The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 382. Oliver Anthony with Jordan Peterson: Art, Commerce, and the Religious
Episode Date: September 7, 2023Dr. Jordan B. Peterson and breakout musician Chris Lunsford, better known by his stage name Oliver Anthony, discuss the balance between vision and efficiency in artistic and commercial endeavors, why ...Chris’ hit song “Rich Men North of Richmond,” has resonated so broadly and so quickly, the way honest expression through music can combat demoralization, how politics have become confused with the sacred, and what we can do to restore each to their proper order. Oliver Anthony, real name Christopher Anthony Lunsford, is an American country/folk musician from Farmville, Virginia. He just recently went viral for his anthem song, “Rich Men North of Richmond” – which has resonated across the country for its messaging about Washington D.C. and the state of poverty and mental health in the broader U.S.. Chris has stated his politics as being right down or near the center, though already tribalism has attempted to take hold of or alternatively reduce/dismiss him, all the while “Rich Men” has amassed nearly 60 million views on YT in just over a month, and trended the billboard charts (Hitting number one more than once) since its release. Chris named his YT channel Oliver Anthony Music after his grandfather, whom he has described as a “real 1930’s Appalachian man.” Since his song's virality, he has already been offered – and turned down – an 8 million dollar recording contract, and is making waves as a truly authentic artist both in performance and practice. - Links - For Oliver Anthony: Oliver Anthony Music (Website) https://oliveranthonymusic.com/ Oliver Anthony Music (YouTube) https://www.youtube.com/@oliveranthonymusic “Rich Men North of Richmond” original release https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sqSA-SY5Hro
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello everyone watching and listening. Today I'm speaking with musician Chris Lunsford, better known by his stage name, Oliver Anthony. We discuss the
balance between vision and efficiency in artistic and commercial endeavors. Why Chris's hit song,
Rich Man North of Richmond has resonated so broadly and so quickly. The way honest expression
through music can combat demoralization, how politics have become
confused with the sacred, and what we can do to restore each to their proper order,
looking very much forward to it. So, Mr. Anthony, your stage name, your stage persona is all
over, your name is Chris, I'm gonna call you Chris.
Part of it.
You call me Jordan.
So here's something you might not know about me,
and I don't care, you know, maybe you wanna know it,
maybe not.
I've been collecting country and western music
for about 30 years, something like that.
I had a roommate from Southern Alberta in college
in Montreal. I wasn't really a country in Western fan at that point.
He really liked Hank Williams and I started listening to Hank Williams and I thought,
oh my god, man, this is great.
When I moved to Boston, I started collecting old vinyl records.
Of course, I had records when I was a kid.
But in the 90s in Boston, you could pick up vinyl for like three for a buck.
It was dirt cheap, so I used to go into the record stores and pick up any old weird looking
album usually from the 50s, 40s through the 60s.
And I built a big collection of country and western music.
And then I made a couple of CDs that called Western Blues and was given those out for Christmas Presence and I actually have a Spotify.
I have a Spotify playlist that's 29 hours long now with 600 songs on it that I've collected
for 40 years.
My wife and I listened to it a lot in the cards, real good driving music.
You know, and I'm going to just lift some of the characters that I listen to.
You're familiar with all these guys, but a lot of people watching and listening won't be,
and they should be. There's Hank Williams, of course. Bill Monroe and his Kentucky boys.
Colter Walls, a new guy from Saskatchewan. He's a great young, yeah, he's great.
My son played one of his songs to open my lectures for 11 shows this year. That was really fun.
Johnny Horton
Tex Ritter, Hank Snow, Flat and Scruggs, the Carter family, Jimmy Rogers, the Stanley Brothers, Roy Akkuff,
Roy Akkuff,
Hot Berry Ramblers, Gypsy Kings, Leon Redbone, et cetera. Tammy and I, my wife, we just watched the Ken Burns
country music documentary, which is absolutely great. It's just brilliant. Eight to our
episodes. And I've done a couple of shows at the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville. So that
was fun. There's a great bar there called Roberts Western World that I go to when I go down
in Nashville and they have a band there called Kelly's Heroes.
They did some music for me at the Granule Opera, played a vicious rendition of the American
National Anthem on electric guitar.
They do a great version of Ghost Riders in the Sky, great blues guitar version of Ghost Riders in
the Sky. So anyways, I thought I'd tell you that just so you know that I'm not a Johnny come
lately to the to the kind of music that you can play in and so. Yeah, that's yeah, that's very
very in like with with my listening. So I love the a lot of the older music and older blues like
Delta Blues and that type of thing, but yeah, that's
I wouldn't have guessed that about you so that's that's good to know. Yeah, it's yeah, well about I
About a quarter of this Spotify playlist is Delta Blues 2 because there's a great overlap right because between the
Delta Blues tradition and the kind of music that you're interested in. And it's a...
You saw that too.
I saw that really portrayed well, for example.
I don't know if you've seen the new Elvis movie, a relatively new Elvis movie, which I thought
was great, but it does a lovely job of laying out the relationship between that black
blues tradition and Western country tradition.
You know, it's not a connection that people often make, but there's a real sink there in terms of musical genre, a nice interplay between the different
musical forms, so cool to see.
And of course, we're all the beneficiaries of that, you know, there's American musical
tradition.
So something you may look at adding to your playlist or looking up at, I think you'd
find interesting is, I don't know who the group is in the video
but if you go on YouTube it's called Carpathian folk music and it's usually the first video to pull up under Carpathian folk music
and it's maybe I want to say it's about 45 minutes long and it goes okay and it it it plays out almost like a symphony like it starts
it starts in sort of one element and and then it has its ups and downs
and I've listened to that thing two hundred times. Sitting out in the woods listening
to that, it takes you on a ride almost the way like Beethoven would. But it reminds me
kind of almost a lot of the older country and blues. It's a very weird element, but it's got a lot of that sort of bluegrass elements to it,
fiddle and upright bass and stuff like that.
Y'all to check it out the Carpathian folk music.
I will 100% check that out.
Yeah, one of the things that's really quite a mystery about music and I can't quite
figure it out is, I like classical music. I listen to a lot
of music in the car. Classical music is hard to listen to in a car because it's got such
an immense, dynamic range. But classical music is obviously extremely sophisticated and
complex and brilliant and reaches up into the stratosphere of genius. But there's dead
simple music that manages exactly the same thing.
I mean, Johnny Cash is a great example of that because, well, in the Ken Burns documentary,
you find out when Johnny Cash first started, I mean, his musicians could barely play
at all, you know, they didn't like three chords.
Of course, the sex pistols were like that too.
And weirdly enough, and I don't get this exactly, is that there's one of the hallmarks of musical genius is authenticity and
genuineness, right?
So you can take a really simple emality and you can do something stunningly brilliant with it.
Hank Williams has created that.
And it gives it a depth that's timeless, right?
It doesn't age, which is what timeless means, of course. But it has to be
something like that, genuineness. And it must be something like that that sparked the imagination
of people around your song, right? Because when I was listening to it, I listened to it a couple
of times this morning just to re familiarize myself with it before we talked. And you have a
myself with it before we talked. And you have a genuineness of voice that has obviously struck a chord. And so, while I'm curious about that, first of all, I'm really curious about how you're
doing because you've been like the center of a media firestorm here in the last couple weeks,
and that must be shocking to you. What's that be like and why do you think your song?
What is it about your song that you think you did right that
Contributed to its going viral
Hmm, so I I have taken time to try to to understand that myself
You know the song
The song skyrocketed in a way that it it know, there's been accusations that it was, that
it was propped up, you know, almost that I'm an industry plant because it, it was like
we posted the song on, on, we recorded it on a, on a Saturday. I think he uploaded it
on Tuesday and by Thursday, man, we were, we were on rollercoaster ride. Like, it was
already apparent that things were going,
we're heading in a direction that nothing else on his channel
had done previously, radio, WV.
And yeah, I mean, I guess to answer the first party
a question how I'm doing.
I'm surprisingly very calm.
Like I've been entertained the last couple weeks.
I've been given sort of an unfair advantage
of how the internet works and how narratives are spread
in certain directions to, you know, people form opinions
about things like for example me playing the Super Bowl,
you know, I've gotten, I've gotten a lot of comments
and messages saying that I'm a sellout that I've decided to sing at the Super Bowl.
But that was just an internet meme that someone created on Facebook.
Like, for example, the one, the one that popped up yesterday was that Oliver Anthony stuck at Burning Man.
And people were sending me stuff.
Don't you?
How terrible it was that I'm this like all, you know, burning
man's this satanic ritual place and you shouldn't be there and it like, but if you know, I uploaded
a video of me hanging out with my goats in the woods like, yeah, man, burning man, it really,
it's a, you know, it's terrible being stuck at burning man. But so I don't know, I try not
to take myself so seriously and I've tried not to take the situation so seriously.
It's just, I'm blessed for the opportunity to be here.
I mean, even just being able to have a conversation with you is surreal.
Meeting Joe Rogan was surreal.
Just, the artists that I've looked up to, like Jamie Johnson and Shooter Jennings, and it's
just so weird that they're are phone call away now.
So I'm doing well, as I'm sure you know, the last couple of years haven't been so great for me anyway
as far as my own perception on life. And so this is exciting to have a new opportunity to dive into.
It's what I've been really what I've been wanting to do for a long
time. I've just been so terrified of the idea of doing it. But here I am. There's no going
back now, I guess.
So.
Yeah. Well, that's actually something I wanted to talk to you about because I was reading
when I was doing some background research on you. And this is relevant to the issue
of selling out that you brought up. So, you know, I've worked with a lot of artists, and I've worked with a lot of wannabe artists, too, you know, or at least had contact with them.
And one of the things I've really noticed is that many of the people I've met who are extremely artistically talented
shoot themselves in the foot on the commercial side of things and they do that in three ways
The first is
Four ways the first is they're actually terrified of commercial success and that's actually understandable because
along with commercial success comes a transformation in
in lifestyle and in
social positioning and it's easy to be lary of that,
and there's some utility in that,
especially if you're a private person.
And then there's ideological issues that come up too,
so it's the issue of selling out is a really relevant one.
You know, lots of artists will refuse
to have anything to do with the commercial end
of their enterprise because they're afraid that that will interfere with the flourishing of their artistic spirit and
that's foolish and it's foolish for a bunch of reasons like first of all
why create unless people have access to what you create?
I mean, maybe you enjoy it yourself and not be perfectly the case, for example, with music. But, you know, if you're a performer, in principle, you
want people to hear what you have to perform. And partly, so they can enjoy it, partly,
so you can get feedback, so you can get better. And so you actually want to bring it your
work to the attention of as many people as possible. The people who bitch and moan about
selling out most loudly are
almost always people who've had no opportunity to sell out. Like no one's ever offered them the
chance to be commercially successful. And so what they do is they elevate their moral stance
falsely by claiming that they're the sort of people that would never fall prey to any capitalist
temptations. When the truth is they're not talented of people that would never fall prey to any capitalist temptations.
When the truth is, they're not talented enough or interesting enough for anyone to ever
offer them that possibility.
And then the other thing that creative people do that's a really big problem is they don't
construe the marketing end, the communication end, as another creative challenge.
So if you're a creative person, you actually overlap with people who have entrepreneurial
interests temperamentally, but one of the things you can do if you're creative and this
stops you from selling out is to understand that the venture of marketing yourself and
presenting yourself and developing a professional persona and also learning how to buffer yourself against the
negative consequences of that is also a creative challenge, you know, because you might ask
any creative person might ask, well, if I was going to handle the problem of being successful
creatively, how would I do that?
And then it becomes another creative problem problem instead of like an antithesis
between let's say the selling out capitalism that would warp your, you know, your creative
spirit and the creative spirit itself. So I'm wondering in your situation, I read today
that you had an eight million dollar contract offer that you turned down. I'm wondering
if that's true, if it's true
why you did it, what your alternative plans are, and if you have like a real devout vision
for what it would be like to keep doing what you're doing, but also be successful.
That's a lot of questions.
Oh, that's okay.
I do what I was getting into when I came on the program.
I understand. Yeah, music is important to me individually.
Like, these songs that I wrote for me.
And inadvertently, it has helped a lot of other people,
like not just Richmond, North of Richmond, but I've got to get sober.
Like, that's one that I just recorded on my Android phone.
And if you look through the comments and emails I've gotten, I had a gentleman the other
day at Moayock.
We played at a farm market.
And he told me that his brother had committed suicide.
He had been struggling with drugs for years.
This is like a big, rough guy, like a guy that looked like he could kill me with two fingers.
And we hugged each other as he cried and told me this.
That's what's important to me is like, people are just so desperate to restore some element of humanity back in
our life that we've somehow lost.
So I don't want to make this into some enterprise where everything's about beating the algorithm
and being at the top of the charts and and and posting in social media
just the right time to capture the most audience. Like that, that there's plenty of people who are
out playing that game and they're good at it. And I'd like for them to continue to do that. I
want to I just want to feel like I have the freedom to do whatever I find it is necessary. And
I have the freedom to do whatever I find it is necessary and in that moment of time to impact people the way I have so far with the music that I've produced.
I have something like 21,000 emails right now in my Gmail I've got 2, I've got 2,500
unread messages on TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, and they're not just people telling me good music dude, keep it up. No, it's like
it's paragraphs of stories of like people having to work two jobs because they lost their business
during COVID and their kid committed suicide. And like, I mean, it's just wretched stuff that
it is the full transparent narrative of what a lot of us already see on the surface level
of what's happened the last few years.
And yeah, so I don't know what I want my music to turn into.
It may manifest itself into some form of a non-profit or a ministry more than just me going
out. Like I don't want to, I don't want to just go yell
all my songs in a stadium, you know,
every weekend for the rest of my life.
Like I want this to, to turn into something
that's more meaningful than that.
If that makes any sense.
So.
Well, there's a bunch of things you said there.
I mean, when I started to blow up and started working
in a much more broad public manner, one of the things that was really hard on me was the kind of emails that you're describing.
I'm not complaining about this.
I'm just pointing it out.
Like, I'd done a lot of clinical work and I'd seen a fair bit of misery in my clinical
practice.
I mean, that's really,
that's an understatement. But you know, it was it was limited at most to a couple of dozen people
and then all of a sudden I was doing lectures for thousands of people and meeting thousands of people and also and then hearing the kind of stories that you're hearing from hundreds or thousands of people. And you know, you talked about dehumanization and desperation.
And it's really quite overwhelming to start to see that
in that heartfelt sense you described,
you know, that big guy was giving you a hug and break into tears.
I mean, you meet a couple of hundred people like that
in a week who do the same thing.
And I found that extremely extremely difficult because I didn't really understand how widespread that
demoralization and desperation was and to see that on large scale was really heart-stopping.
That's dangerous. To the point it exists within the music industry like
they say never meet your heroes,
but I've gotten to meet quite a few of my heroes
the last couple of weeks.
And they have ridden the roller coaster
of signing a big deal and playing shows
and being in those contracts and in that algorithm.
And they are, I can't speak for everyone. I'm sure there's
people that love to go out and tour and do it, but like a lot of my heroes and music that
I've talked to are not happy doing what they do. Like they're not happy having to go out.
And so they've told me, let me tell you what our experience, yeah, yeah.
Yeah. Well, so my wife and I have been touring now for four years.
And I'll tell you how we've managed it if you're interested. First of all,
it's a real privilege, right, to be able to go out there and speak in front of thousands of people.
And it's been a real adventure to go all over the world. Now, we have allied ourselves with top-rate
people, and that's unbelievably helpful. So, I've got a personal staff that handles security
and logistics, and they take care of all the travel details, flights, hotels, getting
me to the venue, Tammy and I to the venue. That's 100% off my plate. And we had a rule that we learned
well touring, which was that if you have anyone with you that causes any trouble at all, that
they don't immediately fix. So if they're, if they're troubled, they have to leave. You have
to have people along who are like 100% zero trouble, because it's a lot of work to move from city to city every day
and to be there for thousands of people and you can't have unnecessary trouble.
And then you have to figure out how to time it so that it doesn't wear you to a frazzle.
You can die from an overdose of great opportunities as you're definitely going to find out and
maybe already have.
And so you have to figure out for yourself
how you can take enough time
so that you have that opportunity
to do your creative work and not to exhaust yourself.
And you know, that takes a certain amount of testing
to see where that balance is.
I travel with my wife, that really helps.
We often travel with some friends or some family.
The same rules apply.
We won't travel with people that cause any family. The same rules apply. We won't
travel with people that cause any trouble, but it's nice to have people along because that
keeps you, well, you get to know them better. It's a good adventure for them and that keeps
you together. I mean, it's possible to do this in a way that's like hyper enjoyable and
so that you get an opportunity to play for many people. But it's a demanding enterprise and you have to, 100% make sure that you're surrounded
by people who can be taken off your plate and that you can seriously trust.
And then it can be an insane adventure.
Yeah.
I'm excited for the opportunity to travel. Yeah, like we've had,
it's as you as you're aware of this, like just the initial song broke in so many countries.
I've gotten an outreach. It was a shame that I couldn't that I couldn't travel abroad yet.
I don't have a passport, but like I just got a message last night
from a girl in Rome saying that you know she and her boyfriend have been riding around
all night listening to my music and Ireland and Scotland. Like I'm I do intend to travel.
I just want to do it in a way that is more meaningful than just showing up in an amphitheater
and shouting some lyrics at people and then everybody gets drunk and goes home. I'm sure there's a way I can conceptualize this to have more impact because that's
the importance of the song to begin with is the impact that had. It somehow broke beyond
the political front that has almost encapsulated every part of our society
today, not just in the North America, but really globally.
The message resonated with people in all types of different cultures and countries.
It's like this is this phenomenon of politics almost parasitically capturing the way we
think about everything.
That's a global thing.
That's not just a North American thing at this point.
It's happening very quick.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
So two things on that.
Well, okay.
First of all, one of the things that's happened, I think, is that the sacred has collapsed
into the profane.
And so the political has now become sacred.
You have to have a space for things that are sacred.
So they stay out of the political.
And everything has become too touchy to talk about
because everything political has become religious.
And that's really not a good thing.
It's part of the reason that we need
a religious foundation isn't optional.
I know you talked about that a little bit with Rogan. Now the
other thing that's interesting, you know, you said you don't want to go just to a stadium
and shout out lyrics and let everybody get drunk and go home. And, you know, one of the
things I've also seen that's unfortunate is that many of the artists I've talked to
and these were often people who had stellar, like international careers. They're afraid
and I'm not saying that this is necessarily
the case with you, but I'd like to talk about it with you. They're afraid that their
mere art isn't good enough, given the importance, let's say, of all the political and maybe
religious upheaval there is in the world. But, you know, I actually don't think that's true.
I don't think that I've gone to a lot of concerts and I've watched the kind of quasi-religious nature of a great concert. And I actually don't think there's anything
more important than an artist can do than for in your situation, for example, is to give the best
damn concert you possibly can. And I can see you're torn between that to some degree,
because you say, well, you don't want to go and shout out a bunch of lyrics so that people can get drunk and go home.
But then that what you've done has spoken to many people very deeply all around the world.
And that what you've done was a genuine expression of what you really believe to be true.
And I would say that if you go to a concert and what you do is you really sing what you
believe to be true.
There actually is no better service
that you can possibly do to people
no matter what it is that you're doing.
Like I don't think there is anything
except for what's truly religious.
I don't think there is anything that supersedes
Genie and Art, not in terms of potency and truth.
And I think you're seeing that
because of what happened in relationship to your song. And I think that's also partly because of what happened in relationship to your song.
And I think that's also partly because of that other point you made, which is, and the
same with the song about sobriety is you're actually writing your songs.
I think Hank Williams did this and Johnny Cash too, unbelievably effectively, the genuine
songwriters.
They're not writing to max out the algorithm and they're not, they don't have contempt
for the audience.
That's not what I mean.
But they're not doing it, they're not doing it for their own fame. They're doing it to express
something approximating the truth in the way that they see fit with you. That's obviously going
to be musical. So one of the things I would say is don't be thinking there's any higher purpose
you can serve than the genuineness that you bring to your art,
man. Good musicians are, I think people die without good music. You know, it's so important.
We have no idea how important it is. It's, it's, it's, I agree. It is to humans.
It's obvious to me that music is, I mean, every culture that we know of, whether they're,
I mean, every culture that we know of, whether they're, I mean, music is something that manifests itself in any society.
And the more that people suffer, the more they lean on music, you know, some of the best
music's been written in the worst of times.
So I definitely agree, like, there's an element of healing to it.
And one thing that I've noticed about the music industry, just in my mouth and I'm in
the business, you know, one of the things I've noticed is that we prioritize, as with
a lot of things in art now, like it's, we prioritize through the system of the music industry,
we prioritize what can make the most money
and not necessarily what can resonate with the most people
or what's the most genuine and authentic.
And so like in country music,
now I love 90s country music as a kid.
I remember riding with my parents and my grandpa
and listening to the Alan Jackson's and George Straits
and Bubba shot the jukebox and like those are just fun,
like just good songs
but somewhere country music and I think music in general has really lost a connection with people
because it's become it's become too commercialized and not not enough about and so that's kind of like
yes I did I've turned down a lot of offers the latest one I saw was a hundred million that's
certainly not the case, but
yeah, I have had millions of dollars thrown at me and I've had everything thrown at me the last
couple of weeks. But I guess the reason why I want to stay on my own path is that I'd like to inspire
other musicians to do the same thing. The know, like the story of kind of how all this came about is just, I mean, most of the
music is from my Android phone that I just recorded, put it on YouTube.
I ripped the way file, uploaded it.
There's a service called distro kid you can use.
You pay like a nominal fee annually.
They don't take any of the money and it automatically puts it on all the platforms for you.
Spotify, Pandora, Apple, YouTube, music.
Like, I would like to see more people do what it is I did.
Like I'd like if anything that I'd like it to inspire other artists to not worry about
going through a record label or worry about trying to find a big booking agency, but just focus more
on creating whatever it is you feel compelled to create and get it out there and not worry
about everything else because obviously that's what we're so desperate.
Like even just the phenomenon with podcasts in the last five years, like the fact that
people can sit here and listen to us talk for an hour and a half.
So intently, like, that's been me.
I listen to podcasts talk for an hour and a half. So intently, like, that's been me. I listen to podcasts all day long.
People are just, at this point, desperate for authenticity
and desperate to connect with other human beings
on the level that we haven't been able to connect on very well
in the last 10 years because of technology and politics
and government and just sort of this weird separation
that's been put between us and COVID certainly accelerated
that to a whole new light like it's been it's a very weird world. We live in it today
And so yeah, that's kind of my thought process. I guess to answer to kind of wrap up that on on me in my future
It's it's more about
Trying to create a new way of thinking with music and really it's an old way of thinking
But it's just bringing it into bringing it into our time, you know?
Okay, so that's very interesting, you know?
So it's definitely the case that
the plethora of publishing platforms now allows artists
like yourself, like Joe Rogan, let's say,
to circumvent the intermediaries in a way that has never before been possible.
And Rogan is a good example of that because all Rogan did for his podcast, all,
and this is what CNN objected to was, he just invited people to his discussion
that he wanted to talk to, and he talked to the many listeners and he tried to learn.
And at the time that Joe started his podcast, he didn't really need either the fame or
the money because he was already famous and he had the money.
And Rogan isn't someone who's primarily oriented in that direction.
Anyways, we can talk about him a little bit in more detail later too, because he were just on his
podcast. And he took that advantage of going directly to the consumer, let's say, and
circumventing the intermediaries. And he hasn't wavered from that at all, although he's also partnered
with Spotify, right? And then I started putting my lectures
on YouTube in 2013, because I was curious about it. And I've taken advantage of the same
opportunities that you've described and it's been great. I would say, however, and this
maybe has, maybe this is relevant to personalizing things rather than thinking about them in the abstract.
Now, in the last year, I partnered
with the Daily Wire Plus people, eh?
And we really thought about that for like nine months
before we decided to do it.
It was a real intense negotiation,
good faith negotiation on both sides,
but it was a very intense negotiation.
And it was kind of dicey,
because on our side, we thought, well, do we want to partner with anyone at all? And if we do,
do we want to partner with these reprehensible, you know, right wing wing nuts, Ben Shapiro and his
lot. And then we also thought, am I going to ruin my podcast by allying it with something that's somewhat more corporate in its orientation.
And that's a real danger, you know.
And we did have a bit of negotiation around that when we first started our deal too, because
there were ways that the more corporate guys there started talking about content providing
that risk turning the podcast into something
that was sort of legacy media polished. Now, on the upside, they've radically improved my
ability to do podcasts. They set up studios for me all around the world. I'm in Florence
right now, the DWP people set up a studio for me here so I can do this. They've increased
the quality of the podcast and they've left me the hell alone completely.
If I wanna do something and I suggested to them,
they almost invariably say yes.
They're a lot of fun to work with,
they're very entrepreneurial, they're not corporate,
they don't think of content production,
they don't talk down to the audience, that's been great.
And they've got rid of problems for me
rather than introducing corporate problems
and I would say the same thing with live nation. You know, I had my doubts about live nation
because of their stranglehold, let's say, on ticketing, but there are a lot better than some of the
corrupt production people we've got involved with in countries that aren't as well developed
because we've hit some fraudsters.
And so the reason I'm telling you all this is fairly straightforward, you know, on the
one hand, you have the advantage of going direct to consumer in the way that you've described
and that gives artists a tremendous amount of freedom.
But if you're very, very careful and judicious in who you're partnering with, you can find people who will open up new avenues of opportunity
for you without interfering with whatever it is that you value and what you have to bring.
And you have to, the devil's in the details, man, because it boils down to the character
of the person, the specific person or persons that you're dealing with. I also have a tour manager,
John, who's an absolutely amazing manager. He used to be a comedian, like a traveling comedian. He was on the road all the time, so he's on the road for like 20 years, and he's been superb.
So you can find people to work with who will expand your commercial reach without
You can find people to work with who will expand your commercial reach without
putting you through the grinder and killing the goose that lays the gold nags. But
but it requires a lot of discernment and care. Yeah, discernment is an important and important concept with all of this. Yeah, because every decision, every word you speak and
every decision you make can very quickly
change the course of everything.
In this world, it is interesting.
Yeah, you bet.
Yeah, and I guess the beauty too with Joe Rogan and with you and with others is that you
conceptualized and created your masterpiece and then decided to bring in something to
help supplement that and reinforce it.
And so that's, so maybe that is something I could, you know, it's like you didn't, you didn't
approach the daily wire of like, hey, let's start a podcast and like you already sort of created,
you sort of created the format and they just respectfully added to it. And so maybe that's a good
way to go about doing it even with mine. Yeah. Like, well, one of the things, one of the ways you can tell if you can do that. So in
your situation, you're in a fortunate situation at the moment because at this moment, because
you can say no, people are coming to you instead of you going to them as you just pointed out. And so you have the fortunate opportunity
to set the terms at the beginning and to think through what those are.
And you already told me to some degree is like,
you don't want to subordinate your music to profit.
You don't want to become a generic act and you don't want the corporate
world interfering with your ability to speak directly to people. You know, those are
principles that are actually worth writing down, you know, like if you, and I often recommend
this to people in general, imagine, and you could do this, it's a very useful thing to do.
Imagine that you could be exactly where you wanted to be in five years.
Now, you've got these stellar opportunities in front of you.
So then you've got to allow yourself to imagine like you're a kid who's pretending or
daydreaming and thinking, okay, man, I can be wherever I want in five years.
I'm a musician, I've already got an audience, I've got an audience of people who want to hear
me, I've got a lot of commercial options.
And then I have a private life that I enjoy.
Okay, how could I bring all of those together in the optimal way?
What would that look like?
And that's got to be, that's, you know, there's this line in the gospel that says that
you should ask and you'll receive, you should knock and the door will open and you should
seek and you'll find.
And that's actually an injunction to a kind of meditative prayer.
And the idea fundamentally, and this works like a charm, is what the hell do you want?
Just imagine that fortune could conceivably smile on you in the way that it has in the last
couple of weeks.
And you could set up your future so that it was literally your dream. What would that look like?
Like you obviously like performing. I mean, if you, we could do that a little bit right now. If you
imagine you could have a year where you had exactly the right balance between performing and
having a private life. Like, what size audiences do you like playing for?
private life. What size audiences do you like playing for?
Yeah, that's kind of the challenge. I love the intimate sea of a smaller.
I mean, we did the farm market we had about 12,000 show up and like,
and even with that, despite everyone telling me I was a full for doing it, I stayed and did like a meet and greet after for about four and a half hours, but it gave
me enough time that I was able to, I'd like it to stay at a level, I'd like to have opportunities
to be able to meet people.
So 10 or 12,000 people.
I mean, we've got, we've got a few coming up that size. You go back to your point about trying to sort of
paint a picture, a mental picture of five years ahead.
I know you had talked about that at some point in a lecture
and that's actually, I give you some credit
for me sitting in the chair I'm in now
because I have done that from your recommendation.
I did your self-authoring program
and all maybe two or three years ago. And you know, the thing that, the thing that really
spoke to me the most though is your story about your friend Chris because I'm Chris.
Oh yeah. And I was, oh really, oh man. And I was, you know, you talked about your friend Chris being an aspiring musician and getting
high all the time.
And like, and I, and if I recall correctly, Chris had had was it, from what I could interpret
like with my own experience, maybe he was even experiencing some like cannabis and
doocycosis and all.
I remember the story
I think it was that was in the other room and like
Yeah, that
Yeah, I realized like maybe I'm maybe I'm Chris, you know
So yeah, well, there's part of the reason I wrote about my friend. He eventually committed suicide
About the age of 40.
He phoned me one night.
He had a bunch of his short stories published in a small book in an anthology from Northern
Alberta.
He's actually a pretty good short story writer.
He was a good photographer too.
He was quite a brilliant man, this friend of mine.
He did smoke too much pot and it wasn't good for him. And maybe there was something else going on there too, but he became mine, and he did smoke too much pot, and it wasn't good for him.
And maybe there was something else going on there too, but he became very bitter and resentful.
And partly because he regarded his own ambition as evil, he was one of these demoralized young
men, an early version of it, very sensitive person, and easily made guilty.
And the constant harping about the evil patriarchy
and the terrible consequence of male ambition
just absolutely did him in.
And it played into his own unwillingness
to accept responsibility in a kind of pathological way.
It was very sad.
Like I knew him for years.
And he lived with me in Montreal when he was older
in his 30s, my wife and I for a while.
And we kind of, we tried to get help and get his life back on track and did to some degree.
But then he left and went back to Alberta.
Anyway, he committed suicide the day after he had phoned me and told me about having this
publication.
He went out in a truck and hooked a tube to the exhaust and in his truck and smoked cigarettes up in the mountains and, you
know, just let himself go.
And it was quite the bloody catastrophe, but it was one of those situations where, yeah,
his life was too aimless.
And he didn't take his own potential within of seriousness.
He regarded his ambitious, his ambition as evil.
He kind of became a nihilistic Buddhist
in the worst possible sense.
And, you know, and drifted was really a real waste of talent.
And so it's a hell of a thing to hear you say,
you know, that you saw some him and you,
but it's very, very common.
You know, and it is a lot better to develop a vision.
You talked about this self-authoring program.
It's, you need a vision, man.
And so now you said, you talked to 12, you sang to 12,000 people and not was good, but
you liked the personal contact with the meet and greet.
So my team sets up meet and greets after my event at every event.
And so that's a premium ticket.
And you know, you can, you can, what would you say, satirize that as excess capitalist exploitation.
But you have to parse people in some manner when a lot of people want to see you.
And it's also the case, you know, that people want to enter into a reciprocal agreement.
And so if they're really happy with you and what you're doing, they also want to contribute.
And that's part of reasonable trade.
Now, I love the meat and greets.
I only meet people for about 15 seconds probably.
And I've, but I've learned to put the mideas very quickly
and to get a bit of an interaction.
One of the things I've learned, for example,
is that when people approach you and put out
their hand to shake your hand,
that's going to happen to you on the street all the time now. Obviously, you can match your tempo to
theirs like a dance. You move towards them about as quickly as they move towards you. And
I always ask people what their name is because even if they're nervous, most people can
remember their name. And once they tell you that, once they tell you that, that sort of
puts them at ease. And I really like to meet greats, you that, once they tell you that, that sort of puts them at ease.
And I really like to meet in greats, you know, because it also helps you remember who you're
that it differentiates the audience back into individuals.
And you should always be communicating with individuals, you know, as soon as you start
talking to the crowd, a something Kierkegaard pointed out, as soon as you start talking to the
crowd, you're immediately lying.
You have to be talking to the
individuals in the crowd. And so I think you can have your cake and eat it on the touring front.
You know, you can sing to large audiences, but you can keep that intimacy if you structure it
properly. And then you also don't get on your high horse too badly because, you know, people are
always coming up to you and telling you, well, like the story that you just told about the guy who came up to you, you know, with his brother who was in such
trouble.
And here in those sorts of stories from people and seeing them open themselves up like
that, it knocks the ego out of you.
That's a really important thing to have happened to you when you're touring too, because when
you're the center of that much attention, you know, you can get puffed up.
That's so dangerous, man.
It's so dangerous to have
that happen. Yeah, I don't know. I don't never want to sit in a position to where I feel like
I'm better than anyone that I'm singing to. Yeah, I don't like that ego that you see come with
people that are in celebrity status. Like it's, um, it's a tragedy because it,
ultimately, it ends up, the person changes into something completely different
than what people fell in love with them for in the first place.
Yeah, I don't see myself any different than anyone else
that I'm, that I'm, like,
and that's what's been so weird about this whole thing anyway,
is like when I am approached,
and of course maybe I need to shave my beard
and cut my hair and wear a hat.
And then I can go out in the public for a couple days. But I kind of stand out in a crowd anyway.
My height and red hair and all. And so yeah, but it hasn't been a, at least not yet, it hasn't been a
bother. It's been, it's been nice to know that it's been nice to know that it has made a positive impact
on people.
I don't know.
I just felt so hopeless for the future for such a long time that seeing people, just
seeing people feel something that I haven't seen in a long time means a lot.
It means a lot more to me than anything else,
than the money or whatever, you know.
What made you, you said that for a long time,
you would felt hopeless about the future
and you alluded to this song that you wrote to about sobriety.
What and also about identifying to some degree,
let's say, with my friend, Chris, what do you think?
Why do you think it was that tempted you to feel hopeless about the future?
And how have you dealt with that?
To the degree that you have and how have you dealt with that successfully?
Um, I, the hopelessness, I think comes from, from seeing us all, like,
It comes from seeing us all, like we find fault in each other instead of finding common ground in each other anymore.
Like to your point about Chris, and like with, you know, and that's one of the verses
in the popular song is that it references young men committing suicide.
This ridiculous rate they are today because, um, yeah, we've, and I don't know why it is.
I think it's, I think it's almost been, again, through social media and sort of the parasitic
way that it alters our thinking.
Like by just, we read every day things that just change the change our perception of each other, but we've gotten to
a point where we almost, it's easier for us to try to find differences and faults in each other
instead of similarities, which we all hold much more common ground than we do difference.
We're all very biologically similar and we all have to acquire some amount of money. Most of us have ambitions of raising a family
or at least have developing friendships.
I'd say 90% of the people that at least exist
in North America are very similar in almost every way.
But it's like we've somehow found the nitpick arbitrary
differences that we hold and we exploit those
and blow those up.
And so, yeah, it feels hopeless because we are more divided today than we've ever been.
Like everything's politicized, everything is about one party or one person trying to hold
some moral high ground over the other just for the sake of being able to point their finger
down at them. You know?
And it's like, what the hell are we doing?
Like, we've got a, we have just an incredible opportunity to live in the place that we do.
The fact that you and I can, can use free speech and free thought,
because speech and thought are one and the same.
Like, if, if people aren't able to have open honest conversations with each other,
they aren't able to conceptualize new ideas that takes us into a better place than
whatever place we were in previously. That's human existence 101. So to see that being threatened
and to see us all sort of being put into these categories in these political buckets, you know,
in these political buckets, you know. It's like even just our own,
even the personalities of people have been weaponized
against each other.
You know, you made a good point.
It's been a couple years ago, maybe,
where you were talking about,
and I'd never looked at people this way prior,
but you were talking about how,
just in people's own persona and their personality
and the way they think,
people can be more conservative or liberal.
Like entrepreneurial, imaginative people can be more conservative or liberal.
Like entrepreneurial, imaginative people are typically more liberal and like in a business,
you've got the CEO is typically going to have a more conservative perspective and the
guy coming up with a new idea is the entrepreneurial guy, he's going to be more liberal.
And it's like, it seems like they, whoever this day is, the man behind the curtain, if
you will.
I don't know if that's just, I don't know who, I don't know how to explain that side of
it, but it seems like things have become very much like taking the imaginative creative
person and weaponizing him against the more traditionalist grounded person.
Instead of them using their strengths together to sort of build a brighter future, it's about
taking each other and seeing how far we can take this thing.
But ultimately, my hopelessness comes from like, what is this country or what is this world
going to look like in 20 or 30 years?
Like, what world are my kids going to live in?
Is it going to be, are they going to be allowed to say what they think?
Are they going to even be able to walk on the sidewalk? I mean, like, you know better than most about just the atrocities that went on
100 years ago, 150 years ago, like, we're so close to falling back into that.
That's really where my hopelessness comes from. But I do believe things can be turned around
for the better in a short period of time. It's just people have to sort of retrain the way
they think about each other. And ultimately, the way they think about themselves, you know.
God, I've only been on Twitter two weeks and realized Twitter is not a good place to be.
People seem to spend a lot more time finding fault in others on Twitter than in that's
time they should be spending with their families or spending working on a hobby or a side business or, you know, like a lot of our time is wrapped up in so much in social media and it's become very toxic, you know.
Okay, so, so a couple of things there. So in terms of keeping your feet on the ground when you've become a celebrity,
become the center of attention.
You know, there's a tremendous emphasis
in the Judeo-Christian tradition
of attending to your own sins, right?
Of taking the log out of your own eye
instead of worrying about the spec in your neighbor's eye.
And certainly, you said you regard yourself
as just another person among people.
One of the things that's very necessary to do if you are in a celebrity position is to spend
a fair bit of time meditating on your own inadequacies, like not in an involuntary and self-denigrating
way, the way that it would be associated with depression, let's say, but in an open,
id, and humble analytic way so that you remember that you still, that you have things to
improve, right? And that that's your problem and your responsibility. It's actually a
relief to do that. And so that's like a meditative or religious practice. And then you talked
about the relationship between the creative entrepreneurial type and
the conservative managerial type.
And that's partly what I was alluding to, let's say, when I was talking about the partnerships
that I've established with people like CAA and Live Nation and the Daily Wire folks.
Those relationships have been made personal, you know, rather than organizational.
And so although they are,
the people I'm working with are members of large organizations,
the relationships themselves are personal,
and they're based on trust.
And because of that, I've been able to
benefit from the managerial capabilities of
the people that I've been working with.
I learned that actually from the man I was apprenticed to
as a graduate student at McGill, Robert Peele,
who's still a business associate of mine.
Robert Bob was a very good,
he was a very good administrator and manager
as well as a very good entrepreneurial scientist.
And he was very good at managing his lab
and keeping track of the necessary corporate and administrative
elements that made the entire process move forward.
And it's that's harder for creative people because those are sort of petty details,
but you can learn how to value that.
And it is like the creative person learning to value the conservative, you know,
it's the same thing.
The person who can put things in place incrementally and move forward, move things forward efficiently, but perhaps lacks vision. It's easy for the
visionary to be contemptuous of that, but it's a big mistake, just like it's a mistake
for the conservative type to denigrate the visionary type, right? Because now and then new ideas
need to come along. But by personalizing that, you can attain that kind of harmonious
production that you described.
And personalizing it also helps remove some of that temptation to denigrate the side that
isn't temperamentally aligned with you.
So if you're careful, you can have your cake and eat it too.
You talked about this self-authoring.com program.
You said you had developed a couple of years ago, three years ago, so you developed something
of a vision for yourself.
So do you remember what the details of that vision were and why you decided to do it?
Yeah.
So I'd use the couple of years.
I'd use the self-authoring and I also use
the personality trait for my wife and I
before we got married.
Oh, understand myself.
Understand myself.
Yeah, okay.
So we've used both of those.
So we could figure out how we had just moved in together
and we had maybe been dating a couple of years prior to that
and we were getting
ready to get married. Yeah, I was like trying to figure out how we could, you know, like any
couple when you're living together things are much different than when you're not living together
and you really learn how you have to sort of work around each other at home. And so yeah, we use
that. But yeah, self-authoring was more of just trying to figure out where my direction was because I
But yeah, self-authoring was more of just trying to figure out where my direction was because I had. I'd moved, I dropped out of high school. I moved to Western North Carolina, sort of in this pursuit of adventure, I guess.
And then I'd had the head injury and I had to move back.
And so everything that I had sort of planned, like my vision of what I thought my 20s going into my 30s would look like
completely flipped upside down.
And I had landed the sales job
still kind of in the industrial construction industry
and it was paying the bills.
And I got to talk to people every day.
And so I was like, well, I'm pretty cool with this,
but this really isn't what I want to do with my life.
And so yeah, I did the self-authoring program
and realized that like, I really needed to make
some big changes in my 20s.
And part of that was selling our house.
We bought some acreage and you know, moved into a, and this was, this really almost cost
me my marriage.
But I was like, hey honey, we're selling the house and we're buying some land, a mile off the road that's full of ticks and mosquitoes and snakes. And we're going to live in a
camper for a couple of years until we can try to afford a mortgage. But that was the beginning of
kind of the vision of all this. I really wanted to be, it's funny. I was having this conversation
with my mom earlier, but she said, you know,
I remember you saying the other day that like you really said that you by the time you
were 35, you wanted to have freedom of finance and be able to do not necessarily retire,
but be able to do whatever it is you wanted to do, which was for me like we want to get
into regenerative agriculture and I'm very interested in forest-raised poultry and I've
loved being in nature, where I seem to thrive.
It was changing my direction away from like,
I don't need a big mortgage, I don't need a car payment.
I had a nice or truck I sold and I bought
this old suburban for $2,000 and started driving it and so we got rid of our car payments
We got got out of our debt
You know all we have is just the land payment
So it's about like taking my finances way down to where my bills are low
I don't need to make as much money and I can try to have some freedom to pursue like that's really what I got out of it
I'd say yeah
So it really helped well that's a radical change.
It's very easy to get caught sort of in that monotonous everyday.
And then it's easy when all your friends are buying new stuff
and you know, they're sending you credit card offers
in the mailbox every day.
And it's like it's very easy to get wrapped up in sort of this world
where you have to work.
You have to work some terrible, you know, seven to five that you don't like and able to try to like
live some life you don't really even want to live.
So it is very important, like I,
yeah, I found a lot of benefit out of that.
Like I think in an ideal world,
you could just sit down with a notepad
and do exactly the same thing to the nice thing
about self-authoring is that it sort of lays out
the steps for you to where you can just answer those questions in a way and be able to reflect back a lot easier.
For somebody like a Joe Schmoe, like me, that's not in psychology, it just speeds up the
process tremendously, of trying to figure out whatever it is.
You get caught up in the day-to-day of life, and in five years, ten years later, you've
lost whatever it was you were ten years ago.
It's very easy to just stay in the present moment
and not take the time to reflect into the past
and the future in a way to align yourself
with whatever it is you really wanna be.
And I think that's where anxiety and depression
and divorce and anger and all these things,
like these terrible things manifest themselves
into a family household and the mother and the father fight and they get divorced and the kids are like things fall apart because there isn't
a, there, people don't take the time to, to just figure out like where is this train really headed,
you know? So it is, I'd highly recommend people do that.
That's the famous line that people perish where there is no vision, the people perish.
And that's literally the case because there's a bunch of reasons for that is if you have
no vision, you have no well-developed aim.
And if you have no aim, you have no direction.
And that means you're lost.
And if you're lost, you're anxious.
And so then you're enveloped by anxiety.
And then if you have no aim, you have no hope.
Because hope is always experienced in relationship to a name.
And if you're in a marriage or other collective, and you have no collective aim, then you're in conflict because nothing unites you.
And then, you know, when my colleagues and I were developing the self-authoring program, one of the things that really struck me to the core and them too was the fact that,
you know, you said that for a Joe Schmoe like you, the self-authoring program was useful because
it broke things down. It's like, well, everybody needs that. You know, it took me 10 years of clinical
work and training graduates and undergraduates to understand how to break down a vision of the
future into its constituent steps.
And that's partly because we are stunningly bad at that in our culture.
You know, and I did some research into the history of the education system to find out
why that was because I thought, how the hell can we have an education system where I
can have top-rate students who've been through 15 years of school who've never been sat
down once and told right a vision for your character and your life.
And I found out that the education system itself, which was based on the Prussian military
model, was designed, designed consciously by people who regarded themselves as fascists.
This was in the late 1800s who wanted to produce
obedient workers who couldn't think for themselves. So, hey man, guess what? 150 years later, that's
exactly what we've got. And it is a stunning fact that people aren't encouraged, well, first of all,
they're not encouraged at all, but second specifically, they're not encouraged to take that time to dream and to say to themselves, look, okay,
buddy, here's the deal. You can assume that the world wouldn't object too dramatically
if your life wasn't an absolute bloody catastrophe, 100% of the time, and you could take a little
time to develop a vision about what you wanted. Now you said, you discovered some things that were actually somewhat difficult to pursue.
You had to give up your house.
You had to give up your car.
You had to move into the woods.
You sound like an introverted person to me.
Do you remember your score on the understand myself?
Do you remember where you are for injuring your extroversion? I believe that it actually showed I was more extroverted.
Yeah, I can see the introverted side,
but at the same time, I love, again,
it's like I found a lot of, as much as I hate,
when I was in my sales job,
I hated sales budgets and numbers
and I hated talking to my boss about,
oh, we've got to grow this account this much.
Like to me, all that was just horse shit.
I just like to go out every day on job sites
and like just meet people from all around the country
and talk to them.
And it just, the money came in because I connected
with those people and they said,
well, we'll buy stuff for me because we like talking to you.
And that's kind of, but yes, I don't know.
Yeah, yeah, well that's the for me because we like talking to you. And that's kind of, but yes, I don't know. Yeah, yeah.
Well, that's the right way to sell is to make relationships.
Well, I'm wondering like, are you, are you, do you like crowds
in groups or do you like meeting people one-on-one?
And are you interested in people or do you like socializing?
I think I'm very, I'm interested in people.
I think, I think my draw to wanna be more excluded from society
is because of some of the pitfalls we talked about earlier.
To me, yeah, I find it depressing sometimes to be,
especially here in Virginia,
like because, so like, and this is a phenomenon
that happens everywhere, but especially on the
East Coast in like semi-rural Virginia, everything looks exactly the same now. It's a Starbucks,
and a Target, and a multi-family project, and like, all the town, whatever sort of uniqueness
and diversity each town had is sort of gone, everything
has just sort of become this like retail dystopian nightmare, you know.
And I see a lot of farms being bought up and converted into neighborhoods and subdivisions
and because farms can't make the money that if they're not through a commercial contract.
And so yeah, just like, it's just depressing to see the way
the landscapes change over a period of time.
And so I think that's really what motivated me to go.
And you know, even like we're here in Richmond filming today.
And Richmond is a gorgeous city.
And it has such a deep history.
But yeah, like it's not what it was.
And you start to see a lot of homelessness.
And it's evident when you're out in public that things aren't the way they should be.
How did you negotiate with your wife?
You said you had to go live in a camper with the ticks and the mosquitoes.
So, you said you developed this vision, but then obviously when you were implementing it,
there were things you had to give up and vision. But then, you know, obviously, when you were implementing it, there were things you had to give up and sacrifice. And you said, you know, and you could certainly
understand why that might cause some consternation in the marriage. How did you negotiate that
and work through it?
Um, I guess like, I, I focused very much on painting a picture to her of what life would
be like in five or ten years and not what
it would be like for the for the first five years, you know, like we both have a vision of
she's a she's in veterinary medicine where we both love animals and so
we've had this sort of dream and part of this and this is another like part of what I am excited
about being able to do again outside of the music like, take some of the money that I'll make from the streaming
and we wanna start some form of a nonprofit or a,
some sort of positive benefit toward,
I have this, I'm not to go off track, I answer,
but yeah, I have this sort of vision.
And even back then, this is what we dreamed of doing.
We started at 5013C, 501C rescue with the friend of ours
for dogs and cats back then.
But it was sort of this idea of if we were able to get
acquired this property, we'd be able to,
in the next five or 10 or 20 years,
be able to do what we really wanted to with it.
And if we didn't do that, and if we stayed where we were,
we would be more comfortable and things would be better in the short run. But really, we would be looking back in 30 years, really regretting
that we hadn't done it. And that sort of the way I pushed it to her. And she was able to
— Okay, okay. — You know, and it's funny — That's really cool, you know.
— I can find a parallel in that, like now that we're sitting here talking, I've been watching
your Exodus series. And I can find a parallel in that and your story
and you're sort of, you do a great job of,
and it's part of what's inspired me to get back
in the scripture the way I have
because you've done a great job of finding
the practicality in scripture
and presenting it in a way that it's very easily understood
because so much of the Bible is interpretation and trying to understand the deeper meaning and things and so yeah, I can I think like it's just
it's important for people to and this has been said many times in many ways but it's important for people to
whatever it is that really tugs at their heartstrings whatever that sort of and you know maybe it's lost through the education system, but like as a child, we all have
these dreams of whatever it is we want to do.
And life seems so limitless and there's so much potential.
And it's like, you've got to find a way to just to face that fear and pursue it, no matter
what.
Yeah, I mean, the worst thing you could do is I have a song called Hell on Earth that
I just kind of threw together.
It's an Android recording, but it sort of
reminisces this idea of like, a lot of people die and go to hell before they ever hit the
ground. It's one of the lines in the song, but it's like people get stuck in this sort
of monotonous work. Let me drive, to work down the interstate and get pissed off and flick
everybody off when they cut into my lane and go work this stupid job that I don't like so I can come home to this
stupid house that I don't like and pay so I can pay all these stupid bills that I don't
want to pay. And it's like deep down inside of them, there is some sort of ambition or pursuit
that they've that maybe they've even forgotten about, but the subconscious has such a weird
way of holding on to things that sometimes even our cognitive memory can't recognize. For me, it was like,
I didn't want to die not taking that chance. Time is very precious. It seems like we live for
a long period of time, but really 80 or 90 years in the grand scheme of the world's existence is just a blip on the map
And so like we do have to take I mean you don't know if you'll even live to see tomorrow
So yeah, you do have to pursue whatever it is that you feel compelled to do in that moment when when the times there yeah
All right, so you got about 10 cool things there. So you mentioned Exodus
So one of the things that happens in Exodus is that
Moses is being a shepherd, right?
He's off with his Midianite father in law,
Jethro, and he's married one of Jethro's daughters
and he's away from Egypt.
He's just minding his own business.
And that's when he's wandering down the pathway
by Mount Horib, which is the center of the world.
It's Jacob's ladder.
It's the place where Jack would plant his beanstalk that stretches to heaven and reused that symbol consistently in the Bible.
Anyways, that's when he notices something off to the side that glimmers and glitters and that's the burning bush.
And he could continue just walking down the path, let's say as a relatively satisfied shepherd or maybe dissatisfied shepherd, but he
decides to go investigate this thing that attracts his attention. Right? That's the key aspect of
the story. He decides to go investigate what attracts his attention. And as he gets closer to it,
he understands that he's on sacred ground. And when he continues his pursuit, God himself speaks to
him. Right? And that's when Moses becomes a leader.
And that that's the story.
That's the story of life is, you know, you said people are all tangled up in the nine to five.
And they're not paying any attention to anything, but immediate practicalities,
even though they're dissatisfied with them and they're ignoring what's calling to them.
All right.
So Moses doesn't do that.
And then he develops a vision,
and that's the vision of the promised land,
and everyone needs a vision of the promised land,
because as we already said,
that protects them from anxiety and gives them hope.
And then you talked about what you did with your wife.
Now, when little kids play house,
and this particularly interesting to me,
because I used to play house with my wife when I was like eight, you know, and this is how kids play house and this particularly interesting to me because I used to play house with my wife
when I was like eight. You know, and this is how kids play house. Like if you're a boy and
you're playing house with a girl to play house properly, this is the rules. You have to come up with
a vision that you offer the girl or she has to do the same to you. She, they have to say, well,
look, here's the house. You can maybe sketch it out on the ground or we'll pretend that this,
playground structure is the house and there's the door and there's the rooms.
And you be the mom and I'll be the dad.
And here's what we're going to play out happening.
And the girl has to say, yes, I'm on board with that.
And then you enter the same fictional landscape.
And you said, and you noticed, you have to do the same thing
with your wife.
It's exactly the same damn thing is that once you develop a vision for yourself, let's say in your imagination, that's what calls for you to you. It's based on what you really want.
You have to develop that vision, then you have to say to her, look, here's what I see five years down the road. And is there a manner in which what you see and what you envision, and that
was, say, your wife's concern for her animals, and so on, the joint interest you had in that,
is there some way that you have a vision of five years down the road that we could bring
together that we would both be thrilled to play out that we could commit to, right?
And so that visionary practice has to extend within the marriage
and then you get to play house and then you get to play.
And that's a hell of a lot better than beating each other up
and using force and compulsion.
Well, those are the options, right?
As far as I can tell, it's slavery, tyranny, or negotiation.
And if you negotiate in a visionary way, then you get to play. And if you get to play,
well, then you're not in that hell on earth that you describe, right? You're as close to the opposite
as you can get. So you obviously manage that successfully. And so I presume. And what is your wife?
What is your wife think about the way this vision is unfolding? Yeah, well, it's, um, it's in the present moment, she's, she's very excited.
Like, um, neither one of us had any idea that any of this would happen the way it did with the music.
But as far as the, yeah, we're excited.
We're excited to.
as far as the yeah we're excited we're excited to it's the last few the last few weeks have been so difficult to interpret anything because she's you know she's pregnant now with my
would'll be my first son I've got I've got two daughters and so this will be my first boy so like
the last couple weeks have been spent more about trying to figure out what we're going to name
the little rascal than anything else
But yeah, like it's we our vision I think for the next 20 or 30 years is is very similar in what we want to do
It's you know, we want to make sure that our children are brought up in a way that they get to experience nature and get to get to
Sort of have some of the
imaginative and
And like you said even just some of the playful nature that children have.
We don't want them to, we want to do what we can to try to protect them from being so institutionalized
at an early age and to sort of the system that you describe and the way modern education
works.
And we want them to be able to pursue whatever, you know, like we're very excited about
opportunities with our children and with our family and
Yeah, we want to we have this vision of
I
Don't know exactly how to work out. There's a some there's a model very similar that Robert Kennedy Jr
Describes called a healing center, but I think we want to incorporate animals into it as well to where it's
But it's we want to incorporate animals into it as well to where it's, but it's, we want to use our property. Maybe we even try to purchase another piece of property
just through this nonprofit. But I have this vision of sort of creating a model that can
be replicated that involves regenerative agriculture, people that are suffering with
PTSD and mental and people that have just getting out of rehab and there's
studies that show that working,
well, hard work in general helps
anxiety and depression, but then
being out in nature doing it, like,
I think there's a place over in Italy
that does this that takes kids
and that end that have depression,
anxiety and suicidal thoughts and all
and sort of works them on this vineyard for a period of time.
And it's got a very high success rate.
And so yeah, we have a vision of trying to take whatever has been produced from this.
And we want to sort of light a fire maybe that will hopefully light other fires.
And this can become something a lot bigger than just what she and I want to do, you know,
with our world.
But yeah, it's about trying to sort of, we both are very like-minded in that bigger vision.
It did take some time, it's very difficult for anyone in today's society, including
me.
I'm just like anybody else, but it's hard to, sometimes it's hard to, how would I say it?
It's hard to take away the immediate gratification
of whatever world you're living in now
and those comforts and being able to somehow put those
to the side for something that doesn't even exist.
Like it's a terrifying thing to make that leap.
But I'd say the point, there's no going back. Well, look, look, it is a
leap of faith. And you have to, you have to have, first of all, you have to have
faith to do anything because you can't do anything unless you have faith in it. And so
maybe you have faith in your nine to five routine. And you think that's the best
that there is. And that's faith too. Because like you said, you might be run over
by a bus tomorrow and who the hell knows what's going to happen. You're going to put your faith somewhere.
So then the question is, where should you put your faith? And one answer to that is security,
or hypothetical security, but that seems to me to be a stupid answer, because there is no security.
So then if there's no security, then where do you put your faith? And then I would say,
well, you put your faith in what beckons? You know, and music beckons to people and beauty beckons to
people in art and justice and truth, like these eternal varieties, the path of heroism beckons,
these things call, right? And that's the burning bush. And you have to put your faith in something
because you're ignorant and you don't know everything, so you have to take a leap.
And it sounds to me that one of the things
that you and your wife figured out
is that you should take a leap into the unknown
to the spot that beckons, right?
And those are those things that call to you.
You said unconsciously that won't go away,
that won't stop bugging you like Jiminy Cricket,
you know, your conscience calling you to,
that's what you're supposed to put faith in. And that's part of the classic representation of
God in the Judeo-Christian tradition. Like God is the voice of conscience, that's what the Prophet
Elijah establishes. He's not out in nature, he's not in the thunder, he's not in the earthquake,
right? He's not Gaia, he's not even the cosmos. God is what beckons to you from conscience and what calls to you
and you ignore that at your peril and your
song you said hell on earth is like hell on earth is where you go if you don't pay attention to what your conscience tells you and to what beckons and that's the truth and it's also the case you know
if you get tangled up into that routine,
you hate that industrial routine, predictable industrial generic routine, and you're pissed off
going to work and you're giving everyone the finger and you're resentful and bitter,
like you're one step away from wanting to turn everything into hell just to get revenge for your
miserable life. That's the story of Cain, by the way, because it's Cain's descendants, right?
Cain gets better and it's Cain's descendants that first make weapons of war.
You know, in the aftermath of Cain's descendants,
well, the thing that happens after the things that happen after the story of Cain and Abel,
right, the Fratric side and then the degeneration into
murderousness is the flood that wipes everything out and also the power of babble, which is this
terrible technological construction that you were referring to, this terrible generica,
you know, mindless generica that spread everywhere, that posits a mere technological solution,
a technocratic solution to every problem.
Those are two various forms of hell.
And this is very real, you know,
and well, it's real enough to base your life on.
I believe that's what we're experiencing today.
Like I think that what you said
is exactly what's happened today.
And when I look at Republicans and Democrats in 2023,
that's what I see. As I see, people who are bitter and angry and disgusted with a system that isn't serving
anyone correctly, but instead of us being in the same way that in a business, someone
with a more conservative mindset and someone with a more liberal mindset could use entrepreneurial
and traditional and organizational skills to build a strong business, which is what we
should be doing in our political climate and in our country.
We're using our bitterness as a weapon against each other.
It's been interesting.
I think obviously a lot of people understand what it is I'm trying
to say or what my message is within the song, but it has been interesting seeing both sides
also attack me, misinterpreting that I'm identifying with the other. You know, I've had, well,
like for example, I've had, even just recently, I've had some conservatives give me grief
for making the comment that were
stronger or something to the...
This was in the middle of a concert and I think I said to strength through diversity,
which really resonates on exactly what that point is that we need to have people that
think differently, use those strengths to work together in a way that makes us all stronger.
But I think people are so used to hearing that as a sort of a left wing rhetoric that they
immediately identified it as that.
And then on the flip side, I've had the left very much attacking me as being sort of this
right wing, far right wing, whatever.
And you've experienced this yourself.
But at some point, we've got to figure out a way to, we've got
to figure out a way to, for us as a, just us as a society, maybe find a way to, to leap
out of that. Like what we're, what we're facing in today's world is much bigger than, than
that, that, that, that is important. It's important that we have politics and that we have
a system in which we decide how
different ideas are implemented in the government, but it can't rule us either.
We've allowed it to not sit here at the wayside, but we've allowed it to almost encapsulate
all of us.
It's become the ceiling under which we live under.
I've had people say that I'm a fence sitter and that I need to have some sort of call to action.
And I guess like if there's anything that I would respond to that with given the next 20 or 30 years to look like.
And there's an important verse that painted the mind.
This is in Matthew 22, it starts in 34, but it's where the Pharisees are questioning Jesus on
like her, because even throughout the Bible there are contradictions obviously, and people
have different forms of opinion and different ways things are worded even throughout the Bible, there are contradictions, obviously. And people have different forms of opinion
and different ways things are worded
even throughout the Bible.
But he says,
a Pharisee,
after Jesus' teacher,
which is the greatest commandment in the law,
and Jesus replied,
love the Lord your God with all your heart,
with all your soul and with all your mind,
this is the first and greatest commandment.
And the second is,
love your neighbor as yourself.
And like as simple as that is, if we could just find a way to make those two commandments,
even outside of religious boundaries, just if we could just, if we could learn to make that our
priority and then base our differences beyond below that.
You know, like God is here,
our love for each other here
and then below that is trying to find a way
to integrate our differences in a way
that everyone can live a better life.
Like it would resolve a lot of the conflicts
that have become like way over-conflicted, you know.
Okay, so I think you're, I think you pointed to in some ways, I don't know if you could
call that the most crucial, the most crucial of lines in the biblical corpus, but it's damn
close because what's happening in that story, as you know, doubt, no, is that the Pharisees
describes the lawyers, they're. They're kind of the political
class, right? They're the privileged class. And what they're trying to do is they're trying
to trap Christ into making a heretical statement so they can kill them essentially or at least
throw them in prison. That's the plan. So they've set up traps, which is exactly what that
question is. And he does this incredible slight of hand,
which is a mark of staggering brilliance, instead of taking the Ten Commandments, which are the law,
right? The Moses established law and saying, well, this one's, what they want them to do is say,
well, it's number four that's most important, because then they can say, well, you don't think
number one through three or five through ten is important. And so it's off to prison with you, buddy.
And so they think they've trapped him because they put him in a place where there's
nothing he can say that won't get him in trouble.
And what he does is conduct a little revolution ethically right then and there and say, well,
if you arrange those 10 commandments and you abstract it out the gist, the essence,
it would be twofold,
and one of the essences is that you should put the thing that should be at the top, at
the top, and that's God, and that's the logos, and that's the truthful speech that
Winodder changes possibility into the order that is good. That's what the logos is. That
has to be at the top. It's the same
as putting freedom of speech and religion at the top. It's the same idea. And that love of God
then becomes the expression of the fact that human beings are made in the image of God.
That has to be at the top. And then allied with that, Christ says, so that's the vertical dimension,
it's like the vertical dimension of Mount Sinai. That's the vertical dimension. You look up, you aim up, and then the horizontal
dimension, the collective dimension is you have to understand that everyone else is a
reflection of the same, of the same divine value that characterizes you. You have to treat
everyone and I've been trying to work through that technically. And it's like, I don't think there is any difference
between treating yourself properly
and treating other people properly.
And part of the reason for that is purely practical.
It's like, think about it this way.
You are very badly outnumbered.
There's one of you and eight billion other people.
And so if you mistreat other people, if you put yourself
first, that is going to come to haunt you man in a way you can't possibly imagine. Whereas
if by contrast you treat other people as if they're as valuable as you in every interaction
you have, people are going to be so thrilled to have you around that they're going to be extending you the same luxury constantly.
And so perversely by stopping focusing on your own narrow self interests and by inviting
other people into the game, everyone will have more and so will you.
And I actually think that's technically true partly because you said earlier in our conversation
that people have this difficulty when they have to sacrifice the present for the future, right?
And the thing is when you start to think about the future, what you're doing is saying, well,
the 50-year-old me, the me that's 10 years down the road, is just as important
as the me that's here right now.
And so is the 60-year-old me.
And you have to construe yourself as a community that iterates across time.
And then you have to take that whole community into account.
And if you do that, it's the same as taking other people into account.
And it's the proper moral orientation.
And it's not proper for arbitrary reasons.
It's proper because if everyone did that, the world would become peaceful and abundant.
And we could live in something approximating harmony.
And many of the problems that be set us would merely as a consequence of the better governance
that would emerge. Many of the problems that are plaguing us would merely as a consequence of the better governance that would emerge,
many of the problems that are plaguing us would vanish.
We've been working on this enterprise in London called the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship,
trying to develop a vision for the future. Let me tell you one thing about it and ask you what
you think about it. So we've been trying to figure out how you tell the real leaders, you know,
let's say someone comes to you and says, I've got a vision for the future. And you might
say, well, those are kind of a dime a dozen. How the hell do I know that you're not just
another manipulator or, you know, in it for your own narrow purposes? How do I know I
can trust you? And so I've been trying to work through that. So here's some possibilities. You tell me what
you think about this. So I would say if if the person who's developing the vision is trying to impose
their vision on you by force, then they're not good leaders. And if they're trying to terrify you
into adopting their vision, so they use fear, then they're not good leaders. They're good leaders if
they offer you a vision like you offered your wife, which is,
here's a possible game, what do you think of it?
And would you like to voluntarily play?
If someone can do that, then they're a leader you can trust.
At least, you know, assuming they're playing a straight game.
And so the rule is, if the person is using power
and compulsion or fear, then their vision is unreliable.
And so I think that's even true.
If there is a crisis, you don't get to terrify people.
They have to invite them.
So what do you think about that?
What's your first response to that?
Yeah, I think that I'd say that it's obvious that at the core of anyone's motive is really either love or hate.
It's something that's obviously benefiting people that people are excited to promote themselves.
But then there are a lot of things you see implemented that are,
they can be very well disguised, but at their core, they are fear-based.
Either in a sense of intimidation or in a sense of maybe false sense of urgency.
And I've experienced that myself now, with my career opportunities like you've got to do this now
And it's perceived in a way that's supposed to be helping me, but it really is a it's a it's driven on it's driven off the
human emotion of fear and so I think that's
That's the way to
Ultimately understand if something if something is like in your case if something is
understand if something is like in your case, if something is genuine and authentic, the real thing is what, yeah, what human emotion is it being driven off of? Is it being driven off
of love and ambition or is it being driven more off of hate and fear? I mean, that's really the
core of everything in the world, right? But yeah, I say that's trying to just talk to us.
I said that is a whole nother animal,
but ultimately everything.
Yeah, it is.
It's all driven off of basic,
everything's driven off of very basic emotion.
I'd say at its core, you know.
Well, and you said false sense of urgency.
You know, I actually think this even applies
in a true sense of urgency, you know,
because the climate people, for example,
might say, oh my God, there's an apocalyptic catastrophe pending.
It's real, and it's so urgent that here are the following measures must be taken.
Okay, so we could take that argument.
We could say, well, look, even if it is a true emergency, let's give you that, which isn't something
I'm generally willing to do, by the way, but in any case, well, for the sake of argument, we'll say,
okay, there is an actual emergency here. I would still say, if your response to that emergency,
is that you're now willing to wield fear as the cudgel of power, then you're too little a man for the jaw is that if the crisis
is terrified you into becoming a tyrant, then you're facing a dragon that you can't defeat.
And so you're not the right guy.
I think even when there is a crisis, you should lead people with faith and hope and not with
power and fear. And that's a way of
distinguishing the real true leaders, let's say, from the false prophets, so to
speak. That's how it looks to me. Yeah, I agree. Yeah. Hey, so I wanted to ask you, I
want to ask you about Rogan just out of curiosity. You went on a show. I've
could be in there three or four times. I've got to know Joe a little bit. What was that like for you and what do you think Rogan? Yeah, I love Rogan's really cool. He's just a and not like I
said, I've met so many of my heroes, I guess he'd say they're all just very down-the-earth people like
which is refreshing to see that you know you hear horror stories about certain people
presenting a sort of characterization to the world of being one thing but then behind closed doors. There's
They're this sort of like monstrous ego-tistical
Creature that is is unapproachable and not really human-like and so yeah, it's nice that every but yeah, I love Rogan. He's
I was impressed at his
The way he does the way he conducts his business.
It's very streamlined and it's, yeah, he has a, has a small staff.
He's very straight to the point with everything.
It's like, it's, it's nice to see.
And I think that's what's brought him the success he's had is that he hasn't, he hasn't
turned it into sort of this, he could make it a lot bigger and, quote, unquote, better than it
is, but he keeps it very just simple and real.
And so yeah, I enjoyed meeting him.
We had a great time when we were, that was my first time off the East Coast.
So we were in Austin, obviously, and we did the Joe Rogan podcast.
And then that night, I connected with Tom Segura, who's another great, like I can't say
enough nice things about Tom.
He invited us to the mothership to what we thought was going to be just to hang out and
meet everybody.
And we only flew one guitar, and I was scared to fly my resonator guitar there.
I just figured somebody would steal it or we'd get crushed or something.
So we only flew my guitarist guitar.
So we had one.
We get to the mothership and Tom's like, man,
you really ought to get up and play a few songs
at the end of my set.
I wasn't going to say no.
So Ron White was there.
And Ron White takes my guitarist in his car, flies across town,
like not even necessarily figuratively speaking,
but they get to his house and back in a short period of time.
And five minutes before we go up and so we went up and just had a blast.
It was just an incredible weekend.
All right, it wasn't even on, it was a Monday and Tuesday.
It was just an incredible time we had there.
It's one of those stories.
Well, that's insanely fun. Yeah, yeah, It's one of those stories. Well, that's insanely fun.
Yeah, yeah, it was one of those times.
So yeah, everyone we met including Rogan, just good,
good down-earth people.
Yeah, every time I go to see Rogan,
and this is really the truth,
it's like I breathe a sigh of relief
when I get into a studio because, first of all,
he's insanely funny,
and that's always such a relief. But also,
I know perfectly well that I'm going to talk to someone for three hours and I'm not going to have
to be have my snake eye open, you know, looking for serpents because Rogan is just exactly who he is.
And like he'll push back and he has his opinions and he's a hard-headed bastard and all of that. But he's not a Pharisee.
He's not laying traps for you to step into so he can look good at your expense.
He doesn't do that. And it's such a bloody relief to talk to him.
And I'm sure that's a huge part of the reason that he is so successful is that people can trust him.
And as far as I can tell, that trust is warranted because every single situation I've seen Joe in and I've seen him in a lot of situations
and some pretty intense ones and challenging ones. He doesn't get edgy. He isn't ego-tistical.
He doesn't defend himself. He's just like calm and together and probably his fighting
background has helped him without too, you know, because it's so, yeah. It's hard to intimidate Rogan.
Yeah, yeah.
So, yeah.
And that was part of it for Joe.
That was part of my, I think.
That was part of my thought process going through this.
Like, I questioned whether I should even do a podcast at all because I'm not, I'm
not a public speaker, but, you know, or at least I guess I, I'm not really even a musician.
I mean, our first, you know, our first paid gig was the, was the farm market, the big, the big farm market with 12,000 people. So it's kind of like, maybe I am a public, I don't know what, I'm not really even a musician. I mean, our first paid gig was the farm market,
the big farm market with 12,000 people.
So it's kind of like maybe I am a public,
I don't know what I am at this point,
but I remember that.
Right, right, right, but you have to find out.
Within those first couple days of everything blowing up
and like we were getting flooded with requests
for interviews and podcasts, and I remember telling my buddy,
and I was joking it, like I had no idea it would turn into this, but I said, I want to do Joe Rogan for my introductory.
And I want to do Jordan Peterson, like, to try to unpack all of this. And then I'm going to call it
good and let that be that. And so like, here we are. I mean, it's, uh, it's, yeah, it's crazy.
It's still surreal that you and I are talking like, it's so funny. I'll tell you, since we're talking
about my wife's, um, um, and I mentioned this on Joe Rogan that I drove her crazy listening to camping with Steve,
YouTube videos at night before he went to bed.
And so I got to meet camping with Steve.
He and I have connected and talked, and he's just awesome.
But she doesn't know your name, but she would get driven crazy.
Because anytime I'm in the house, like cook and dinner or doing anything,
I've got philosopher man on. And that's, she'd say all you're listening to philosophy for man again
But I'd listen to your stuff for hours every night and so it's just again
It's just crazy that we're sending your evidence conversation, but I told her I told her I was going on the Jordan Peterson podcast
And she said Jordan Peters. I said, you know philosophy for man
So you have to apologize to her for me. Oh, well, yeah, well, that's pretty pretty,
it's pretty funny. All right. Yeah, well, you know, that's, yeah, well, that's so interesting.
Well, it's so interesting too for me to see that, you know, that you developed this crazy vision
a few years ago, and now all these surreal things are happening to you. And I actually think that's
how the world works, man. I think the world has a real dreamlike quality to it, you know, which is why we dreamed to try to figure it
out. And that your dreams call to you. I mean, that's what the psychoanalysts taught. I certainly
learned that from Freud and more even from Carl Jung, you know, that your dreams, you
can dream the future. In fact, that's how the future comes about. It's either you
either dream the future or you let it turn into a nightmare. Like those are the
options. And so you dream the future by asking yourself what you want, assuming
that you're trying to take care of yourself. And you do that in a way that
brings other people on board. You know, with this arc enterprise in the UK, we're
trying to develop a vision that that when people hear they think, geez, you know, I'd make some sacrifices to be part of
that. I'd put some work into that. They're not trying to hit me over the head with a
cudgel and they're not trying to fright me. They're trying to invite me to the table,
right? They're inviting me to the discussion. And that's really what we're praying and
both metaphorically and literally to do is to say, look, man, if we got our act together, if we were all visionaries and
we told the truth and we cooperated properly, there's no, we could make the desert blue,
right? There's no limit to the problems we could solve. We don't have to run around
like chicken little, claiming that the sky is falling and, you know, put all these limitations
on ourself and doom the third world to pennery and starvation and assume that there's too
many people on the planet.
We could just shoulder our damn burdens and walk uphill properly and fix the place and
we can do that.
And if we don't, well, we'll get what's coming to us and we've had that happen a couple
of times in the 20th century and that wasn't so pretty and so hopefully we'll be smart enough. God, I hope we're smart enough not to do that again.
Yeah, I mean that, there's there's verses and ecclesiastes that talk about
repetition throughout time, but there's always that same that same driving force and that element that
created the Soviet Union and created so many nightmares before it and after it.
Like that still is just as much present today as it was then.
And it's like if we don't, yeah, it's like you have to be proactive at
keeping that balance, that harmony there, because the political climate in the world
we live in now is benefiting a handful of people.
And it seems like that handful of people is doing everything they can to keep the system
in that sort of disorder.
But if somehow if people could, and you're right, and it's like you talk about imagine the power of a
The power of imagination, you know, but it really is the truth
It's like if people could just figure out yeah in their own space
How to make things better and how and just even have a vision of things being better and we and just a certain amount of people did that
Like that's all it takes and then a lot of the yeah a lot of the
like that's all it takes. And then a lot of the problems that we talk about,
like even in politics and all,
but almost would almost resolve themselves
just inherently from that.
From people taking responsibility.
Well, that's right.
Well, there's another scene in Exodus
where that's actually laid out.
It becomes part of the principle of
subsidiarity, which is a core element of Catholic social doctrine and a
fundamental element of genuine conservatism, which is that if you build a
hierarchy of responsibility, so individual, marital, familial, community, state,
all of those levels, and every single level takes its responsibility.
There's no reason to have a king, and there's no desert, right?
But and the rule is something like this is every bit of responsibility that you refuse
to take on your own behalf, on behalf of your family, let's say, or your community, that
responsibility will be taken up by tyrants
and used against you.
And I think, well, how could it be any different,
different, right?
Because if you leave something necessary,
just lying there on the table,
it's just an invitation for a thief to steal it,
like obviously.
So yeah, you make a vision for your own life and you take responsibility because if you don't,
someone else will steal.
Someone else will steal your destiny.
Someone else will steal your soul.
And it might be a handful of people or it might be the dread spirit that's driving their greed.
And that's something whose hands you do not want to fall into. You know, you'll
end up on the road to hell, you know, or contemplating or committing suicide or torturing people
and that's probably, that's probably not the vision you want to pursue. That's for sure.
Yeah, because it's very contagious.
All right, sir. Yeah, it's very, that energy is very contagious. Yeah, like if, I mean, just think about it,
if, if, I mean, just going back to our conversation
about commuting on the interstate,
but yeah, just somebody cuts somebody else off
and that, it's almost like they hold onto that.
And then they event, whether they do it consciously
or pass it aggressively, at some point,
maybe it's to their boss or their kids or their coworker,
but then they kind of pass it off on somebody else. And it creates creates this. It's everything's very much more, it's very connected in
a way that we don't really see on the surface levels, you know. Yeah. Yeah, that's for sure. Yeah,
I had a vision of that here recently, you know, so people think, well, I'm just one person
in a massive eight billion, you know, what can I do? But imagine this, imagine a globe,
okay, with points on it, and then all those points are networked together, you know? Okay, so now
imagine you're one of those points on that globe. Now, when you zoom into it from a distance,
that point will be the one that's closest to you, you know, so it looks like it's the top of a kind of a rounded,
kind of like a rounded pyramid. That's a way of thinking about it.
So you're at the center of a web of a thousand people,
because you're gonna know a thousand people well
in your life, at least.
You're gonna have an influence on them.
And then those thousand are surrounded by a thousand each.
And so that's a million people,
one person away from you,
and it's a billion people, two people away from you, and it's a billion people, two people away from you.
And that's where you are.
You're in the center of the world in that way.
You, a thousand people, a million people,
and then a billion people.
You're at that center, and everything you do echoes.
And the world's set up like that.
So we're each a center where everything we do echoes.
And that's a terrifying thing
to realize, right? Because that means whatever happens is on you. I was reading this Don Stiemsky
quote the other day and writing about it said, he has a father there, Zosemah, who is the spiritual
guide of this, I think it's Elijah Alliotsia, who's a monastic, monate in the Brothers Karamazole, which is a great book,
and Zasama tells Aliyosha,
you are responsible not only for everything you do,
but for everything everyone else does.
And you think, Jesus, that's a completely observed
proposition, but then you think, you know,
well, you think about it this way, man.
If you were a really, if you were the worst person
you could be, and that's something to think about it this way, man. If you were a really, if you were the worst person you could be,
and that's something to think about, if you were the worst person you could be, you could produce
a lot of hell in misery. God only knows how much. A lot of people would be way worse than they are
because of you. Land maybe, you know, infinitely worse. But if you were the best person you could be,
a lot of people who are bad wouldn't be nearly as bad as they are.
And so when you see all this misery around you and all these miserable people, you've got to ask yourself, you know, how much of that is a consequence of the things that you've left undone or the things you've did.
And man, if you have any sense and you really think about that, that'll terrify you right to the bottom of your soul. And that's a good thing. It's a terrible thing. You know, but it's a necessary thing. And that's
and that's why I just the the more I haven't the more I've thought through sort
of even just what it is you said now it's there has to be something here and
honest and righteous at the top of our focus collectively in
order to maintain that. But that's yeah, I mean, so yeah, that's really the
that's that's the importance of that's the importance of having of idolizing
God at the top of that structure is that's the only way I see that purity and
that honesty being maintained collectively among the group of people. But yeah
that's a great way that's a great I'll analogy with the spiderweil. I like that.
Yeah, yeah, what's a very good vision. Oh, well, and I think I think what you
close with there is correct as far as I can tell, like that's the insistently repeated message
of the biblical corpus and all the works of wisdom that surround it is that you have to put
and all the works of wisdom that surround it is that you have to put what's appropriately ultimate at the top.
And that is something like the sum of all that's good, right?
The sum of bonimates.
That's a definition of God.
It's truth and beauty and justice and mercy all united into a single character.
That's a way of thinking.
Character you're supposed to embody and put at the top, which is the same as celebrate or worship
Yeah, I think that's right. Look, we should stop. I guess it's 107 minutes into this 90 minute
podcast and it was really fun talking to you
I it's really good to meet you and I would say man
Congratulations on your success. Congratulations on developing your vision
Congratulations on your success. Congratulations on developing your vision.
Congratulations to you and your wife
for having enough sense to knock your heads together
and come to something approximating a consensual solution.
And to getting over your resentment
and to having your dreams come true
and it's not a weird thing that that can actually happen.
That's for sure.
Yeah, it's a really, I'm excited to see what happens in the future. Yeah, and
likewise with you, congratulations on even your recent success. And I'm
excited to see I know that you're you're in the midst of a lot of different
battles. And so I wish you the best with all of my keeping my prayers. And I
hopefully we'll be able to keep in contact moving forward. I'm excited. Yeah,
well, yeah, well, there's something exciting about having an adventure that's crazy enough,
so you literally don't know what's going to happen next. I mean, that's, that's a good way to keep
you on your toes and not resentful. It's like what weird thing could possibly happen now.
That's a real adventure, man. Yeah, no kidding. All right, so for everybody watching and listening, I'm gonna continue talking
to Oliver Anthony on my
On the YouTube on the daily wire plus side of this
Platform or this interview. We're gonna talk a little bit more about autobiographical issues
Which is what I generally do there. Thank you to the film crew here in Florence for making this possible today and for daily wire plus for facilitating it. And thank you very
much for talking to me today. And good luck keeping your head straight through this crazy,
this crazy, salient forth that you're embarking upon. Bye-bye everybody. Thank you.