The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 560. When Does Masculinity Become Toxic? | David French
Episode Date: July 7, 2025Sparked by French’s recent New York Times article, “The Democrats’ $20 Million Man Problem,” he and Jordan Peterson discuss the societal failures contributing to male alienation—fatherlessne...ss, loss of purpose, overmedication, and a culture that increasingly pathologizes masculinity. French shares personal insights as a father, veteran, and conservative commentator (Who is regularly published in Liberal outlets), and the two expand on themes of demoralization, the need for intentional rites of passage, and the psychological appeal of figures like Andrew Tate. The conversation closes with a stark agreement—we urgently need to reach young men with empathy, structure, and a meaningful vision for life. This episode was filmed on July 2nd, 2025 | Links | For David French: On X https://x.com/davidafrench?lang=en Read David’s work on the New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/by/david-french#latest Read David’s most recent book, “Divided We Fall: America's Secession Threat and How to Restore Our Nation” https://a.co/d/1Ne3VBS
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I reached out to you for the podcast because I read an article you wrote in the New York Times recently
entitled, The Democrats' $20 million man problem.
The most positive article that has been published about me in the New York Times.
Yeah, I really do feel like a lot of the things that are ripping America apart will begin to ease if we can deal with this loneliness,
this alienization, this lack of belonging.
How we got here is quite the bloody miracle.
People were celebrating the demise of men or denying the demise of men or beginning to characterize traditional masculinity as inherently toxic.
And what that told a lot of young men was not,
well, you have a problem.
And instead was telling these young men,
you are the problem.
Hello, everybody. So a small miracle occurred at the end of May this year.
The New York Times wrote a piece that featured me that was positive, or at least mostly positive,
and it was entitled The Democrat' $20 million man problem.
It was written by journalist David French,
and David had written a couple of pieces about me,
and some positive and some less so.
And I thought it would be very interesting to talk to him
about the Democrats' $20 million man problem.
Now we ranged much more widely than merely that,
but that's the focus of the conversation, so join us for that.
I felt that the Democrats' investment of $20 million to solve their problem with men was money spent so absurdly badly
that it was a kind of staggering miracle.
And I thought we should we could have a conversation about all of that because you're
obviously concerned about the Democrats' man problem but more deeply you have the sense,
not to put words in your mouth, that something is amiss on the masculine front,
and you're also at odds and ends, let's say,
about who men should turn to.
Right, right.
Well, you know, let me just start off
with the way that I started off that piece.
And there's a very memorable moment for me,
and it was not the only time
that something like this has occurred,
because I've been writing and talking about
the challenges that men,
and particularly young men, are facing for a long time.
I mean, I was sort of standing there,
jumping up and down, going, young men are in trouble,
young men are in crisis for a long time.
And around 20, oh gosh, 16, 17, 18, I began to encounter a lot, young men are in crisis for a long time. And around 20, oh gosh, 16, 17, 18,
I began to encounter a lot of young men
who were saying that you had really impacted
their lives for the better.
And I began with a vignette about a former Marine
who was driving me somewhere and started talking
about how you had really changed his life.
I believe the phrase he used was saved his life.
And I was really curious about that.
And so I asked him how that happened.
And he was talking about when he got out of the service,
and this is something as a veteran that I have seen
with a lot of soldiers, sailors, Marines,
when you leave the service,
one of the things that you lose
is your sense of daily purpose.
Especially if you've deployed and you've been down range,
you have incredible sense of purpose,
even though it's very, very stressful,
it's very, very difficult, it's very, very scary,
but you have this real purpose.
And you come home and you leave the military
and you begin to lack purpose, you lack direction,
and you know where that takes people.
It takes people into bad places.
And he talked about,
this must've been right after your book,
12 Rules came out,
and he talked about reading that book
and how just that very simple thing
of the making of your bed
and the adjustment of how we viewed the world
and the intentional acts of service
or kindness to other people,
really kind of was like a reboot for him. any intentional acts of service or kindness to other people
really kind of was like a reboot for him.
And that always stuck with me
and it stuck with me for two reasons, Jordan.
Reason number one was just the sheer power
of somebody caring, okay?
And this is something that is a huge problem.
So many young men, as you know,
I'm not gonna tell you anything about young men
you don't already know,
but so many young men do not have fathers.
They do not have male role models.
And so that fact that a man cares
and wants to see them succeed
and wants to see them succeed in the right way
is incredibly important.
And then the other thing that really stood out
was the way in which your communications were then
were not trite self-help, although you had some basic rules,
but you really dove deeply into the philosophical reasons
and even the religious or scriptural reasons
why you articulated these points.
And so two things were happening at once.
You were saying, I care.
And you were giving a sophisticated enough approach
that said that I'm not patronizing you.
I'm treating you like an adult.
And I think those two things at once was kind of,
for lack of a better term,
like the alchemy or the magic of the moment,
because, and as I wrote,
a lot of people on the other side of the cultural spectrum
were, the last thing they were doing
was delivering a message that said, I care.
In many ways, it seemed as if people were celebrating
the demise of men or denying the demise of men
or beginning to characterize traditional masculinity
as inherently toxic or inherently problematic.
And what that told a lot of young men was not,
well, you have a problem, which a lot of young men knew.
I do have a problem failing to succeed at school,
failing to get some real purpose.
And instead was telling these young men,
you are the problem, which is a totally different thing,
which is saying there's something wrong with you.
And that was, I think,
an extremely destructive development in the culture.
Now, it was unevenly applied.
Like I, during the sort of the rise
of the so-called Manosphere,
I was living in rural and suburban Tennessee,
and you didn't see that really attack on young men as much.
But there are other places in other parts of the country
where that was very much a present reality
in a lot of young men's lives.
And so you have a lot of young men who are struggling.
You have a lot who are fatherless.
You have a lot who lack male mentors.
And then you had this one side
of this sort of cultural divide saying,
there's something wrong with you.
There's something inherently wrong with what you wanna do,
what you wanna be, what your goals are,
your dreams are, your aspirations.
And somebody else says, no, I care about you.
I want you to succeed.
I want you to feel meaning.
I want you to feel purpose.
In that situation, like that message is like encountering
an oasis in a desert.
So let me ask you some questions about that.
I guess the first question I have is why,
personally, why is this an issue for you?
Like, and I want to tangle that up
with a different question though,
because there's a political element to this, obviously,
and I'm not telling you anything you don't know.
You wrote that
the Democrats had a $20 million man problem.
So although it's not exactly a political problem, it's actually a philosophical problem or it's
a spiritual problem.
It's deeper than the political, it's just manifesting itself in the political.
So I want to address two things.
The first question I want to address is,
why is this an issue for you?
And then let's sort out some of the political issues
before we proceed in the conversation.
Well, it's an issue for me for multiple reasons.
One, I'm a father of a son.
I have a 24 year old son.
And I have seen with my own eyes,
in that peer group that he has,
how many young men in that peer group, you know,
spend a period of time kind of wandering in the wilderness,
if that makes sense.
I've seen, you can't be a father of a son in this era
and have not seen the struggles
that a lot, so many young men have had.
And so one of the things is I want to be
a good mentor to my things is I want to be
a good mentor to my son.
I want to be, I want to love my son well.
And when you try to love your own son well,
you cannot help but enter this larger world
of what's happening with young men in general.
And so that was right in front of my face
watching his peer group come of age and the struggles
that many people in his peer group had.
And so that was very direct and personal.
Then the next personal layer was I'm also a veteran.
And so I served in the Army as a JAG officer, an Army lawyer.
I deployed to Iraq during the surge in 07, 08.
And because I joined later in life,
I joined the army later in life,
I was the second oldest officer on the base
behind our commander.
And, but I had, that gave me an actual opportunity
to serve in a mentoring capacity
for some of these much younger soldiers.
And I could see their struggles
and I could see their questions about the world
and the life after the military. And then the see their struggles, and I could see their questions about the world and the life after the military.
And then the third thing is,
I'm very concerned about American culture more broadly.
The way in which an increasing number of people
feel a sense of despair and anxiety and hopelessness,
that we've seen this rise of deaths of despair.
And then when you dig into it,
who is dying the deaths of despair?
Well, yes, there are women married and single who are,
but by and large, it's disproportionately single men,
either never married or divorced men.
And there's this real sense of a lack of community
and connection.
And then you layer on top of this,
and again, this is all stuff you're very familiar with.
You have the declining number of friendships
amongst young men in particular, and men in particular,
and it's all adding up to an immense amount
of human suffering.
It's adding up to pain, loss, anguish at the very edges.
It's adding up to suicide and suicidal attempts.
And so we have a society and a culture
where millions upon millions of people
are feeling the sense of anguish.
And if you don't have a heart for that,
like if that doesn't touch your heart,
just leave aside the politics.
You know, I would say, hey guys,
if that isn't touching your heart,
take another look at this, right?
And then the other thing, the political aspect,
I truly believe, and there's really a lot to back this up,
that a lot of our political dysfunction is downstream
from our personal and cultural lack,
a sense of a lack of belonging in our communities,
in our families, and amongst friends.
And so I really do feel like a lot of the things
that are ripping America apart will begin to ease
if we can deal with this loneliness,
this alienization, this lack of belonging.
And so even if you're just cold blooded about it,
like even if you're like,
well, I just want American politics
to be less dysfunctional, American be less divided,
just dealing with the issue that is besetting,
again, particularly young men, is an imperative.
So it's an imperative morally, it's an imperative culturally,
it's an imperative politically,
and if you have an ounce of love in your heart for people,
it's just an imperative spiritually.
I have been a Christian evangelical conservative
my entire life.
I voted for Kamala Harris,
the first Democrat I voted for in national election
in my life.
So I have been a conservative.
I was a delegate to the 2012 Republican convention.
So yeah, I've been a Christian conservative
my entire life and have volunteered
for Republican campaigns.
In 1998, sorry, joined the College Republicans
at my small Christian college that I attended in Nashville.
And very different experience from my law school,
which was very liberal.
My small Christian college was super conservative,
and it was so conservative
that we realized as college Republicans
that we had no more votes to get for George H.W. Bush over to caucus. But yeah, I've been a
conservative in my entire life and a Republican. I'm not a Republican anymore, but I've been a
Republican most of my adult life. You have written for the Atlantic and for the New York Times.
Why do they allow you to write for them?
for the New York Times. Why do they allow you to write for them?
Well, you know, they were actually looking for a pro-life person when they were trying
to hire a new columnist, actually looking for somebody who was conservative and somebody
who had, you know, I'm also a veteran.
I don't believe there were any columnists who were veterans.
I'm also a lawyer.
I don't believe at the time of my hiring that there were any other columnists who are lawyers. I'm a constitutional lawyer. So, you know, I think
that's the overall mix. But, you know, you'd have to ask my boss as to why. But I was very
pleasantly surprised, I'll be honest with you, when I got the job offer, it was definitely not something I was seeking out,
but it came to me and I was very grateful and thankful
and I've had a really good experience there.
Getting the most out of life means being prepared
for whatever comes your way,
but many of us don't realize that a simple will
doesn't actually cover all aspects of estate planning.
There are crucial elements that need separate attention.
That's where Trust and Will steps in
to help ensure your loved ones are fully protected
in every situation.
Right now you can visit trustandwill.com slash Peterson
to get 20% off their simple, secure,
and expert-backed estate planning services
that cover all your essential bases.
The process is straightforward and free
of complicated legal jargon,
so you can complete your estate planning
from the comfort of your own home.
Knowing your assets and final wishes
are properly documented and legally protected
can give you peace of mind so that you can focus
on living your life fully,
knowing your loved ones will be taken care of,
and according to your exact wishes.
Plus, their website is incredibly user-friendly
and simple to navigate,
making the whole process super straightforward.
What's particularly reassuring
is that your personal information and documents
are protected with bank level encryption for maximum
security. Each will or trust they create is tailored specifically to your state's
laws and your individual needs covering everything from care wishes and guardian
nominations to final arrangements and power of attorney documents. It's no
wonder they have an overall rating of excellent and thousands of five-star
reviews on TrustPilot. We can't control everything, but Trust and Will can help
you take control of protecting your family's future. Head over to TrustandWill.com slash Peterson for 20%
off. That's 20% off at TrustandWill.com slash Peterson. Okay, okay. So you, you pointed out
three reasons that you're concerned. Because you have a son and then you talked about what you saw
in his circle of friends because you're a veteran
and you played a mentorship role there
and then because you're concerned
with broad cultural issues.
Let's start with the personal.
I wanna tell you a story about my son
when he was about 13.
So I reviewed his report card and it wasn't stellar, let's
say, although it was fine, but it wasn't stellar. And so I asked him
about that and he said, well, Dad, I'm doing pretty well. I'm doing really well for a boy.
Huh. Right.
And I thought, I'd never heard him say anything like that.
And it was certainly nothing that he had picked up at home.
And it was quite striking to me because for him,
that was just matter of fact.
And of course, that's a deep rabbit hole
because when your son comes to you and says,
I'm doing pretty good for a boy, if you have any sense, the first thing you think is, where
the hell did that come from?
And so seriously, because now that's an implicit presupposition that the boys underperformed
the girls.
That was certainly not a presupposition when I was his age and it wasn't anything that was appropriate for him because there's
nothing wrong with his mind or his conscientiousness. And so, you know, I've
observed that boys are, their, the school system is not set up for them in the least. The vast majority of teachers are not only female,
but infantilizing female and radically left.
Boys play preferences are denigrated.
They're required to sit for hours at a time,
which is not in keeping with their nature,
especially if they're active,
in which case they get diagnosed with ADHD
and get put on methylphenidate,
which suppresses play behavior
as one of its primary functions.
And then they're told that competitive games are wrong
because we should all cooperate by people
who are too stupid to notice
that competitive games are cooperative because everybody's playing by the same rules.
And then they're told that boys' ambition is pathological and that the patriarchy is
and marriage for that matter is an oppressive institution.
And if they manage to escape from all that, then they're told that the activities of males
are destroying the planet.
And that's pretty much a comprehensive,
that's comprehensive evil queen pathology
as far as I'm concerned.
And it's not bloody wells.
Then you add to that, there's an additional twist too,
which we should delve into.
It's a universal cultural problem to make adults out of juvenile males. That's why
there are initiation root rights in so many cultures and you have to create a responsible
man and the reason for that is that it's a hell of a lot easier to be irresponsible and immature than it is to be responsible and mature.
And so-
For men and women.
For men and women, yeah.
Right.
Well, the thing about women is once they have an infant, that kind of catalyzes the maturity
and maybe their nature has a proclivity to initiate women a little more dramatically
that it initiates men. So the fundamental problem that cultures face is how to make men out of boys and how to
stop young women from getting pregnant out of wedlock.
That's the anthropological evidence. Well, so the boys face, I think, a virtual conspiracy of demoralization.
And that seems to me to be, well, that's underneath the political, but the Democrats have been
playing that hand madly for, I'd say, four generations.
And now they're reaping what they sowed.
Yeah, I would, boy, there's a lot in there.
Let me go kind of step by step,
and let me begin with one thing
that I think you articulated right off the top,
that is, I think, a very important disconnect
that is happening.
So a lot of this articulation you hear from the extreme left
and you laid out the way there are folks on the extreme left
who has just comprehensively demolish masculinity.
Now I'd say most boys have not been exposed
to that in school.
That might be a very, you might see that
in some hyper progressive prep schools or whatever,
but some degree of that, some element of that,
is coming and leaking through and
permeating through a lot of American culture.
One of the things that I have seen is that a lot of
the people when we talk about this,
when we raise this issue,
a lot of people in the commentary class,
in the academic class
immediately denigrate a lot of the evidence
about the struggles of young men and boys
because they don't see in their milieu,
they don't see men struggling.
Because they're in places where it might be,
say, elite academia or high level corporate work
or in the military or government
where men are still at the tip of the spear at the apex of kind of American commercial
and political and economic achievement, men are still doing quite well.
It's the big, giant, giant number of people who are not in that sort of tip of the spear,
who are really struggling.
And because so many of us live in these bubbles, a lot of people don't see it at all.
They don't see it at all.
And this is something that I think is endemic in our commentariat, and that is a lot of
our commentariat lives and eats and breathes a very rarefied cultural air,
and they don't have any real world sense
of the way that people are living their lives
and the struggles they're facing outside of that milieu.
And so when you walk into and you start talking about
how these young men are struggling,
a lot of times you get immediate,
I've been in these rooms
where people immediately dismiss you.
Well, disproportionate number of men are CEOs,
a disproportionate number of men are in Congress,
a, you know, you name it.
And I'm like, I'm not talking about
the tip of the spear here.
I'm talking about millions upon millions of people,
regular Americans
who are struggling and in many ways they're not struggling because of you, but are you
helping or are you hurting? And I can tell you right now, if you're telling men that,
for example, traditional masculinity ideology is inherently toxic, you're hurting. You're
not helping. And I tend to have an explanation of the struggles of young men that's rooted in a lot more than
ideology and politics.
It's rooted in changing economies and changing technologies.
A lot of things changed in a way that left men in a position where they would often feel
like I'm not as necessary, I'm not as needed as I was.
A lot of the raw strength,
that raw physical strength, for example,
that men have became less and less important
to be a part of a vibrant economy.
Military is shrinking.
The US military is much smaller right now
than it was at the height of the Cold War.
A lot of these things created dynamics
where men felt less needed. And then
you have another part of this cultural world that then jumps on men who are feeling less
needed, who are not elitists, who are not tip of the spear, or regular everyday folks
who are just trying to do their best and are coming in and saying, well, a lot of the things
that you feel or a lot of the things, the way that you are is just bad and wrong.
And so that created this environment
in the sense where I'm struggling
and an awful lot of people don't care.
And that I feel like is just a giant cultural disaster
that unfolded.
And now it's not unfolding everywhere the same,
that litany of things that you said about what people
in the far left think and did, like my son and his peers,
they never heard any of that in rural middle Tennessee.
That is not their experience in rural middle Tennessee.
But I will say that all the technological changes
and the changes to career and the changes
to all these other big cultural changes absolutely impact us everywhere.
And so young men with, you know, are facing a world,
even if they're in a very sort of man friendly part
of the country, which rural Tennessee is,
they're still walking into an economy
and they're still walking into a culture
that has been through a lot through generations of upheaval.
And in that circumstance, you really have to intentionally
lean into mentor young men into virtuous masculinity.
It doesn't happen by osmosis, it doesn't happen by inertia,
it happens through intention.
And so that's where, when I was writing my piece
that you reached out, that's when you're in your book,
12 Rules is a lot about intention.
Like living an intentional life
and thinking things through and having an approach
and having a purpose.
And that's exactly how you cultivate virtuous masculinity
is you're living a life of intention.
It's not happening by osmosis.
It's not happening by inertia.
And in fact, a lot of the cultural inertia was destructive,
not constructive.
And so creating a, it was,
I think it was absolutely vitally necessary
to create a kind of counterculture to that,
that was like, hey, young men, we love you.
We care about you.
We want you to succeed.
And I think that's one of the reasons why,
and you often see a lot of emotions spring up in men
when they do encounter somebody,
whether it's somebody who wrote a book
or delivered a speech that finally says to them
that very simple message, that that's what they hear.
I care for you.
I want you to succeed.
I'm here.
I'm going to help you do it.
And the best people who do this do it, I want you to succeed in the right way.
The worst voices are, just go get what's yours, young man.
That's the toxic message that gets, that indulges the worst elements of our nature.
The message that says that here, train you up in a way
that is much more akin to the Kipling poem,
if, than sort of any kind of like blind ambition
or greed or sexual conquest or sexual exploitation.
But if you're building people in virtuous masculinity,
I think that's the oasis in the desert, whereas
that toxic, go get what's yours, sexual prowess, financial accomplishment is the be all end
all.
That's the mirage.
That's the illusion.
And that just leads them deeper into the desert.
Well, we should talk about that a little bit, I think, from a psychological perspective,
because there are real reasons why that more psychopathic end
of the so-called Manosphere has its attractiveness.
You know what happens every summer?
We all get a little too comfortable with letting
our routines slide. We sleep in, we take vacation, unplug from everything and hey, that's great,
but here's the thing. Sometimes that break from our routine becomes a break from the
stuff that actually matters, like our spiritual discipline. That's exactly why I'm such a
fan of Hallow. It's the number one Christian prayer app and honestly it's been a game changer
for keeping my spiritual life on track. They've got over 10,000 guided meditations, prayers, and spiritual exercises,
so whether you've got five minutes or an hour, there's something there for you.
What's really cool is this month they're doing something extra special.
Hallow is walking everyone through the spiritual exercises of St. Ignatius
with Father Timothy Gallagher.
If you've never experienced imaginative prayer before, this is going to be incredible.
Look, don't let this July just slip on by.
Take a few minutes today and get intentional about your spiritual life.
And right now, you can try Hallow completely free for three months when you go to
Hallow.com slash Jordan.
That's H-A-L-L-O-W dot com slash Jordan for three months free.
So back in 2016, when
So, back in 2016, when my objection to my Liberal government's utter stupidity launched me into the public eye, I told the Senate and the public in general that this conspiracy, so to speak, to weaken men would produce a very toxic and fascist-like backlash.
Now, one of the things that, man, I admire greatly, that psychologist Carl Jung pointed out was that you can be socialized into a conformist persona.
And the way out of that is through the dark side, so to speak, to incorporate elements
of the psyche that have been set to the side in the domestication effort, hyper domesticated young men are going to find hyper aggressive
young men attractive as role models.
And the reason for that is they need that aggression.
And the fact that that's attractive is just an indication of how much demoralization has
taken place.
Well, I also think that's a eternal battle. just an indication of how much demoralization has taken place?
Well, I also think that's a eternal battle. I've put it this way, somebody has asked me,
who are the best men and the worst men
that you've encountered?
And the answer is the same, football coaches.
Some of the best men I've ever encountered
are football coaches who have been able to
socialize young men and take this energy, this drive, this aggression
and create it into and turn it into a brotherhood,
turn it into a community, turn it into a fellowship
that is pouring into fighting for each other the right way.
And so I've seen a football coach be incredibly instrumental
in a young man's life by taking all of that that's in them,
all that stew that's in them and molding it
and channeling them and turning them into tremendous citizens
and turning them into good teammates and good friends.
And you will meet so many former football players
who will say the person who changed my life
as much or more than my father,
depending on the relationship with their father, was their football coach. And then you will find men who will say the person who changed my life as much or more than my father, depending on the relationship with their father, was their football coach.
And then you will find men who will say
one of the most malignant influences in my entire life
was my football coach,
because he taught me to hurt people.
He taught me to inflict pain.
He told me that rage and aggression were my friend.
I should cultivate them and burn, you know.
And I've actually seen,
I've seen different kinds of coaches.
And so I would say that, you know,
one of the interesting realities of life is that you've,
and this goes all the way back.
If you go back to June 6th, 1944, on Normandy Beach,
you had two different kinds of young male acculturation
confronting each other on that pivotal day in world history,
where you had one, a generation of youth,
acculturated into cruelty, into viciousness.
And yes, they were very lethal,
and they were very well-trained,
and they were very proficient in the profession of arms,
which caused a lot of people to admire them,
but they were cruel and they were vicious
while they were lethal. And then, on the other side, you had the forces of American who admire them, but they were cruel and they were vicious while they were lethal.
And then on the other side, you had the forces
of American and British democracy
and Canadian democracy as well.
One of the beaches was Canadian, right?
So you had these coming across the channel.
They weren't perfect people and they weren't perfect
cultures, but these young men were acculturated
to use their sense of their courage and their aggression
to defeat cruelty, to protect the weak,
to protect the vulnerable.
And it is striking to me, it is striking to me
how that virtuous masculinity,
that virtuous courage and aggression
so comprehensively triumphed in World War II.
I'm reading this book right now about the fall of Berlin.
And this is a great lesson in why you shun cruelty
and you exhibit compassion.
At the very end of the war,
when Nazi Germany was collapsing,
people were falling all over themselves
to come to the American side and to escape the Soviet side.
And so this was something where not only by our valor
did we win the war, our compassion also helped us
win the war.
And that's when I'm looking at this little angel and devil
under the young man's shoulder.
I've often think of the bad coach and the good coach
or at the most extreme, and I don't know,
gosh, I'm a middle-aged man, so I guess I always have
to talk about World War II at some point in it.
You know, at the extremes, you have the pure evil
of fascism and communism and the virtuous valor
of a democracy awakened.
And these are the angels and devils
that are always on the shoulder of young men here.
And look, I know that there are parallels with women,
but we're talking about men. These are the angels and devils that are on young men here. And look, I know that there are parallels with women, but we're talking about men.
These are the angels and devils
that are on young men's shoulders.
And you're exactly right.
A lot of young men will be drawn to that devilish side
because not only does it feel rewarding and strong,
it's easier.
It's easier in so many ways
because you don't engage in self-discipline.
You don't check yourself.
You don't engage in kindness-discipline. You don't check yourself. You don't engage in kindness
because kindness carries a cost.
And so it's the easier path to indulge
that unmitigated, unbridled aggression and ambition.
It is the harder path to temper that aggression and ambition
with courage and compassion.
And so I think that's the eternal struggle,
and it manifests itself in different eras,
in different ways.
So I've been spending some time considering the
archetypal image of the shepherd in the biblical writings.
Yeah.
And of course, so Moses was a shepherd,
and David was a shepherd, and Christ is a shepherd,
metaphorically.
So the question is why the image of the shepherd?
And you put your finger on it in the discussion that you just brought forward.
So in pastoral times, especially in the Middle East,
being a shepherd was actually a pretty,
it was a demanding and dangerous job.
Like all jobs were demanding and dangerous in those times.
Nothing easy about it, yeah, absolutely.
Well, so the shepherd had to fight off wolves and lions
and he had to take care of himself in the wilderness.
So just right there, that's hard.
But then the crucial issue is that that monstrous capacity
to fight off the predators and even to some degree to fend for yourself
was turned into service to the most vulnerable.
That's why the lamb, the protection of the lamb
is such a numinous image in the Western cultural tradition,
especially at the biblical level,
because all that aggression,
I mean, you touched on this, say,
with regard to valor in World War II, all that capacity for aggression, I mean, you touched on this, say, with regard to valor in World War II,
all that capacity for aggression and teamwork aggression,
for that matter, is supposed to be subordinated
to service to the most vulnerable.
And so the shepherd is this amalgam of monstrous power
and service to the most vulnerable,
self-sacrificial service to the most vulnerable, self-sacrificial service to the most vulnerable.
Of course, that's a hallmark of Christianity itself and something that distinguishes it
from all other theories of sovereignty, right? Because Christianity is very paradoxical and
peculiar in that regard that it defines sovereignty not as the aristocratic will to
power dominance and force, let's say of pagan Rome or even aristocratic Greece for that
matter, but transmutes that into the capacity for stalwart and forthright behavior in service to the most vulnerable.
And that means the highest serves the lowest and that actually becomes a defining characteristic
of what's highest, which is really quite a miracle of conceptual rearrangement.
And so this is part of this kind of notion
is part of what's been driving my discussions with men.
I mean, most of what I've done on the public stage has been,
much of what I've done in the public stage
has been in response to my observation
of the desperate situation of, well, young people,
because you can't demoralize young men
without devastating young women.
I don't know if you know this,
but you know in the West now that more than 50% of women
at the age of 30 have no children.
It's more than 50%, right?
Half of them will never have a child.
And so on the one hand, we have have the absolute radical pathological demoralization of
young men. And then we have the insistence that although all that masculinity is toxic and
patriarchal, that's precisely what young women should pursue. And so they pursue that in some
ways displacing young men, but more detrimentally for themselves,
squandering their youth on service to the evil corporate world, bizarrely enough, given that it's a leftist trope,
and the demolition of their, not only of their fertility, but the probability of their participation in the long-term partnership of marriage.
So, I mean, you can hardly imagine a more toxic brew than that.
And how we got here is quite the bloody miracle.
I'd like you to comment on that.
I'd also like you to tell me if you would,
what kind of response you got
to your New York Times article.
Okay, well, yeah, let me start with that
and then I'll get to the second, the bigger one.
Remarkably positive from readers.
One thing that I think is a lot of people miss,
especially people who are all in all the time
into political fights online,
is that there is still a big American center,
center left, center right.
There is a big American center.
About 80%.
That has a lot of common concerns.
And so, whereas somebody on Twitter might be going,
talking about toxic masculinity,
there's no problem with young men, the future is female, and all of that stuff.
There's millions of democratic moms who have sons who love their sons so much and are worried
about their sons.
And so when I go back to first principles rather than immediately diving into gender
gaps and political races and all this. Instead, talk about struggles.
You actually meet people where they are.
And where millions of moms are, and dads, moms and dads,
are right now is I'm having trouble.
My son is having trouble,
or my son's friends are having trouble.
My nephew is having trouble, whatever.
That's where millions of people are,
and they are hungry for somebody
to approach that problem with empathy
and approach that problem saying,
I see all of this.
I see you.
I see what is happening.
And so I think that that's why
the response to that article was
overwhelmingly positive,
certainly into my inbox.
Now online, it was much more mixed,
but that's an artifact of lots of things that are actually
irrelevant to the article.
But it was remarkably positive.
And Jordan, I'll tell you another story that I think would be encouraging to you.
I was in a meeting, one of these meetings, you know, I call them save the world meetings
where you get a bunch of people into a room
and everyone's talking about what's wrong with the culture
and what's wrong with everything
and what can we do to fix it.
And this was room was much more left leaning,
much more left leaning.
There was a few conservatives in there.
I was in there, a couple other people.
But one thing that was so striking,
woman after woman at the meeting stood up and said,
we need to be reaching young men, we need to be reaching young men
and we need to be telling young men we love them.
I'm a mom of boys and I love my boys
and I do not want this culture telling my boys
there's something wrong with them.
And this was happening in left leaning spaces,
not far left, not like radical left,
but in left leaning spaces.
And so I think, and I have seen it with my own eyes, that there is a
desperate hunger in America, broad America, for constructive mentoring of
young men. Another thing, you know, you may have followed this, but Admiral
William McRaven, who was the Admiral who headed special, you know, American Special Forces,
directed Operation Neptune's Sphere, which killed Ben Laden.
Just a remarkable American man, American story,
American role model.
You know, he gave a commencement speech at UT Austin
several years ago, and it was,
it's known as the Make Up Your Bed speech,
it's a theme that you've articulated as well.
Millions and millions and millions of views for that thing. up your bed speech, a theme that you've articulated as well.
Millions and millions and millions of views for that thing.
It has been just spread and metastasized all over America
and not just in conservative spaces.
And so that's what I think is encouraging.
Lots of people in that big American middle are saying,
waking up and saying something here is wrong.
And that's why the response to the Times article
was more positive, I think, than people might expect.
The other thing, going to the bigger, deeper question,
you know, I get so tired of like the concept
of the gender wars and the concept,
the way our political parties exploit gender gaps. So, you concept, the way our political parties exploit gender gaps.
So, you know, the way our political parties come in
and say, the Republicans might say,
well, we win more with men than with women.
So you're gonna really dive in with men,
or the Democrats say,
we men win more with women than men,
and they really dive in with women,
which means we have these giant engines
of cultural and political influence
who are exacerbating gender and sex disagreements
as part of their political project, right?
And so it's making, it's creating the sense
that rather than we're all in this together
and that you cannot have, you know, women in America
as writ large cannot be in a healthy place
unless men in America are in a healthy place
and vice versa.
So the idea that we're all in this together,
that this is not a zero sum game,
I think that's a message that has to be repeated
and repeated and repeated,
that the success of men does not mean the failure of women,
the success of women does not mean the failure of men.
And I don't know that I,
here's the way I would put,
I don't have the same perspective of view
about corporate evil and all of that,
but I will say this,
I do think that one thing that really distresses me
is that we see people having fewer kids
than they say they wanna have,
and we see people getting married later
than they say they wanna get married, or not getting getting married later than they say they wanna get married,
or not getting married at all
when they say they wanna get married.
And I think we have this gap between people's desires,
the deepest desires and longings of their heart,
and their actual lives,
what's actually happening in their lives,
that is really putting a pall of anxiety
and failure
and hopelessness over American life.
So what is it that we can do to close this gap
between your heart's longing and the reality of your life?
And by the way, longing for children
and longing for a marriage is, that's not,
I don't think everybody, you know,
as a Christian who believes in the Bible,
it's very plain from scripture that not everybody has to be married.
But if you're somebody,
marriage is a wonderful institution.
It's wonderful for me.
So saying I want to get married, that's a good thing.
Saying I want to have kids, that's a good thing.
And how can we narrow that gap
between the heart's longing and the reality?
Honestly, Jordan, I think that's one of the central cultural
and political projects of our time,
and it's why neither party has been able to win
a commanding majority for anything more than a two
to four year period in the last generation,
is that so many millions of Americans feel like
their dreams are out of their reach
and they're looking everywhere for a solution to this.
And in the political sphere,
they're definitely not getting it.
So one of the things I thought when I reached out to you
is that since we were concerned about the same issues,
that it might be worthwhile sorting out
whatever differences we might have.
You know, and I don't know how much you know about my work
enough to have written about it sometimes,
but I'm curious if you have any questions or concerns
about what you see that I've been doing.
And because I'd like to address them
because we don't need the split.
Right, well, you know, I would put it like this.
There are lots of elements of your work
that I have really appreciated.
And I've really appreciated the impact of your work
that I've seen on people I know and people I love.
And I have very much appreciated that.
I think we probably had some pretty sharp political
differences when it comes to how do we manifest,
who do we support and how do we manifest
our shared concerns into the political world
and into politics.
And then I think there are some things that we disagree on
that really have nothing at all to do
with what we're talking about.
I know I think I wrote in the Atlantic that I was critical of your stance on the Ukraine
war, that you're kind of seeing the Russian invasion as at least understandable.
I don't think you would say justifiable, but understandable to a certain extent.
And then some of your stances on vaccines,
and I know you've talked about some people
need to go to prison around their stance around vaccines.
And so it's interesting,
there's a different interesting approach you can take
when you have areas of commonality and areas of difference.
You can dig into the difference and say,
these differences are why we are opponents, or you can dig into the commonalities and you can say, these differences are why we are opponents,
or you can dig into the commonalities
and you can say these commonalities are why we are friends,
but who have differences.
And I would really like to see in American politics
more of the latter approach on a consistent basis
that rather than saying, hey, we have this overlap,
but the differences mean we're fundamentally opposed,
say the overlap means that we have a lot of fundamental agreements, but like almost every human being on the planet, we're fundamentally opposed. Say the overlap means that we have a lot of fundamental agreements,
but like almost every human being on the planet, we do have differences.
And I'm happy to dive into the Ukraine War or to vaccines or any other issue where you think we
might have differences. I think that might be helpful for people to hear some of that.
But that was, you know, when I have written critically, it's been mainly focused around
some of these political choices.
And to be honest, they're political choices
that are not unique to you at all.
These are a lot of the beefs that I have
with the change in the Republican Party more broadly.
I never thought I would see a day, for example,
when the Democrats were more hawkish against Russia than Republicans were, for example.
I never saw, I never saw, and this is on me, but I never saw a strong movement, anti-vaccine or
vaccine skeptical movement coming out of the Republican Party. That was always a far left,
crunchy, Democratic Marin County progressive thing. And so there are many ways that the Republican Party
has departed from my previous views.
And I feel like you're more in line
with the mainstream Republican Party now than I am.
Shopify powers millions of businesses worldwide
supporting everyone from established brands
to entrepreneurs just starting their journey.
You can create your professional storefront effortlessly
with Shopify's extensive library of customizable templates
designed to reflect your brand's unique identity.
Boost your productivity with Shopify's AI power tools
to craft compelling products, descriptions,
engaging headlines, and even enhance your product's
photography, all with just a few clicks.
Plus, you can market your business like a pro
without hiring a team.
Easily develop and launch targeted email campaigns
and social media content that reaches customers wherever they spend their
time online or offline. If that's not enough, Shopify offers expert guidance on
every aspect of commerce from inventory management to international shipping
logistics to seamless return processing. If you're ready to sell, you're ready for
Shopify. Sign up for your $1 per month trial period and start selling today at Shopify.com. Go to Shopify.com.
Again, that's Shopify.com.
Yeah, it's hard to say.
I mean, I don't know.
I haven't called for anybody to be imprisoned with regard to their stance on vaccines.
I'm not very thrilled about the fact that there was force applied when people were making medical choices.
I think that was a big mistake.
And I think there's the backlash that we see against vaccines is certainly part and parcel of that.
With regards to the pesky Russians, well, you know, my sense is we missed a massive opportunity in the 1990s
to strike a real accord with the Russians.
And there was all sorts of
reasons for that, not least one of the reasons being that it was very convenient for the military
industrial complex, so to speak, to have a perpetual enemy and Russia seems to fit that bill quite well.
And so it's not like I'm thrilled about the fact that the Russians have been
And so it's not like I'm thrilled about the fact that the Russians have been chomping at the bit
on the Ukrainian side of the world
for the last multiple years.
I don't regard Russia as a permanent enemy.
China's a different story in all likelihood.
I don't think we really need to go either of those places.
I mean, they've been beat to death in many likelihood. I don't think we really need to go either of those places. I mean, they've been beat to death in many ways.
And I am more interested in the issue that we're discussing.
Tell me a little bit more about what you saw
with your son's friends that concerned you.
Yeah, and boy, some of my son's friends
might be watching this podcast.
So I don't want to cast a broad brush
and have them think, date?
What does Mr. French think about what, you know?
No, I'm very proud of my son.
I know it's, yeah.
I have great, he has wonderful young men in his life,
but I'm talking writ large.
I'm talking about his broader peer group, okay?
And one thing, there's a couple of things that I saw.
Definitely alienization from the academic world.
No question.
That thing that your son said about,
like I did well for a girl, absolutely saw that
with this sort of sense of,
this isn't communicating to me, this isn't reaching me,
definitely saw the effects of sort of inhibiting and play.
That's another big one.
You know, when I was in first grade
in Baton Rouge, Louisiana,
I was born in Alabama, raised in Alabama, Louisiana,
Tennessee to Kentucky, so all across the South.
When I was in first grade in Baton Rouge, Louisiana,
we had three recesses a day, three recesses a day.
And they were crazy and they were wild and all growing up.
We played tackle football at recess
in my elementary school in Stamping Ground, Kentucky.
So it was just a different experience growing up.
And so much more constrained play,
a sense that school wasn't really for them.
A loss of the free range childhood.
I know you've talked to Jonathan Hyde in the past,
but this sort of loss of the broader play-based childhood
where kids roam the neighborhood.
That's what I did when I was growing up.
The number of forts I cut through, thick underbrush.
I mean, by the time I was like in middle school,
I was a master builder of rural fortifications.
Like, I mean, you know, you would just go and leave
and play and come back and your parents would,
my parents were great.
They would make me be home for dinner and then,
what'd you do?
And then I would tell them about my adventures and boom,
I'd be out again until, you know, my curfew.
And so all of those things have resulted
in this sense of the loss of all of that,
this sense of growing frustration,
this sense of growing recklessness.
And then you made this medication point
that's very, I think, very important.
I don't want to paint with too broad a brush.
There are a lot of people
for whom medication has been important,
but I feel like it's been overprescribed at a large scale.
And so then you take-
There's methylphenidate is inexcusable.
Everything about it is a lie.
You know, the original hypothesis,
just to be clear about this,
is that there were a small subset of children
who were neurologically abnormal.
And if you put them on a stimulant,
which is what methylphenidate is,
most common ADHD medication, it's an amphetamine,
that paradoxically calmed them down. And the fact that they calmed down was an indication of their neurological abnormality.
Okay, every single bit of that is a preposterous lie. What methamphenidate does is increase the probability that you will continue to attend to whatever you happen to be attending to.
It locks you on and it suppresses play behavior.
And there's no evidence whatsoever that it has a paradoxical effect on a small subset of children with attention deficit disorder.
What it does quite clearly is stop boys from playing roughly, especially the
ones that are more extroverted and well more extroverted, more sociable, more assertive,
more talkative, all of that, more boisterous. And so I don't think there's any evidence at all in
the clinical literature of the medium to long-term utility of attention
deficit disorder medication. I don't think there ever has been. Like I've followed that
literature since 1982. In fact, the first scrape I had in graduate school was with a
professor at McGill who was at the forefront of ADHD research and who was a methylphenidate advocate and I
criticized her papers on the grounds of
no long-term follow-up and so and it's some
preposterous percentage of boys now are put on
methylphenidate medication and so I would when I was a kid is when it really began starting, because I can remember when some of my peers would start to go on Ritalin.
And that was even back in the day when I was,
I'm Gen X, I mean, we were the ultimate
free range generation, I was a latchkey kid
for a little while.
And so you take all of these things,
less play, less ability to, you know, the academic environment,
less hospitable, less recess,
and then there's a lot of downstream consequences of that,
and then you say, here's a pill.
No, that was not the path.
And again, again, I don't wanna overstate this,
but I will say that we went too far in that direction,
and there's been, we've paid,
and a lot of well-meaning doctors,
a lot of well-meaning parents doing the best they could
with the circumstances that they had, you know,
fell into this.
And it's just been so tragic.
And so one of the reasons why I'm such a booster,
for example, of Jonathan Haidt's work,
is that he really wants to get us back
to that play-based childhood.
And look, everything's trade-offs.
You know, it's an interesting irony
that the latchkey kid generation
became the helicopter parents.
The Gen X generation, we were the latchkey kids,
and it's my generation that hovers over their kids,
and you know, even more than helicopter,
the snowplow parent that like clears the way.
And I think one of the reasons is some of the excesses and even more than helicopter, the snowplow parent that clears the way.
And I think one of the reasons is some of the excesses
of the latchkey world were really negative.
I mean, there's a lot of bad stuff that happened
in that total free range environment,
but then there was this overcorrection
that went all the way to tightly managed play.
And not to refer too much to Jonathan,
but there's in his book, The Coddling of the American Mind managed play and you know, not to refer too much to Jonathan, but
there's in his book, The Coddling of the American Mind with my dear friend, Greg Lukianoff,
was really important and in one of the ways that I that really helped open my eyes and helped me put a finger on what was happening was offering this contrast like in my generation, how young were
you the first time you left a house without supervision?
And for me, the answer is I was really young,
maybe seven, eight.
I'm not out of the question that it was even six years old,
but you ask parents now and they might raise their hand
and say, well, when my kid was 14,
we tried to raise like free range kids
and it was difficult even in rural Tennessee
because we would get to the point
where we would tell parents as they were coming over,
they were letting their kid come over to play.
We would say, look, we have a philosophy
where we let our kids run around the neighborhood and play.
Is that okay with you?
Because we wanted to pre-clear that.
Because some parents would say,
I would really rather not if that's okay.
That is not something that would come up in 1984.
What kind of neighborhood?
What kind of neighborhood was that?
It was a rural Tennessee neighborhood.
We lived literally across the street from us
was just open pasture.
And behind us was another street with a cul-de-sac.
And then we moved from there to the very opposite of that,
one of these very densely planned communities
right outside of Nashville.
Both of them remarkably safe,
but both of them very different.
One was very outdoors, one was very much like,
if you were gonna run through the woods,
you were gonna encounter a bunch of deer,
you were gonna encounter turkeys,
you were gonna encounter coyotes in the hills.
And the other one was, well, you're gonna encounter turkeys, you were gonna encounter coyotes, you know, there were coyotes in the hills. And the other one was,
well, you're gonna encounter a coffee shop and a pizzeria.
But in both of them, some parents, some parents,
and this is Tennessee, Red Tennessee,
some parents were totally cool with the free range,
but a lot were absolutely not.
In both situations.
In both situations, in both situations.
I wonder, tell me what you think about this.
I mean, when these massive cultural changes take place,
it's never a straightforward thing to specify why.
I mean, in the neighborhood that I grew up in,
and so I was a child in the 70s, so I was born in 62.
So, you know, I had my young child in the 70s, so I was born in 62.
So, you know, I had my young childhood in the 60s
and my middle childhood in the 70s.
At that point, I grew up in a little town,
let's say from the time I was nine
till I graduated from high school,
town of about 3,000 people, Fairview, Alberta, at that time,
the neighborhoods were,
there were a lot of women
who were still at home in the neighborhoods.
You know, and so the neighborhoods were
established in known territory
because there was a,
they were regulated by a network of interconnected women.
And so when you had your kids outside to play,
outside wasn't hostile territory defined by the presence
of no one but strangers.
It was territory defined by the watchful eye of a loose network of women.
And that all disappeared in, really in the 1980s.
And it isn't obvious how that can be put back.
Like the question is, why did people start to become fearful of the neighborhood given
that there was no radical increase in the probability that your child was going to be abducted by, you know,
some psychopath.
That's a really good question.
You know, we human beings are generally not,
we're often not very good at proper threat calibration.
And so, you know, in the 1980s,
you began to have the stories
like the missing kids on the milk cartons.
Yeah, you got that just when women entered the workforce en masse, you know, those two things coincided.
You also got the sexual predation and satanic ritual abuse conspiracies in daycare.
You know, to me, that was all a manifestation of unconscious concern about having your children
like radically unsupervised, not just unsupervised. Or just abused and exploited. Yeah, I remember
the satanic panic very well. It was terrible. It was weird and yeah, it was very dark. And so you
have this situation and I think so when I'm coming of age
in the late 70s, early 80s,
you had this situation where,
and I used the phrase latchkey kid before,
and there was this kind of gap
between the home situation that you described
where the dad was at work
and moms were all over the neighborhood,
the two parents working, and, the two parents working,
and then the two parents working the way things are now,
where there's loads of afterschool activities.
If your kids are in sports, it's like all consuming.
And there's just a much more,
especially for middle-class and upper-middle-class families,
there's just activity after activity after activity.
So there isn't this latch key phenomenon as much.
And so I think one of the things that happened
in that latch key gap, those latch key years,
for some kids it was awesome.
For me it was fantastic.
I loved roaming the neighborhood,
but I was also a kind of nerdy,
responsible, straight as an arrow kid.
So when I was a latch key kid,
one of the things I started
was neighborhood chess tournaments. So if that doesn't tell you I was a latchkey kid, one of the things I started was neighborhood chess tournaments.
So if that doesn't tell you,
I was a raging nerd in middle school,
I don't know what does.
But I started like chess tournaments
and people would come to my house and play chess
or I would just walk outside with the basketball
and start bouncing the basketball
and people would come from all over the neighborhood
to play basketball.
And that for me was great,
but I also know that there were kids
who were violently bullied,
just terribly bullied in their neighborhoods.
There were girls who were assaulted in their neighborhoods.
And so not everybody's experience
of that last key generation,
we kind of lionized it on Twitter,
but not everybody's experience in that time period was good.
And so a lot of those kids who had that bad experience
then come of age and they vow,
my kids will not experience this.
And I would also, you know,
this is a podcast so we can do some sort of like
speculation free association.
But I do also wonder if the part of the delay
and having children, if part of the anxiety at the moment is that
you have a lot of people who are not wanting to have kids
when the fewer number of children
is they don't want to have kids until they're ready
to be able to make sure everything is okay.
Yeah, you know, I think David, what we should do
is we should close this section off.
We should talk about exactly that on the daily wire side.
Okay.
Yeah, because I've been speaking with my wife a lot.
She's particularly concerned about the plight
of young women and the fact that if young men lack mentors, I would say the crisis is
actually even more acute among young women on the mentorship front.
I think...
Especially when you add in the pornography element to this where young men lack mentors
and are being acculturated into relationships through early exposure to pornography.
And we wonder why there are major relationship problems
in this country.
Yeah, well, that's another thing that we can talk about
on the Daily Wire side.
So I wanna talk to you, if you would,
about some ideas about timeline for life.
How old are you?
56.
56, so we're roughly the same age.
I'm 63.
And so, I guess you were a kid more in the 80s
and I was a kid a little bit more in the 70s,
but it's not that much different.
So let's do that.
Let's close this off.
The more discussion that can be had about the utility in encouraging young
people in general, now we've got to figure out exactly what that means, that's what we'll
talk about on the Daily Wire side, what does the proper time course of a life look like?
So for everybody, yeah, because this delay that you described, that's what
triggered that for me. So for everybody watching and listening, join us on The Daily Wire,
and we'll continue this discussion focusing on what a optimized timeline for life might look like
from a developmental perspective.
And so in the meantime, I'd like to thank you
for speaking with me today and to help,
and for your work on the cultural front,
bringing the plight of young men to broader attention,
especially among people on the left,
because that's of crucial importance.
And I'm very pleased to hear that your work
has had some broad impact.
Maybe that'll continue to be the case.
The next $20 million the Democrats spend
might be better spent in consequence.
So any closing words?
No, I've really enjoyed the conversation.
This is an absolute passion of mine.
It's been that way for a long time,
is this idea that we have so many millions of men,
young men who are really struggling,
and how can we reach them?
How can we inspire them with a virtuous vision
for what it means to be a man?
Because I'm convinced it's only the virtuous vision
that's ultimately going to be a man, because I'm convinced it's only the virtuous vision that's ultimately gonna be fulfilling.
And look, it's a real pleasure to talk to somebody
who's been thinking about this, eating, drinking,
breathing this for a very long time.
And I have appreciated the good fruit that I have seen
and young men in my life that I've seen that have had as a result
of some of your writings and some of your teaching.
And I do appreciate that,
and I think people should appreciate that.
Well, thank you very much, sir.
And to all you watching and listening,
your time and attention is much appreciated.
Join us on the Daily Wire side to continue the conversation.