moratorium on federal production and exploration and federal lands here in the
U.S. offshore as well, which has been a disaster for my state of Louisiana, a big energy state.
Effectively turned off the spickets.
But in order to meet our demand, we then had to go hat and hand to OPEC.
We had to go beg, you know, SaudiC, we had to go beg, you know,
Saudi Arabia, we had to go and beg these other nations to help us supply our need. It's
just inconscionable, inconscionable. And of course, the energy that's produced in those
other countries is not anywhere near as clean and efficient as that, which is produced
here because of the way they do it. So, ironically, they did more damage to the supply.
What do you think the justification is for that? I mean, to cut off production,
but not cut off demand seems like a pretty counterproductive way, both to deal with the
economy and with the environment, assuming that you buy the story that fossil fuel use
per se is driving the crisis that we should all be attending to, which is something that
I'm really on board with in any way at all. It seems pretty obvious, especially given what's
been happening in Europe lately with regard to their energy crunch, that the policies that were
pursued by the United States, especially with regards to fracking, turned out to be, well,
fortuitously far-ascited, it made the United States energy independent, as you said,
but actually able to export,
while simultaneously cutting carbon output,
which is important to those people, to whom it's important,
but it's at least notable on every front.
The America was looking pretty good on the energy front,
especially in contrast to Europe.
And so what do you think the rationale is for simultaneously cutting production and making
it extraordinarily difficult to provide abundant energy?
Well also pursuing a policy of going around the globe and asking for excess energy resources
from obviously from producers who are not necessarily reliable, let's say like Venezuela or desirable.
And also who don't abide by the same standards
of environmental purity that govern the situation
in the United States.
I don't understand how that policy can be constructed
and pursued.
What's the rationale for it?
Is it that, I mean, we had a deputy prime minister
in Canada who said famously something like,
well, it's good that energy prices are much higher
because when Canadians pay more at the pump,
they're all reminded constantly of just how severe
the environmental crisis is.
And which I think is an absolutely appalling way to behave.
And I also think it's counterproductive
on the environmental front because making people poor does not make the planet
healthier.
There's no evidence for that.
So what do you think,
why do you think the Democrats pursued this policy?
This is an excellent question, Jordan.
And I agree with you 100% on your position on this
and as we've discussed in the past,
that it's difficult to provide a rational explanation for it because
there really is not.
I don't think they apply rational thought to these decisions at all.
To me, the best way I can explain it, and I get asked the same question all the time,
certainly when I'm around in my district, the fourth congressional district in Louisiana,
go to town halls.
We have lots of big open public events where everyone is welcomed and take questions from the audience. And this is always one of the most common questions.
And in my explanation, the answer that I've come up with is the best way I know to explain it.
And that is that this is not a rational decision on the part of these folks.
They regard the climate agenda as part of their religion. I don't know any other way to explain it.
They pursue it with religious zeal.
And they care not, apparently,
what type of pain these policies inflict upon the people
that they are supposed to be serving,
because they're not serving the people,
they're serving the planet.
And they use this terminology now openly,
because you know, to a great amazement and frustration.
And it's as if, put it in very perocule terms,
when I'm in Louisiana, I try to explain to our folks
that, listen, they have effectively replaced
Father God with Mother Earth.
I mean, not to oversimplify that, that's how you know that.
That's how I see it.
And so they believe we owe field to the Mother Earth
that we're created by the earth, they believe.
And so we must owe everything to the earth itself.
And we have to serve that cause above all else
and it matters not who they are.
The problem I have with that is that the policies themselves
don't seem to result in the consequences
that are hypothetically desired.
Like I've spent a lot of time looking
over the environmental crisis literature. And one of the things that seemed to me, that are hypothetically desired. Like, I've spent a lot of time looking over
the environmental crisis literature.
And one of the things that seemed to me,
well, two things appeared to me to be quite obvious
as a consequence of pouring over it.
And the first is, we don't have
one environmental slash economic crisis confronting us.
We have many.
And so for example, Bjorn Lomburg and I wrote
an article for the telegraph last week. And I believe one of the things he pointed out in there, we
pointed out in there, was that 23 million people a year around the world die from
indoor air pollution, mostly from burning dung and wood. 23 million people, a
huge number of people, and obviously that's polluting and it's not good for the
environment and to replace that
with inexpensive, well, it would be fossil fuel replacement if it was replaced most efficiently,
would save tens of millions of people and also be good for the planet. And that's completely off
the agenda. No one pays any attention to that whatsoever, even though, like I said, 20 million,
the lives of 20 million people, a lot of them children depend on it. There's these multiple issues as well on the environmental front and Longburg has done
a better job than anyone else in rank ordering these things.
And so the thing that I find so perplexing is that even if your goal was in some sense
to serve the planet, it's by no means obvious in any sense whatsoever that raising energy
prices and impoverishing
poor people will do anything but hurt the planet.
So I don't even buy the internal rationale.
It's like, well, we're supposed to be serving the planet.
Like, well, none of our policies seem to be doing that.
Longberg, I think, estimated in the same article that net consequence of all the global climate spending since 2005 will be a one ten thousandth
of a degree reduction in temperature by the year 2100. Insofar as it can be calculated by the UN's
own climate models. And so I don't get it. It's, it's, it's been, we've had 30 years of this
nonsense. All we've seen to do is make the energy grid much more ineffective.
The only place that's really made an advance in terms of reducing carbon output is being
the United States.
They did that through fracking.
Every environmentalist on the planet hates fracking because they claim erroneously that
it does such things as cause earthquakes. And so we're in a situation where the planet is clearly no better off.
And in fact, by many measures, we're so off that it would have been if we just left it to hell alone.
And energy costs are spiraling out of control and people are being plunged into poverty as winter approaches.
And like there's no positive outcome of that whatsoever.
And yet the leaders are all gathered at COP27, again, I believe this weekend, to do exactly
the same thing.
And so even by their own standards, the standards of the environmentalists themselves, why wouldn't
they support natural gas if they're actually concerned about improving the planet, or
nuclear power for that matter. It's just, there's something more nefarious going on at the narrative level, even then
we all feel to the planet.
It's something like, it's something like, we have to destroy capitalism at all cost,
even if that means compromising the planet.
It's worse than the nature-worship hypothesis. I think that's right.
They're consistently irrational.
At a sort of a local or regional level, here in the US, for example, I think that religious
zeal argument sort of explanation makes some sense.
But I do think that on the international level, I think the persons who are ultimately
responsible for this, those who are pushing the elites at the top
of the food chain, so to speak,
there is a more sinister agenda.
Ultimately, we, you and I, I think, agree,
this is about government control.
And they will pursue that with religious fervor, of course,
as well.
And they seem to have gotten the entire,
civilized world bought in on the,
at least the leaders of many of these nations
bought in on this idea that we have to pursue this agenda at any cost.
And so we're going to continue to see the results of that.
You know, I look.
It seems a bit too convenient that the solution always is, well, there's a terrible crisis
besetting us.
And what that means is you have to deliver all the power to a handful of centralizers
who are then allowed to use compulsion to implement their desired policies.
Like if your solution means you're handed all the centralized power,
and I have to abide by your dictates, then I think it's legitimate of me to question your motives.
That's exactly right.
And the solution to that, the antidote, is to educate and inform more people,
to remind them that going along with this agenda
requires them to sacrifice their freedom,
and their safety, their comfort.
I mean, we've seen the projections.
This may be a very harsh Europe, a winter in Europe.
And that's because they don't have enough energy units
to even heat the homes of the persons who need this the most. And so I fear that there's going to be real and continuing pain
until the world wakes up, and so hopefully we can continue to be the voices crying in the wilderness
to remind everyone of what the true facts are here. And so what do you think the Republicans will do
about the energy situation? Obviously, you don't have are here. And so what do you think the Republicans will do about the energy situation?
What, obviously you don't have the presidency
and so there's gonna be limitations on what's possible,
but what do you think the right way forward is
in relationship to the provision of,
or the development of an energy policy
that would insure to those who are going to be doing
the exploration that they're
not going to be cut off at the knees again.
Right, that's key.
And I do have some hope that after this election, I do believe there will be the feeling of
a mandate.
I think it's going to be an overwhelming vote.
And I believe that we will have some people who are rightly thinking, even among the Democrats who will
wake up and recognize that we've got to turn this around.
We saw some hopeful sides of that.
Just a few days out from our election, you saw Senator Joe Manchin, a West Virginia, came
out with just some really strong language, calling out President Biden for his really insane
policies. I mean, he effectively called three for his really insane policies.
I mean, he effectively called three days out from the election.
He was at a rally, I think in Pennsylvania, and called President Biden called for the
end of the coal industry and effectively just took a real swipe at the oil and gas
industry fossil fuels in general.
Not a good look.
I mean, Pennsylvania is an energy state.
And so Joe Manchin responded immediately
very strong language.
I think that we may have a new day
and a new opportunity to turn some of this around.
I think the American people are going to demand it.
They cannot afford just simple fuel,
simple energy now,
and we've got to get back to some of the policies
that allowed us to be in the great position
we were in before Joe Biden took office.
If you rewind in your mind to February of 2020, right before COVID hit our shores here,
we had achieved the greatest economy in the history of the planet, not just the greatest economy of the US,
but the greatest economy ever.
We had, by every measurable metric in category, everyone was doing better in the U.S.
Our economy was thriving.
It would jobs are being created.
More opportunity was available for more people in every demographic.
We were widening the pathway out of poverty for more people.
And the reason we were in that position is because we advanced limited government principles.
We reduced taxes.
We reduced regulations. we reduced regulations,
and we allowed American entrepreneurship to thrive.
We allowed the free market to thrive.
We've got to get back to that because that's the solution.
And it begins with energy policy,
and it should translate to every area
of what we do with our economic agenda.
Well, you know, one of the things that I think
that conservatives are often rightly, or effectively, let's say,
criticized for by those on the left is overreliance on the kind of policies that you just described,
the cutting policies, the restriction of government overreach. I believe that
restricting government overreach is important, but it's
not a very compelling narrative in some sense, right?
Now you've been working on a book associated with core principles of conservatism, and so
you've been thinking this through philosophically as well, and it seems to me that for the conservative types to mount effective, to develop an effective
counter strategy to the false messianic narrative of the radical left, that something like
a coherent philosophy that's compelling on the narrative front has to be put forward.
And you've been working on this book. And the book is called Seven Core Principles of
be put forward and you've been working on this book. And the book is called Seven Core Principles of
American conservatism. That's right. And let me give you a little
a little background of how that came about. It was birth out of necessity.
Jordan in the in the last Congress in 116th Congress I served as chairman of the Republican study committee and you've come and visited our group on Capitol Hill. That's the largest RSC is the largest caucus in Congress, certainly the largest caucus
of conservatives.
And it's known as the intellectual arsenal of conservatism on the Hill.
Over 50-year history now, we have the largest group.
And so when I was chairman, it was 148 members of that group.
Anyone who self-identifies, self-describes as a conservative in the House as a part of
this organization.
And it is intended, and it was in its origin, to be the policy shop where our conservative
philosophy makes its way onto paper.
It informs our debates and our arguments on the Hill.
And that's how we create our policy, legislative, text, et cetera.
So when I took the helm of that organization,
it was an interesting time in American politics,
because we were two years into the Trump administration
about halfway through.
We were in uncharted water, so to speak, as a nation.
Lots of things were very dynamic and changing
and different than they had been before.
And what I sensed was that a lot of my colleagues
and certainly a lot of friends and associates
and constituents back at home who identified,
and probably many of them always had,
as conservatives and Republicans,
were having a difficult time articulating,
summarizing exactly what that was, what it meant.
And so I determined that as chair of this group,
we wanted to make very good use
of the two years ahead of us. We had just been put into the minority in the house. And so I thought
instead of wandering in the wilderness for 40 years, we should roll our sleeves up and make it a very
productive time. So in order to do that, it's always a good idea. If you're going to craft policy,
if you're going to advance an agenda, to know exactly what
you believe and what the objectives are.
So I put it in the paper.
I did a lot of thought, study, and prayer, and my background is in constitutional law.
And so these are things that have studied my whole life.
So I thought, if you had just a couple of moments with a millennial who self-identified
as a progressive, how would you present what it is that we believe?
And I posed this question rhetorically
to all my colleagues in a big meeting of the RSE,
and I said, how are we going to explain
and advance our position?
And so what would you say it means
to be an American conservative?
So I posited this, and I suggested this to my colleagues
at that time.
I said, listen, to me, if you had to boil down volumes of conservative writing, if you had
to boil down the Republican Party platform, everything that we say that we're for, all of
it, you know, from Edmund Burke to today, what would that be summarized for in our time
and our place?
And I said to me, it boils down to what I'm going to call
those seven core principles of American conservatism.
And it's quite simply individual freedom, limited government,
the rule of law, peace through strength,
fiscal responsibility, free markets, and human dignity.
Not in any necessary order, but those are the things
that all conservatives should profess to believe.
And I said, there's nothing magic about that list
and anyone could create their own or add to it or delete.
But to me, that's what I'm going to posit for us.
To be our guardrails for the next two years
as we go forward to make our arguments on the House floor,
to create the policy to put our plans together.
And it is the foundation upon which we will build.
Everybody agreed with that?
We amended the bylaws of the Republican study committee for the first time in 15 years to add those in. And we began to work with those
parameters. And so it was a very successful effort. At the end of that two years, we published
over 400 pages of policy prescriptions. We called it the conservative playbook for a Republican
led majority. And in those publications, our answers to all the greatest challenges facing the
country. And because we got momentum doing that, I began to hear from conservative legislators at
the local and state level around the country.
And Republican groups in this state and that, people calling to say, hey, could we adopt
something similar?
Could we use the seven core principles?
And I said, absolutely.
I have no pride of authorship about it.
So all of that has been building, and that's why it's making its way out of the pages of
a book and also we can spread it out even further. It's not rocket science, but it's a good way to
summarize what it is we believe. And I think that's important. Yeah, well, I've been thinking through
the idea of identity from the political perspective and there is part of me that's attracted to classic liberal ideas, because
I believe the right unit of analysis in the most fundamental sense is the individual.
And I think the classic liberals did a good job of putting that point forward. But I think
that an overemphasis on the individual atomizes people. And I think that and and and the consequence of atomized individuals is tyrannical government
as far as I can tell is that if if everybody becomes an island unto themselves, all of
the necessary relationships that bind people together are vacuumed up in some sense are
subsumed under a centralized authority.
And I've also been thinking through the idea of identity
from the perspective of mental health.
So what does it mean to have a healthy identity?
So you might ask what it means to have an identity period.
And it certainly isn't something that you only define subjectively.
And so my clinical experience and I think the most sophisticated psychological theories bear this out is that you can't have properly functioning individuals who are atomized.
And the reason for that is that in the most fundamental sense, emotional and motivational regulation, which is what mental health depends on or even consists of in some sense has to be experienced in relationship
to other people. And so one of the things I've noticed when I've been lecturing to young people,
and this is relevant to the issue of what conservatives have to offer to young people, is that
the meaning that people need to rely on that sustains them through tragic times isn't to be found in pursuit of self-interest,
even if it's enlightened self-interest.
Not in the narrow, hedonic sense, right?
Not in the sense where I get exactly what I want
right now all the time.
What seems to provide people with stabilization
in their life and hope is the fostering
of a hierarchical network of social interactions so that it's
pretty hard to be sane and to have a functional identity without being married or the equivalent
if you're an adult.
You need someone who's a long-term partner because otherwise your life is a mess of loneliness
or short-term chaotic relationships. And it's very difficult to be sane and happy when that's happening.
It's very hard to maintain your equilibrium unless you have at least some family, right?
Some siblings, parents that you have a bonded relationship with, that you're in interaction
with, that you have joint projects with, you have to have friends,
you should be involved in the network of economic exchange, you should be pursuing some civic
responsibility, maybe you have a religious obligation that's, and that's a different way of thinking
about it than a religious faith, right, is that you have an obligation to pursue and participate in some spiritual tradition. And it has to be
a tradition too, because otherwise it just spirals off into a kind of new age insanity. And it isn't
obvious to me that people can live happy lives because people say they want to be happy, which I
don't really think is also true. I think people want to have an adventure and they don't want to be
miserable. And that's not exactly the same as being happy. But I don't think that you can pursue any of that
stably without being embedded in those in that multitude of hierarchical social relationships.
And that's all dependent on responsibility. No, I don't want short-term self-gratification
and a kind of atomistic hedonism. And if you explain that to young people,
they figured out right away,
especially if you allow that with the idea
of developing the kind of embeddedness
in the social community that helps sustain you
in the face of tragedy.
Because what do you have when things go wrong?
You've got the people you love and who love you.
You've got your friends.
You've got hopefully your career
and maybe your creative endeavors.
You have the service you can provide to others at the level of civic responsibility.
And none of that's been discussed in some real sense for about 60 years.
And all of that's core to the kind of identity that stops people from being absolutely anxiety
written and hopeless.
And conservatives really have all that within their grasp
if they wanted to take it.
And it sounds like that's the sort of thing
that you're working on pursuing.
That's exactly right.
And I think we do need to take it.
And I think that there's a vacuum created,
and it should be filled with what I regard to be
very simple truths.
I mean, I think the simple truths are the most profound.
And what you just articulated there is exactly right.
I believe it's impossible, by the way,
to divorce it from a religious worldview, let's say,
the Judeo-Christian worldview, for example,
because that is where we find our meaning.
I think what you just described
is God's created order for things,
for the individual, for the family, for society.
I think we are made in the image of God,
the founders of this country believe that.
And in fact, indeed, in our declaration,
they proclaimed it to be a self-evident truth,
something that you cannot not know,
that God is the one that created us,
and he gives us all the same rights.
And God created us to serve.
We find our greatest meaning.
I mean, that the Bible is filled with this admonition that if you are to be great, you are to serve. We find our greatest meaning. I mean that the Bible is filled with this admonition
that if you are to be great, you are to serve. And the greatest is the greatest servant.
And so that's where you find your value. He intended the family to be, for obvious reasons,
the first unit of community. And upon that, we build a healthy and vibrant society.
You know, I listed human dignity as the seventh of the core principles,
but I say in the book that I'm finishing up that that really could be the first,
it is the foundation of it all, because it goes back to the beginning,
that we really are of individual value and worth,
and that is because God gave us that worth.
It's, by the way, your values completely unrelated
in any way to the color of your skin
or what zip code you live in
or where you went to school or where your talents are,
your values inherent because it's given to you
by your creator.
You know, GK Chesterton and the...
This is also a go-ahead.
Well, I was just gonna say Chesterton,
famously said that America's the only nation
in the world that was founded upon a creed
is listed with almost theological lucidity in the Declaration of Independence.
And that is our creed in short summary.
It's the second paragraph of the Declaration.
Our nation was built upon that idea.
As you note rightly, we began to deviate from that idea about 50 or 60 years ago or so
a little bit longer.
And that is why we're at the hopeless result that we are.
So I believe we have to get back to those founding principles
because it's fairly.
Well, I also think that conservatives
have done a pretty poor job of defending that.
So you see this vitriolic accusation arising
from the radical left that the West, the West in general,
and the United States perhaps in particular
was founded fundamentally on a doctrine that was akin to the promotion of something like
oppression and slavery. Now that's a typical leftist trope because the leftists think every
form of social organization is founded on nothing but exploitation. But what disturbs me about that is that it's also counterproductive in relationship
even to the stated goals of the leftists because the way I look at things
and I can't see how this is wrong, is that the careless self-axiom, the careless self-added evident axiom of human social interaction,
is something like, if I can force you to do something, I have the right to do it, which
is, well, if I'm more powerful than you, and I can compel you to do my bidding, why
the hell shouldn't I?
And that means that, as Hobbes pointed out,
let's say the philosopher Thomas Hobbes rather than John
Jacques Rousseau, that vision is predicated on an idea that
in the state of nature, human beings aren't noble savages,
it's more like life is nasty, brutish and short.
And I don't believe that Hobbes was 100% right,
nor do I believe that John Jacques Rousseau was 100% right, in order I believe that
John Jacques Rousseau was 100% right. I think we have an implicit capacity for evil and an implicit
capacity for good and that we're battling between that all the time. But I cannot read the history
of the West, Great Britain in particular, and then the U.S. emerging out of that context as anything but the struggle of the idea that all men have
intrinsic all human beings, as you said, regardless of creed or color or ethnicity or intelligence
or any local attribute whatsoever, that because of that intrinsic dignity, the anything that smacks of slavery and compulsion is in fact fundamentally
ethically wrong. And you know, atheistic types who go after the idea that the dignity of human
beings is predicated on something like their formation in the image of God still have the problem
of trying to sort out then what is it that gives people that intrinsic
dignity and worth because if you abandon that as a self-evident principle, so that would
be as a fundamental religious or sacred principle, in some sense independent even of your religious
belief, it's still a deep and foundational principle that presumption of intrinsic value,
that fights against the very institution
of slavery, and as far as I can tell, that's exactly the reason why slavery wasn't
eradicated, despite essentially, despite its unbelievable prevalence throughout the entire
course of human history.
So the leftists, in some sense, decry the use of power and corruption and claim that the West and the United States
are fundamentally slave, predicated, oppressive states, but what they fail to contend with
and what conservatives haven't done a good job of defending is that that's not only a lie,
it's the opposite of the truth is that these are these Western democracies that privilege human dignity are the only societies
in the entire history of humanity that have ever managed to make a moral case against
the principle that might make right.
That is precisely right.
And it is that belief in the inestimable dignity and value of every person because of the
belief, the underlying belief that they are made in the image and as a creator, creation of God himself, that has been the
guiding principle. That is why that belief is why slavery has been eradicated and child
labor laws have been revised and all of the ills in society have been attacked. It's been
persons motivated by that belief that you have to do that
for the individual because of their value and their dignity. And our country, the United States,
was founded upon that premise. It was not perfect at its origin. Of course, we still had slavery
to contend with, and we all know that it's the great stain on our history, but it was acknowledged by
leaders at the time, the principal men who were called to put all this together. And it was acknowledged by leaders at the time, the principal men who were called to put all this together.
And it was acknowledged by later generations as well.
Martin Luther King, Jr. famously said in his,
I have a dream speech that the Declaration of Independence
was a promissory note to future generations
that were in the process of making a more perfect union
and that we would not achieve everything that we should yet,
but it's built upon this foundational premise.
And so our first president,
George Washington famously in his farewell address,
he said, he gave us his prescription
on how we could keep this republic.
It's a grand experiment in self-governance.
And he said, watch your federal debt,
watch your foreign alliances.
He gave some very practical advice,
but he also said, watch out for the evil and poison
of political parties, et cetera. But he also said, watch out for the evil and poison of political parties, etc.
But he also said, of all the dispositions and habits, which lead to political prosperity,
religion and morality, or indispensable supports.
And then John Adams comes next and he says, look, our Constitution is made only for a moral
and religious people that is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.
They did not want to legislate that every person had to adopt a certain religion, but the
point was that you had to have this fundamental premise, this, you had to have virtue.
If you're going to have a government of buying for the people, there had to be a foundation
of virtue.
And they saw that the seed bit of virtue was in religion and morality.
And that's why it should be supported. It's, it seems to me that even the principles
that the classic liberal individualists rely on
presume the self-evidence of those moral virtues.
They're a given.
And the problem is is that they're only a given
when they're active.
And when they become inactive or when they become actively
subverted, then the self-evident starts to decay.
And then the whole enterprise has the possibility of falling apart.
You know, I was just in Jerusalem, and I walked down the Via Dolorosa with a friend of mine,
Jonathan Pasha, we're doing a documentary about that, and I was thinking about the idea
of the passion.
We ended up in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, which at least in principle is founded on the site where Christ was crucified. And
I was thinking about this psychologically. And I think this is something that is worth delving
into, although it's way down at the bottom of things. You know, I've wondered for a long time,
exactly what the Western world has been doing psychologically, let's say, gazing at the
crucifix for the last 2000 years, and why that's associated with the image of God. And again,
I'm thinking about this psychologically, not theologically. And one of the things that
psychotherapists have realized in the last 60 years or so is that if you can get people to voluntarily confront the things that disturb
them and compel them into paralysis and avoidance and possibly even tyranny, right? Those are the
things people would like to avoid if they could, but often can't because they're the harsh realities
of lifelets. Say the more you can get people to expose themselves to the things they're afraid of
and disturbed by voluntarily, the braver and more healthy they become.
Then I was just in this monastery in northern California, an artist had, they're putting
literally a hundred and a half million dollars into half million into the artwork and the cathedral
that's associated with this monastery.
And there was an image of Christ crucified underneath Mary
and then behind the crucifixion was an image
of a cross that represented the resurrection.
And when I look at that, I think,
well, it's the benevolence of the mother that gives rise
to the heroic individual,
let's say. And what's in the central nature of the heroic individual? And the answer to that
is something like the courage to confront the catastrophe of mortality itself, voluntarily,
and also the willingness to confront the reality of hell. And both of those are embedded in the passion narrative,
because Christ, of course, goes to an ignominious
and undeserved death, which is the most tragic thing
that can happen to anyone in some sense.
But that's not enough, because he has to
hero hell itself.
And you might say, well, what does that mean psychologically?
And I would say, well, we don't only
have to contend as human beings with the reality
of suffering and death. We have to cont beings with the reality of suffering and death,
we have to contend with the reality of suffering, death, and malevolence of a deep kind.
And if we turn away from that, then we cannot rise to the occasion.
And the image that's embedded in the Judeo-Christian tradition, especially in relationship to
the crucifixion and resurrection, is something
like the notion that if you gaze upon that which terrifies you long enough and hard enough,
and with enough diligence, you don't see death and destruction.
You see the possibility of renewal and rebirth, because that's the spirit that is called
out of you if you're courageous enough to confront the terrible realities of life.
And as far as I can tell, that's psychologically true.
And then you might say, because you could take that further and you can say, well, what does that have to do with God?
And the answer is, well, that's a very difficult question to sort out. That's for sure. But you could
say more prosaically that if the spirit that guides us most compellingly and profoundly
through life, is the spirit that calls us to confront our catastrophic fragility and our subjugation to malevolence,
if we have to confront that voluntarily.
And that is the spirit that strengthens us and revives us.
How could we possibly regard that as anything other than technically profound and divine?
Because it's fundamental.
And I think you can have a fair bit of that discussion outside the theological domain,
which I'd rather do most of the time, right, because you should speak of theological matters at your peril,
but at the very least. And so then you think, well, what gives people intrinsic worth and dignity?
And the fact is that they're capable of bearing up voluntarily under the brute force load of existence and malevolence
and deserve respect and do credit
as a consequence of that strength.
And if your society isn't predicated on that,
then it will fall apart.
And as far as I can tell, that's all just true.
I think those are simple truths.
I think that's exactly right.
I think that's what animated
previous generations of Americans.
We did have a very strong Christian culture
and the early origins of the country
and the Judeo-Christian worldview was prevalent
until recent generations, almost everyone agreed.
That's what the studies would show
and what our common experience bears out.
And so they believed in those simple truths that are articulated in the Bible.
You could talk about it from a psychological perspective,
but it's difficult to divorce the faith aspect from it as having guided and
encouraged the people.
The Bible speaks clearly to suffering and trials and how that going through that
produces perseverance,
perseverance, then produces character,
character, then produces hope.
And hope is essential.
I think of the passages in 1 Peter 5,
Peter is writing to the early church in those days.
And he says how evil itself, evil incarnate,
that the devil prowls around like a roaring lion
seeking whom he made a vow or talk about malevolence.
But the passage of scripture right before that,
it says, do not worry, cast your
worries on God because He cares for you. So in the context of all that, we understand that
sure human nature is evil and capable of all sorts of malevolence and evil. But God is greater
than that, and that belief in that animated principle is what truly guided our nation through
some very dark days. And I think it can be. Well, we can talk about the necessity of faith in that regard too,
because the more scientific oriented rationalists that are opposed to such views presume that
faith is something like the willingness to believe things that are so
preposterous that no one would believe them. But that as far as I can tell
that isn't what religious faith means, religious faith, which would be deep faith
because the religious is the domain of the profound and the deep. Religious faith
is something like the precondition for action in the face of the unknown.
So, so a couple of examples of that, I mean one would be, well, why would you tell the truth?
Because you don't have any evidence beforehand that if you tell the truth, things will work out in
the best possible way for you. You have to tell the truth and then see what happens. And that means that in order to do that, you have to have faith in the truth.
And then you might say, well, why would you get married?
And the answer can't be because you know you'll live happily ever after.
The answer has to be that you'll take the hand of your wife and jump into the unknown
together on the basis of faith, that if you keep faith with each other and you engage in the redemptive
dialogue that's part of the process of the exchange of the logos that you'll be able to
maneuver through the catastrophes of life more effectively.
Like all and then if you confront a challenge by definition in some sense a challenge is
a situation that you don't know if you can master,
and you're willingness to confront that can't be based on the evidence that you'll win and overcome the challenge
because you don't know. It has to be a leap of faith. And so then the question arises,
well, what not do you need faith or should we abandon faith? Because I don't
think that's possible. In the absence of omniscience, an omnipresence, an omnipotence, what you
have to contend with that, which is beyond you, is faith. I can't see how it can be any other
way. And then the question, this is something conservatives should be addressing. Well,
faith in what? And the inviolable dignity of the human individual,
that might be a good place to start.
And then conservatives can talk about responsibility too
because, you know, I think part of the attraction
that the leftists have for young people
is the leftists say, well, we'll take care of everyone.
And the conservatives can say, you don't exactly want to take care of everyone because
that infantilizes them. You want to give them a domain where they have the option, the
opportunity to take care of themselves and the people around them. And you want to distribute
that as widely as possible. And that's a much more noble vision. I think and it gives people something to,
it doesn't that it gives people something to do.
It, it restores to them the true responsibility
of their life.
And if the meaning of their life is dependent on
the adoption of that responsibility,
then it restores the meaning to their life.
And I do think young people understand
that if you explain it to them and that they're dying to hear that.
You've been doing a fantastic work at that and your writing has inspired a lot of young men.
I know and I've walked with you in the halls of the US Capitol and seen young men come up and tell
you what a profound effect that has had because I think you're drawing them to this again, whatever it is, to be a simple
truth. We find responsibility in our contribution. We find responsibility in our selflessness. We
find dignity in our work again, because that's how the creator made us. And when you explore that, when you pursue it, that is the pursuit
ultimately, I think of happiness and fulfillment. And you're right. It's a common.
Happiness in that more profound sense that the founders meant, because that's not short-term.
Heedness, I mean, I think the way it lays itself out practically, and people can think this through
for themselves, is that the more you're of service,
and I don't mean resentful martyrdom
in relationship to other people,
I mean balanced service,
but the more you offer others,
the more is returned to you.
That's obvious.
And you know you wanna be around people
who are productive in generous,
and maybe they err on the side of productivity in generosity
to some degree, right, to just leave that little margin
of error.
But it's given that there are so many other people,
and just one of you, obviously, the more you
deliver to other people, there's going
to be people who take advantage of that.
But that's not the point.
But on the whole, the more you deliver to other people, in faith, the more is going
to come back to you, especially over the medium and long run. I mean, how could it be anywhere,
anyway else? Because obviously, if all you do is take, people figure that out very rapidly,
and then they stop wanting to have anything to do with you. And so I think there's, again,
it's a simple truth because it's a practical,
it's a metaphysical reality that meaning is to be found in the service of others and that
sovereignty might, in the highest sense, might be defined as the broadest possible service,
which is a revolution in thinking that was engendered in large part by the biblical writings. But
I'll think that it's just a practical truth. You can try, this is a clinical exercise, people
who are narcissistic and disagreeable can be led to do something like something as simple
as well. Try doing one thing every day just for someone else and see what happens and
what generally happens is their temperaments improve and their lives improve. And I don't think that's a mystery once it's laid out.
Well, of course, that's what's going to happen.
And if you're, you know, I think it's,
if you, if you were 10% longer hours,
you make 40% more money.
And so, so, right, and you can see why that would be, right?
Because if you had a 10 employees and one of them is there 20 minutes early and stays
20 minutes late every day, and you notice that, and then an opportunity emerges, well, who's
going to get the opportunity?
It's self-evident in that fundamental sense.
And I love when human experience bears out principles from the Bible.
And it is a biblical principle, by the way, that the greater the degree of your self-sacrifice,
the greater the reward in terms of service to others and to the kingdom of God,
is it were in that context.
The widow's might, when she gives what little she has, there's a tremendous reward,
whereas if the millionaire donates $10,
maybe he did it out of a cheerful heart,
but there's not a great reward that comes with that.
And so, you know, that idea, that belief,
I think, again, to tie it back to the greatness of America,
the country that I revere so much,
is that that belief is what guided us,
is what developed the extraordinary economy
and culture and society that we had here
because persons were guided by that principle
and it drove them to work hard,
it drove them to be entrepreneurs,
it drove them to be job creators
to create more opportunities for people.
Right, it's also people.
It also helped them fight against the terrible attraction
of envy.
You know, one of the things that I've seen that characterizes the excesses of the radicals
on the left is the proposition that anybody who has any more than I have acquired that
as a consequence of oppression and theft.
And I think the fundamental problem with that is that if no one is allowed to have any
more than anyone else, ever, then no one ever gets to have anything at all.
And so I think part of the biblical insistence that envy, covetousness, is a fundamental sin,
which means to miss the mark, is that if some people can't be richer than others,
some of the time, no one can have any wealth at all.
And, you know, there's a big anthropological mystery, which is that
from the period of time, about 350,000 years ago to about 50,000 years ago,
there doesn't seem to have been much of an increment in human
well-being on the material front.
And no one can really figure that out because, genetically speaking, we're not that much
different from our ancestors that long ago.
And so what changed, and who knows the answer to that?
But one possible answer is that, well, we were caught in something like a self-defeating spiral
of envy such that, and there's good anthropological evidence for this, so that in most societies,
anyone who had any more than anyone else immediately became a target for thugs and predators
who just killed them and took what they had.
And that just stops all economic growth whatsoever.
And so if there's no tolerance for,
if there's no tolerance for inequality,
it's possible that there's no way of generating wealth
because wealth has to start somewhere
and then be distributed.
It can't be everywhere at once instantly.
And so...
That's right.
And the belief that you've just described
is what has driven, in our times, the radical
left to grow this massive controlling government, the state that is going to be the great leveler,
that is going to equalize everything and redistribute the wealth and all of these other policies
they produce, because what they're doing really is institutionalizing envy and
division and hatred for that matter.
It's class envy and it's how they divide as the Marxist principle really to turn the
population gets one another, but they've had some success with that.
And so again, back to what conservatives should be doing right now.
We have to push back against that.
We have to explain to people what the origin of these crazy policies is and what the antidote is. And I think again that the solutions are the guiding
principles. I think what guided our country from its origin is what needs to guide us again.
And it's not a difficult argument to make if you have enough time to lay these principles out.
How do you see that being translated into the principles
that you were discussing?
How do you see those principles making themselves manifest
in the short to medium term on the policy front
in the United States and the foreseeable future?
What's your hope for transformation in a more detailed manner? Because we've been speaking
at a high and broad level, let's say, one of the advantages to being in the political arena,
like you are, is that, well, at least in principle, these principles can be transformed into policy,
and that's a tricky thing to manage. And so what are you excited about on the visionary front,
let's say, on the conservative side? Well, a lot. I think we have a tremendous, and I believe,
an historic opportunity in the days ahead. We have a lot to repair and restore in this country,
and I'm excited because I genuinely believe that as conservatives, we have the answers
to all the great challenges facing the country. Part of the reason I'm excited,
and I know that this can
and will work, is that we sort of have had a trial run
at this already.
The first two years of the Trump administration,
we achieved some amazing things for the economy,
for national security, for the stability of all persons,
the opportunity that they had.
And that is because we implemented some of these policies,
some of this philosophy
that we've been talking about for generations.
We actually did it.
Trump, being that the bull in the arena, so to speak, was bold enough to advance them,
and that's why we had the great results that we did.
And then when we shifted in, I mentioned in the following Congress, in the 116th Congress,
the one before this one, when we had the Republican
study committee working in the minority,
we knew we could not advance legislation to the floor
because Nancy Pelosi, the speaker, would not allow it.
But we generated what we did was get all the conservatives
to work together.
We divided everyone into task forces and working groups
in their areas of expertise and interest
and the things that animated them.
And we created policies and all these various arenas,
model legislation, things that we have,
prepared and ready.
And when we were doing that,
Jordan, we worked with and consulted with groups
along the conservative spectrum,
these interest groups and think tanks
and public interest groups.
And they came together with us in work sessions.
And there was a lot of brainstorming
and collaboration that went into this.
And there was a realist pre-dec core and a real encouragement that developed amongst the
members and these other persons on the outside because they saw that this could come together
and we could formulate a real plan.
So, you know, we published that document.
I told you about the conservative playbook for a Republican led majority and that playbook
is an example of the things that we will advance.
You know, we run in this election cycle on what we call the Commitment to America and that playbook is an example of the things that we will advance. You know, we run in this election cycle on what we call the Commitment to America
and that is sort of our current take on what Newt Gingrich and the Republicans did
back in the mid-90s when they took control for the Republicans at the house first time in 40 years.
The contract with America, but that commitment says to the people,
these are the things we believe in, this is what we're going towards and going to work for.
We're going to be presenting that to the America people over the next two years.
They're going to see a stark contrast between our philosophy and what that produces
and the opposing philosophy of the radical left.
Now, is President Biden going to sign all this into law?
That's a big question that no one can answer except him.
Remember, and this is important to point out historically,
when the conservatives retook the majority under
Gingrich and the team back in the 90s,
Bill Clinton was the president.
He never saw the light, but he felt the heat,
and he moderated, and he decided to work with them.
And so they were able to do some meaningful things
on welfare reform, and they checked off the boxes
on the contract with America.
The question is, would Joe Biden, does he have it within him to do that, to revert to
his previous form, to be more moderate, to work with his Congress and get some things done
for the people?
He's the only person who can answer that question, and it's a real challenge.
It's a rhetorical question, but it's a big one right now.
Yeah, well, the United States, you know, looking at it from the perspective of an outsider
to some degree, I mean, your country is remarkably
functional. And generally, you guys muddle through uphill. And so maybe there's reason for
well, and that's how it looks. I mean, so maybe there's reason for optimism on that front.
If there was intelligent policies that were productive, that were being put forth by the
conservatives, and there were compelling, practical reasons to abide by that.
It's possible that Biden would be someone that could be worked with.
And part of that's obviously dependent on who has the power granted to them as a consequence
of the elections and that doesn't look like that's going to switch.
What do you see, like if you could see what you wanted to have happen, let's say, on the
energy front over the next five to ten
years, what would you envision? Because energy has become a real issue, not only in the
United States, but obviously globally. And so, what do you see? What would you like to see
happen? What do you think is possible on the energy front?
Well, energy is actually pretty simple. We need to do exactly the opposite of what the Biden administration has advanced.
And we have the test case because we can revert
to two years earlier and see what the Trump administration did.
The reason that we were leading the world
and became energy dominant at that time
and we're a net exporter is because we unleashed American energy.
We allowed for the vigorous exploration,
we allowed for production.
We were working to complete the Keystone pipeline
and make the channels of distribution easier.
There's a great demand, for example,
for liquefied natural gas, LNG,
which is a big export product of my state around the world.
I was just over on a congressional trip not long ago.
In southern Europe, we went to
Portugal, Spain and Greece and Croatia. There is a huge desire and need for that to be transported
there. But this president turned off our spickets inexplicably. It's just a terribly destructive set
of policy. So we will go in and reverse it. Yeah. Well, we should point out too for those of you who are listening who are of a more liberal
or progressive bent is that if you really want to serve the poor, there isn't anything you can do that's better for the poor than to make energy because energy is equivalent to work. And so what you're doing by making energy
cheap is expanding the degree to which poor people can work productively. There's
no difference between cheap energy and work. We want energy because it does work
essentially. And so this is another thing that disturbs me and
impuses me so much about what's happened on the left. You know, I used to, and I
was a kid, a teenager,
I worked with the socialists in Canada, and most of them at that point, especially in
the leadership, were old labor leaders. And a lot of these people really were on the side
of the working class. And so, when push came to shove, they were trying to serve the
working class. Now, you could debate the utility of the policies they used. That's not
the point. But when I see the radical of the policies they use. That's not the point.
But when I see the radical progressive types who claim to stand for the oppressed simultaneously
insist that the only way toward planetary salvation is to crank energy prices up, I think, well,
you just have to do a rudimentary economic analysis to understand that if you make energy
more expensive, you put those who are marginal into absolute poverty. That's what happens. And there's a lot of people like that, so it's not that you just
affect a tiny proportion of people. And hypothetically, you're doom-ing and devastating, the very people
that your compassion is leading you to serve. And so that's a great mystery to me. I don't,
it's very, very stunning to me that when push comes to shove, the left
will sacrifice the poor to appease the hypothetical good interests of the planet. And then of course
that doesn't even work because the other thing I learned when I was pursuing the environmental
studies that I pursued was that if you get people past a certain threshold of wealth,
which looks like about $5,000 a
year on the GDP front, they immediately start taking a longer-term view because they're
not scrabbling in the dirt literally to conjure up their next meal.
And so they can start being concerned with, well, really, issues of medium-to-long-term
sustainability, which in principle is exactly what the environmentalists want.
So I read all that and I thought, wow, we could have our cake and eat it too. medium to long-term sustainability, which in principle is exactly what the environmentalist wants.
I read all that and I thought, wow, we could have our cake and eat it too.
It looks like the best way forward to a sustainable natural world is by eradicating absolute
poverty.
Well, what a good deal that is.
There's no people who are absolutely poor anymore.
The natural world is going to thrive in a more sustainable
manner. Who could possibly be opposed to that? And the answer seems to be people who are so
antithetically opposed to capitalism that they would destroy abundance and the planet itself,
just to do in those they deem as evil on the capitalistic front. It's just, it's just, it's breathtaking. And that does open up an
opportunity for conservatives. And so hopefully they'll be there to take the opportunity.
So. Well, that's right. And I think we have to, part of the way we take that opportunity is we
articulate clearly what it is we're about and what it is we're trying to achieve.
And I think that, you know, we have to ask the question, what is the goal of our economic
policy?
What is the goal of tax policy?
Why are we doing this?
Well, we want all boats to rise.
We want more people to do better.
We want to broaden the path.
We had a poverty for more people.
And the way you do that is to allow that economy to thrive.
You get the all controlling centralized governmental power out of the way you do that is to allow that economy to thrive. You get the all controlling,
centralized governmental power out of the way and you allow entrepreneurship to thrive. Again,
that's what built the U.S. economy and that's what we've deviated from at our peril. And I think
the people that are hurt the worst, as you say, are lower income persons who are on that lower levels of the economy because they have less opportunity.
And that breeds hopelessness.
And on all these other things we're talking about, you find dignity and work, and you find
greater dignity and harder work.
That's been our common experience.
That's what life tells you.
And so we need to get out of the way.
Well, an invention too, and people do that.
And adventure is the thing.
Yeah, well, that's the thing is is that that that that eradicating obstacles
on the entrepreneurial and and and business front, let's say, that isn't merely a matter of
economic utility. It's that that means that you clear out the obstacles to people adopting
responsibility and being productive in generous in their own personal domains. And that is where
the meaning in life is situated most fundamentally.
And so it's not merely an economic issue, it's an existential issue,
and a psychological issue, and possibly a theological issue as well.
And that definitely needs to be communicated to young people.
And I think it can be effectively.
I know we're pressed for time today.
And I wanted to close maybe with something also practical
that one of the things I've been doing as I've been going around lecturing is suggesting to my
audience is that they try to find something that's civically responsible to do.
And that would be joining a club of some sort of a church or some organization beyond the family,
let's say, that's not immediately self-serving, that's oriented to a common goal.
And so one thing that might be useful for people who are listening to here is what do
you think young people can do if they want to get involved on the political front?
Because people often just don't know what to do.
So practically speaking, what steps could they take if they wanted to do, if they wanted to start working on the political front? Yeah, there's a lot of opportunities for that,
and I'm glad you asked it. I'm often asked by young people how to get involved. How do I get from
where I am now to where you are? And you know, it's hard work. You have to feel called to it
to a certain degree. We could talk about that, unpack that as well. But the way to find out if you have an aptitude for it
is to go and volunteer.
And there are lots of opportunities in every community
across our country to do that.
You have local, for example, Republican clubs
in almost every county in America.
And they're always looking for volunteers.
And certainly young people who are anxious to get involved
and they'll put your right to work, working on a campaign
and also doing phone things. Let's talk about that really practically. So you go, you take your phone and you look up
Republican, what would you Google and are you looking for a phone number and email address? How do you offer your services?
You could begin at the state party level every state in the United States has its own Republican Party
state party level, every state in the United States has its own Republican party. Look them up online and call them up and say, hey, I'm a young person in this particular community
and I want to get involved. Who should I talk with? And they'll connect you with the local
leaders if you don't know who those local leaders are of the local Republican club. Often
they'll be weekly lunchens and these communities where you can go and listen and learn and
become a part of it.
Look, there's a great need, a great desire for young people to be involved.
When they do show that interest, that excites the older folks who are involved and they'll
certainly find a place.
I know a lot of, I could give you a lot of examples of young people who started exactly that way.
And now they're chiefs of staff on Capitol Hill and they're running large organizations.
It does not take long to move up in these arenas if you really show an interest in an aptitude.
And again, you're willing to work hard.
So we certainly encourage it.
Yeah, right.
So that's worth laying out.
So to all of you who are listening who are wondering what to do. So make that phone call
or go on to Google and do the search and make some contact and maybe be persistent enough to do it
two or three times. Don't just quit if it doesn't happen immediately. It's going to take a while
perhaps to be connected to the right people. And then the next thing to realize is that if you show up
and you're reliable and you do the work that's assigned
to you, you'll be amazed at how rapidly doors will open to you because all of these organizations
are perennially desperate for help.
There's always more work than they can do.
And so if you go there and you do the work and you're reasonable and reliable and you're
able to learn and willing to learn, then what'll happen is there'll be more opportunities than you know what to do with.
And so I see so many young people, I think they're cynical often because they're ignorant
in some real sense.
They don't understand that if they knocked on the door, let's say in this particular
situation, it would open.
And how quickly that would happen.
And so if you would rather do something other than be bitter and cynical
about the current political situation and you're young,
well, you could try getting involved because you'll find out that actually works way, way faster than you think.
And so that's worth knowing and it's worth trying.
And it would be lovely to see a revival of civic responsibility on the local front.
And the other thing I might say about
that too for everybody who's listening, it's something to think about is that there are always
people who are looking for power. And you know, that's one of the things the leftist point out,
although they attribute everything to the power motive, and that's not reasonable. But here's a
rule. All the responsibility you don't take for your own governance will be vacuumed up by tyrants.
That's the rule. And so if you don't shoulder your civic duty, then someone tyrannical will take that
responsibility and turn it into their power and then they will compel you. That's what will
absolutely happen. And so not only should you do this because it might be a great adventure
and because you could get involved deeply in the political world and much faster than
you think. And that's the carrot, let's say. But the stick is, if you don't do it, someone
else will do it for you and it won't be someone you want. So that's how tyranny arises out
of individual atomization and the abdication of responsibility.
It's so well said. In one of the presuppositions of our grand experiment and self-governance here
in the U.S. is that we'll have an informed and engaged electorate and you have a duty as a citizen
to get involved. You have a duty. And to tie it back to the biblical abdication, you also have
responsibility. If you're a if you're Christian, let's say to to be engaged to be salt and light in your community
And by the way what what you said just a moment ago is also a biblical principle if you're faithful and little
You'll soon be trusted with more. I mean it these are just
Principles that bear out with common experience and you ought to give it a try if you haven't that's the encouragement
Yeah, well one of the things that happens in universities that I think so pathological is that young people who are actually looking to shoulder some proper civic responsibility, let's say, because
they feel called to bear some collective responsibility are immediately enticed into political activism
and that stands for political action. And the truth of the matter is, it's not very effective.
It's also morally self-righteous,
often in a appalling way.
And it leads to demonization and polarization.
And an easy sense of moral superiority.
And instead, and what could happen instead
is that young people could be invited to join the political party
of their choice in exactly the manner that you just described
and actually partake in the process itself.
And that's actually more sustaining and more effective than pretending everything so corrupt
that nothing can possibly be changed and waving placards at those you think are agents of
Satan.
So.
Exactly.
And if you go ahead, Jordan, sorry. Well, so we're coming to the end of this session.
I'm going to talk to Congressman Johnson
for another half an hour on the Daily Wire Plus platform
about the development of his particular political career.
And that'll enable us to delve more deeply
into how these things might unfold.
And so if you want to hear that part of the conversation, then
I would invite you to go over to the Daily Wire Plus platform, the Daily Wire Plus people
are making these podcasts, professionally podcast, professionally produced podcasts,
available to everyone free of charge as they always have been. And so thank you to them
for that. But we have this additional opportunity to delve into the biographical details of Congressman Johnson's stellar career, and that should be extraordinarily
interesting.
So, to all of you who have been watching and listening, thank you for your time and attention.
And I would say, think through the things we talked about today carefully.
You know, you are a sovereign citizen in some real sense, right, with all the rights and the responsibilities that go along with that.
And it's definitely the case that you could find the meaningful adventure of your life in the bearing of that citizenship responsibility.
And I don't think there's any reason to be so cynical about the current state of affairs in the West, and particularly in the US, to throw up your hands and say,
well, what can I do about it?
It's like, join a political party
and volunteer your services
and find out how radically your life
will be transformed over like a three year period
because it will definitely happen.
If you're in there and you're committed
and you show up and you pay attention and you're reliable,
doors will open like you can't imagine. And then you can go change the world in the way that it might need to be changed.
And you won't be wondering what you should do with your life.
And so, that's a call to civic responsibility.
Thank you very much, Congressman Johnson.
It was very good talking with you.
And I'm looking forward to continuing our conversation on the Daily Wire Plus platform.
I've enjoyed it. Thanks so much.
Hello everyone. I would encourage you to continue listening to my conversation with my guest on dailywireplus.com.