The Michael Knowles Show - Why Nothing Satisfies The Woke Culture | Wokal Distance
Episode Date: May 16, 2021Wokal Distance joins the show to discuss everything from pornography to Caitlyn Jenner and the epidemic of reality never being good enough. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com.../adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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It's pretty tough to make sense of our world today.
We've got the former deck athlete, the guy on the Wheaties box, may very well become the first female governor of California.
We are told that we need to get race entirely out of our politics, but we're told this by people who view politics primarily as a matter of race.
We are told that we need to be very scientific by people who deny objective truth.
I don't know how to make heads or tails.
I guess they've already succeeded.
One guy who really, I think, is so perceptive about these sorts of things, you may have heard of him.
You may well not have heard of him, though, is Wocal Distance.
A great Twitter follow.
You can follow him at W-O-K-A-L-U-K-L-U-K-L-U-Sk-Distance.
You can probably spell that one out.
You can find him on YouTube, but more importantly, you can find him right here today.
Wocal.
First of all, thank you for coming on.
Thank you for having me.
Second of all, I'm trying to reconcile the myriad contradictions that are being foisted upon me by the dominant culture.
And I'm not talking about some radicals in the streets, though I guess they're part of it.
I'm talking about by everything, by the corporations, by the administrative government, by entertainment, by the whole kitten caboodle.
How am I to make sense of this sort of thing?
Well, I think, to put it simply, we are living in the postmodern era.
we have moved through modernism
and we are now living in postmodernism.
Okay.
And let's take a nice little way to think about this is,
well, let's make two points about this.
First off, I don't think postmodernism is good.
I think we should get through it as quickly as we possibly can.
And then I think the second point is to make
is a little bit of an understanding
of what postmodernism is.
And so I think a good place to start with that
is there was a postmodern philosopher named Jean Bodriard.
And Jean-Bodierre.
Jean Baudriard said that we are living in a simulation, in the world of simulacra and simulation.
He wrote a book, and I believe it was 1980, called Simulacra and Simulation.
It's a very difficult read, so it can be tough to get your head around.
He said we're living in a hyper-reality where everything is inauthentic.
And I think here's a good way to get your head around it.
It's pretend that you and I are living in ancient Rome, and you and I are walking along the road,
and we find some wild strawberries.
And we go and we pick them and we eat them.
Those strawberries are real.
Now fast forward to the 1960s and you and I are still alive because we've discovered the
Fountain of Youth.
Yeah, we're like Dr. Fauci, you know, the ages come and go, but we seem to remain.
Yeah.
Yeah, we are immortal.
And we're walking along and we go to the supermarket and we buy strawberries.
Now those strawberries are grown in a factory setting and only the biggest, most beautiful,
juiciest, ripest strawberries get picked and given to us.
And they only plant the nicest strawberries, the nicest seeds.
So they're real strawberries still, but they're selectively grown strawberries.
They're the pinnacle of what a strawberry could be.
So then you and I sit around and think, and we have all of our knowledge that we had from ancient
Rome until 1960.
We say, hey, let's make a strawberry candy.
We're going to distill that flavor of the strawberry, and we're going to put it into a little
candy. So we make the strawberry candy.
Fast forward to the 1970s, you and I think, maybe we could sell more of these candies if we
make them a little sweeter. So we distill the flavor and make it even more powerful than a
strawberry is. We make that 10 times as powerful as a strawberry and we add sugar.
Well, fast forward to the 1990s, and the Jolly Rancher company comes along and says,
you know, using real strawberries and sugar's expensive, we're going to use a synthetic
strawberry flavor and high fructose corn syrup.
And they make the Jolly Rancher.
But then the soft drink company comes along and says, we're going to make a soda pop of the strawberry-flavored Jolly Rancher.
And then 7-Eleven comes along, and 7-Eleven or some other company comes along and says, we're going to make a slurpee that is flavored like the soda that is flavored like the Jolly Rancher, which is flavored like the candy, which is flavored like the genetically monified strawberry.
which is flavored like the wild strawberry.
So we're starting with the wild strawberries,
and then we move to the perfectly selectively grown strawberry,
then we go to the candy,
then we go to the Jolly Rancher,
then we move to the Slocop,
then we move to the Slurpee,
and by the time we get to the Slurpee,
we're dealing with something that is vaguely like a strawberry,
that tastes maybe a little like a strawberry,
but isn't really anything like a strawberry.
So my son could go along,
and he picks up the slurpy,
and he starts drinking the strawberry slurping.
And as he's walking along the road,
he sees these funny kind of red-shaped things in the background,
kind of over there.
And he goes, and he picks one, and he goes,
this kind of looks like the little logo on my drink here.
And he takes it and goes,
it kind of maybe tastes vaguely like this slurpy thing,
but it's not nearly as good.
I'll drink the slurpy.
That's an example of a simulacrum,
of a thing that is a copy of a copy of a copy of a copy,
And what Baudriard thought was that everything is kind of like that.
We're dealing with copies of copies of copies of copies of copies of copies of things.
Now Baudriard pushes this idea and he thinks that, for example, we could talk about, I don't know, women.
Back in Rome, there's women and they're just walking around.
Fast forward to the 1960s and there's women, but we've invented makeup.
So fast forward to the 1970s and we've invented makeup and we've invented birth control.
And then fast forward to the 80s when we have makeup and we have birth control and we have breast implants.
Then you add to the go forward to the 1990s and then you add the Photoshop.
Then you fast forward to Instagram and you have a woman who is wearing makeup and has a wig on and she's on birth control and she has blessed implants and she's got 14 layers of makeup on and she's been photoshopped.
And on top of that she has a wonderful little filter on and all of a sudden you're so far away from what a regular person is.
looks like that it's it's it's more real than real it's it's a woman that nobody could ever aspire
to look like you could never have the skin tone of a filter that doesn't exist it's not real but it's
pointed through to you and bodriard thinks we're stuck here and he thinks we can never get back to
reality now i think i would like to say that we can i think i see where you're going with this i was
i was trying to figure out how does the jolly rancher relate to kately jenner but you've just
explained how The Jolly Rancher relates to Caitlin Jenner, that Caitlin Jenner is a hyper-real woman.
She's more woman than a woman. He, he, he is now this appearance of this woman in such an
exaggerated and caricatured way. But whereas I might think that this is a very strange turn of
events that Bruce Jenner now looks like this kind of exaggerated woman, what you're suggesting
perhaps is that we're living in this hyper real world. So of course we're going to get a Caitlin Jenner.
Yeah. I would say, I would say it kind of works like this. The movement of the transgenderist movement or the
transgender movement, the gender ideological movement, whatever you want to call it, has basically
latched onto the symbols of femininity, the symbols of womanhood, and have abstracted those away from the
women who actually wore them and have turned that into the thing that is a woman. So they would say
that being a woman is a purely social role. It's entirely a socially constructed thing,
kind of like the presidency or the job of being a lawyer or being a male man. So talking to them
about a biological woman would be a little bit like trying to talk about a biological male man.
They would say no. They would say a woman isn't this biological entity. A woman is a social role
of a person who follows particular norms in a particular society.
So they would say that they've taken all the things that women have added to their arsenal of social signification.
They've taken all the things that women have brought onto themselves, makeup, wearing dresses, using the color pink, having eyeliner, wearing heels.
And they've said that the thing that constitutes the woman is all the symbols and the social role that they play.
It's got nothing to do with the underlying biological reality.
Okay, I'd like to mix metaphors for a second about metaphor.
So what you're saying is in a sense we've put the cart before the horse.
And to be a little more precise here, we've confused the symbol for the symbolized for the thing that the symbol is referring to.
Yes.
Okay.
Yes.
Boudriard explicitly states that we are living.
in a world where the only thing that does anything is the symbols.
The symbols are the whole world.
That's it.
So the underlying reality, he says, rots away.
He says, you can't ever get to the reality because the only thing that you're operating
on is the level of symbols.
Every time you look at something, when I look at you, Michael Knowles, I don't see a man
or a person.
I see the wedding ring and that's a symbol of being married.
And I see the jacket.
That's a symbol of being at work.
And I see the leftist tears.
and that's a symbol of intelligence.
And I see the Michael Null's show,
and that's the symbol of the show.
The underlying person is completely removed.
I can't get to that.
The only thing I have access to is the symbols.
Yes, right.
Okay, this makes sense.
I've wrapped my head around this.
I agree with your observation.
I would say with Bodriard's observation,
but you should take credit for it.
I take credit for all sorts of ideas
that I just read in some book somewhere.
Now, we agree that this is what's going on.
Okay, fine.
I want to know, first, how did we,
we get here and then second and more importantly how do we get out of it okay so there's a couple of
things that have that have happened um in 1993 there was a book written by a man named stanley grens
called a primer on postmodernism and he argues in that book that we have moved into the postmodern
epoch or the postmodern age he says it's as significant to shift as moving from say the middle
ages to the enlightenment okay he thinks we've now moved from the enlightenment into the postmodern
age. And so Baudreard in 1980 is writing about this. Now you have to think he's writing about
this in 1980. And in the 80s, when we have landline phones and network TV, he thinks you are a
wash in symbols and information to the point where you can't see the real world. You'd have to
wonder what do you think looking around now. Yeah. Right? He'd look around now and be like,
What, right? So the way that the postmodern person views the world is to say that the thing that we have access to is the signs and the symbols, right? That's what we're walking around in, that everything is socially constructed, including your methods of knowing. Yeah. Right. Science is a particular to them. It is a way of knowing, right, that's culturally validated, right? And that there could be other culturally adequate ways of knowing. And all that you have is ways.
of knowing and constructing ideas and constructing knowledge right so they would say
that it's that that what we call for example science is is a sort of there's a
technical term which I'll unpack legitimation by parology okay and what that
would mean is that things are true because there's enough social momentum in
society for the society to consider those things to be true but if pardon
my interruption so if but let's say that there is enough
momentum in society for society to consider something to be true.
Last time I checked, truth is not based on consensus, right?
I mean, truth is based on objective reality.
Correct.
So they have a different conception of truth and a good way to get at that if you want to really
undercut them.
Here's a nice way to think about it.
It was, I believe, in the 80s or 90s, there was a building built on the campus of
Ohio State University called the Wintersexner Center for the Performing Arts.
and it was a postmodern building.
And so it runs at different angles to itself, so it's not a clean grid.
You can see bits of the foundation and bits of the infrastructure and the scaffolding poking out at various parts that have doors that lead to nowhere.
And the idea was that all of the architectural norms and patterns and things that we use to understand architecture are random and arbitrary.
So why can't we just break all those?
and the nice way to get at how to undercut kind of that's their view, right?
That if it's all arbitrary and socially constructed, we can do that.
And so the question that you might want to ask those people is,
okay, so you made all the lines and the windows and the doors,
you put them in arbitrary places, used arbitrary shapes and arbitrary directions.
Okay, did you do that with the foundation?
And the answer is going to be no.
Yeah.
Because much like your ideas about the world,
the foundation is the place where the building connects to the world.
world. And if the place where you connect to the world isn't set on a good foundation, the whole
thing's going to collapse. Right? So that's kind of where we're at right now, is that we are
beginning, we are in a postmodern world where we're getting, where people are getting away from
the reality, where they're in isolated bubbles of information, where the social pressure is
dictating the belief set, nothing to go on with the real world. And that's the situation we're
living in. This reminds me, I once asked, speaking of the grievance studies, sorts of experiments
that we were talking about a bit earlier. Peter Bogosian, who is one of the people behind that,
once explained to me that intersectionality posits that the only thing that I can know with certainty
is my own suffering. And I thought this was an interesting key into intersectionality. And I
see there, okay, you need this, some connection to the world. You need some connection to reality
here. And so for these woke people in the grievance studies, it can be my resentment or my suffering
or my whatever. But there has to be some link. Okay. So then, right, there's some link here. You're
right. They won't mess with the foundation of the building, but they're destroying everything else.
People saw this coming in the 1980s. Very few people, but at least this one guy, saw it coming in the
1980s. It had been building for a while before that. But how did you even get to that point in the
80s? How did you even get to the point where people could see this happening? Well, I think there's a
few things that were going on. I think Boudiard was very pessimistic about this. And as he moves on
through his career, he actually, he wrote a book in 1991 called The Gulf War did not take place.
And his whole thing is he thinks, look, the thing that you saw on TV didn't happen,
something happened, but we don't know what it is, right? He thinks that it was a show that
was put on, right? He says the United States wants to play the role of the good guy, and
still they're casting Saddam Hussein in the role of the bad guy, and here we go, we're going
to have a fake war. That's kind of how Bodriard sees it. Now, the thing with Bodriard that we want to
avoid at all costs is Bodriard accepts the premise that reality is gone, that we can't get to
it. And what we would want to do is we want to look at Bodriard and say, okay, Bodriard, you've
made some interesting observations about how social abstractions can get away from reality, but
that doesn't mean the reality's gone.
It's still here.
Not even Bojard's going to step in front of a bus, right?
Right.
So if you rewind a little bit, there's some philosophy that's going on in the 60s, 70s, and 80s
that really kind of pushes this.
And it comes from a couple of guys, Jacques Derda and Michelle Foucault.
And I can't explain those guys in just a few minutes.
But suffice to say that, how do I put this?
as complicated as their ideas were, what was taken out from their ideas and from their philosophy,
what was abstracted out was the idea that there is no central or correct perspective,
that there is no inherent, fixed, and stable meaning in language,
and there is no stable, correct, proper, appropriate categories.
All those things are arbitrary.
You know, I love the distinction you've made here because you say you can't sum up these radical
theorists like Foucault or Derr in three minutes. Frankly, I don't think we could sum them up in
three years or 30 years. And frankly, I don't even know if they could sum themselves up in certain
things that they said. But regardless, who cares? I frankly, I don't even care. I mean,
I'm interested as an intellectual matter what Foucault or Derrida thought. But what I care more
about is the effect that they had. What was taken out of their philosophy? There's a
line that people love to quote from Derrida, which is variously translated as there is nothing
outside of the text. But then Derrida's defenders come in and they say, no, actually, he said,
there is no outer text. And then they are trying to find all these semantic distinctions.
Well, pardon my bluntness, who cares if the effect of it is that people interpret the man to mean
there's nothing outside the text, that really everything is just constructed. Everything is a matter
of language. And we can control language and control the work.
world, then that's what matters to me because that is what engineered my politics.
Yeah. So what happened is these theorists had some kind of interesting ideas, but their ideas
were harvested through by activists and were turned against themselves. When Derda said there
is no outside text, one of the problems that Derrida runs into, and this was pointed out by John
Searle in 1983 when he was doing a review of a book called On Deconstruction. And Searle, he said,
says, look, Derrda's, one of the Derrda's things is to say that there's no, there's nothing
that is central. There's no essence to anything. There's no inheritance. There is no, he attacks
logocentrism. The idea that there's a Logos, that's gone. A logos, meaning the sort of
divine logic of the universe, in the beginning was the word and the word was with God, right,
the word there was, in the beginning was the Logos, right. Yeah, that's right. And so Derda
says all of these things that we've been talking about, Plato with the forms, essence,
God, all of that, he says, is this logocentrism, which he wants to deconstruct.
There's a nice term for it and do away with it.
And he says, and Derta comes to the conclusion that because there is no central point,
all interpretations are endlessly open for reinterpreting and reprocessing.
And Searle, the analytic philosopher John Searle came along on.
him and said, look, when you get rid of metaphysics data, you're buying into the same thing that you're attacking him because you want to get rid of metaphysics because you think metaphysics is necessary for us to have truth, for us to have reality. And what Searle says, and we could nitpick him about this if we wanted to keep some metaphysics around, but he said the classical metaphysics of guys like Plato of Aristotle, he said, that's not necessary for us to talk about truth. I hereby declare metaphysics is gone. Building didn't fly.
down and I still see things around, you and I can still talk.
Reality is the thing that grants us the objectivity, right?
And while I am a subject, I am causally connected to the world.
So reality is the thing that grants us objectivity.
I don't... Derek can attack metaphysics all he wants, but his, what he thinks that follows from that
and what he was taken as meaning, that there's nothing outside the text, that there's nothing outside of interpretation, that there's nothing
outside of context, that everything is purely contextual and defined by its context.
Cyril's going to say that's wrong.
And I would toss out also, Derda, if you think things are only differ because of context,
differ in virtue of what?
Of the properties that they have?
Of the thing that actually makes them up?
Of the reality, Derda?
That what you mean?
So, Searle points out that Derda's whole philosophy is, is,
is rickety, it's on stilts, his blinding insight isn't actually all that insightful.
And what he was taken to mean, that everything is merely interpretation, that turns out
to be entirely wrong.
Besides which we could ask a very simple question, which is if everything is entirely
interpretable, why should we accept the interpretation that everything's entirely interpretable?
Right, right, right.
Why should I accept your interpretation?
This reminds me of, you know, every freshman philosopher who, you know, rips the bong a little
too hard and says, you know, man, there is no truth. And you say, okay, well, with what authority
are you convincing me that your statement is objectively true, namely that there is no truth?
You remind me, too, of this line from C.S. Lewis, which I love where he says the, I'm paraphrasing,
he writes, he writes better than I talk, but he says that the atheist can no more blot out
God, then the lunatic can blot out the sun by writing the word darkness on the walls of his
padded cell. And I love that image. So Derry Dada says, no, this subjective reality, it's gone.
And you say, well, I don't know, sun's still shining, everything, building still stand. It looks real to me.
Yeah. So they've taken Dara. Dara wasn't enough to do it, though. They needed somebody else.
And they needed Michael Foucault. And as much of people have tried to nuance him and say, he wasn't
really saying the things that they that they said he was saying. I kind of think he was.
Yeah. And what Foucaulte was arguing was that what is considered to be truth are things get,
truth is a status that we bestow on ideas. Socially, it's a social status, like saying,
you know, president is something that we bestow on Joe Biden by virtue of an election or
prime minister, something we bestow on Justin Trudeau by virtue of an election. Truth is a
is something that we bestow on ideas by virtue of our social institutions.
Yeah.
Right?
And so he's, this is what he, that idea that truth is a product of discourses and power,
that truth is a social entity that is created using power via discourse, the way we talk
and discuss things.
That idea took hold.
And so all of a sudden, you have these people on the one hand who say,
everything is just context
and we can reinterpret things endlessly
and then you have another people
call on and say all of the ideas
that we have are really just a product of discourse
and of power
and now you can do two things
one is you can every time someone says
you know I think
that
lower taxes are good
they're going to come along and say that's
that's a power move
you're saying that
because lower taxes
will help your side gain power
Yeah, yeah.
And everything is due to the lens of power.
But not only is everything viewed through the lens of power, it's also endlessly reinterpretable.
Yeah.
Right?
So when everything can be endlessly reinterpreted and everything is just, is seen as a mask for power,
all of a sudden you can see what the problem, the problems that crop up, and you can see this, tying it back to Caitlin Jenner thing.
When someone says, look, I don't think the trans women who are biologically male,
should be allowed to compete in women's sports.
What they'll tell you is,
the Foucodeon answer is you don't really care about women's sports.
You don't watch the NBA.
This is about controlling women's bodies.
So that's the power thing.
And then they'll say,
now here is the reinterpretation of the symbols,
is to say, look, the idea of what a woman is,
we can pick what words mean,
we can decide what things mean,
and we can reinterpret the idea of a woman
to refer to the social role, right?
You do both of those things at once,
And all of a sudden women's sports goes from people with a particular biology being able to compete with each other on a fair playing field to people who are in a particular social role playing against each other regardless of their biology.
And you can see this Sarah Silverman did an interesting little thing about it just recently.
She said, what about the category?
She says, well, what about tall women?
Yeah.
What about some women are bigger than other women?
And what she's doing is she's calling on the type of deconement.
instruction that went on in the 70s where they would say it's it's all just context right that's
why they say that um who was it recently that said that testosterone Samantha B yeah on full
frontal Samantha B said testosterone doesn't isn't the thing that makes someone a better athlete and what
she's doing is she's saying look by itself if I just inject a bunch of testosterone into me I won't
become a great athlete therefore testosterone isn't the thing that does it this is the univariate fallacy
right where you where you say because i changed that one because the one thing by itself isn't enough
that means that it's you can't make any judgments based upon that so saying that testosterone by
itself isn't the deciding factor is a little bit like saying bullets have never killed anybody they haven't
they haven't they're just sitting there on the table you need some you need some metal that's formed
into a gun you need a barrel you need a handle you need aim you need oxygen you need you need
energy? Why are you going around spreading this fallacy that bullets are killing people? You need
organs to be ripped up. I mean, you know, though, I have to say to give Sarah Silverman and
Michelle Foucault some credit here, when we're imagining Foucault to say this and when we actually
heard Sarah Silverman say this verbatim, she says, this isn't about women's sports. You don't
care about women's sports. The fact is, I don't. I don't care about women's sports. I've never
watched women's sports. I guess in the gymnastics of the Olympics or curling or something. I don't
know, occasionally if it happens to be on. Otherwise, I just don't follow it, and I don't,
it doesn't interest me. Regular sports, you know, like real sports with guys, that doesn't
really interest me either. Okay, but what does interest me is reality. What does interest me is
the conception of truth as eternal and grounded in reality and the conception of truth is just
something socially constructed. And to your point, you've just made me think of it. The traditional
understanding of truth in our culture, in Christendom, is that Christ is the truth. And he is,
when he is standing there before Pontchus Pilate saying, I come to give testimony to the truth.
And Pilate, who's not the good guy in the story, right? You've got the bad guy there. He cynically
asks, what is truth? As though he were deri da or Foucault or any of these postmodernists that we see.
And the idea that truth is just this sort of label that we use for popular ideas that the society has come to embrace.
Well, what happens to Christ in the passion narrative?
Christ is scorned, he's abandoned, he is scourged, and he's crucified.
Doesn't sound very popular to me, does it?
Even by his closest friends.
So you've got that conception of truth, which is the one that I go to.
And then now you've got this postmodern idea that you've described that,
And it's just, you know, whatever we all think is popular and it's about power dynamics.
So I totally see your point that we have transformed, we have gotten here.
There were particular thinkers going back at least to the 60s that it brought us here.
But it didn't just start in the 60s either.
I know we could be here all day if I keep asking you to go further and further back.
But it didn't just start in the 60s.
There were writers in the 30s and 40s and the 1920s and the 1890s and the 1890s.
I hate to ask you to trace, you know, centuries of intellectual history in about five minutes.
But how did we even get to Derrida?
Well, Derrida was picking up on Ferdinand de Sassur's idea of structuralism, right?
That's where he comes from where Ferdinand de Sassur was the first one to say words get their meaning from other words.
And those words get their meaning from other words.
And words are just endlessly defined by other words and the meaning is found in the structure.
And Derda comes along and says, okay, what structure?
Right?
There's no structure.
It's just words endlessly referring to other words.
And so I think because we could go back forever, I mean, even Nietzsche talks about in the death of God,
he says, who has wiped away the horizon, right?
And he's talking about the demarcations of reality, right?
I think the thing that we need to do right now is we need to get back to the idea of truth as corresponding to reality,
that it's not endlessly interpretable and deconstructible.
Even with what you did with Sarah Silverman, there's something you said,
I don't care about women's sports.
No, but you do care about fairness.
Right.
Well, exactly.
I care about fairness and justice and truth and reality.
And what is she doing when she does that?
What she's doing is she saying, you don't care about women's sports.
And that's meant to be interpreted as your care about here isn't an intrinsic concern for the WNBA.
Your concern is about power.
No, my concern is about fairness.
Because once you bring fairness into the WMBA, what's to stop you from bringing it into the NBA?
If people can use particular chemicals and hormones and whatever
and have whatever testosterone on their levels they want and pay in the WNBA,
well, what's to stop a guy from the NBA saying,
I'm going to have whatever testosterone levels I want and he's on steroids, right?
There's no end point for it, right?
So I think we have to get back to the idea of truth that it corresponds to the world
and corresponds to reality.
We'll get there first, right?
That's the first thing we've got to do is bring back the objectivity.
Remember, if your foundation,
doesn't have any objectivity to it when your building meets the world it's going to collapse.
Well, if your way of thinking has no objectivity in its foundation, when your ideas meet the world,
they'll collapse too, right? So I think that's the first thing to do.
I totally agree. And the reason I suppose I've asked about this further back intellectual history
of where this all comes from is because the problem seems so deeply embedded.
Just to give a very sort of broad sketch, you've got the new left rises in the 60s,
Right. Guys like Herbert Marcuse, a father of the new left, where does he come from? He comes from
the Frankfurt School and critical theory, which we're now seeing a lot of the emanations of critical
theory. Where does critical theory come from? Well, it ultimately goes back to Marx. What does Marx say
he wants to engage on? The ruthless criticism of all that exists, tearing down everything,
an early discussion of deconstruction, to use the popular word. And frankly, I think it goes back
further than Marx. So now you're saying we need to ground our sense of the world in reality
again. Well, how do we do that after centuries of this gradual poisoning of our, of our
worldview? So if you want to go back, we can talk about Hegel if we have to go back there.
Although, I don't want to talk about Hegel. I don't, not a Hegel fan. So the way I like to think
about this, because people point it at what we call critical.
social justice, which is the term I use, the woke movement, if you will.
Yeah.
They pointed it and say, this is updated Marxism.
And I go, kind of not the correct way to think about it.
The kind of way to think about it is Marx kicked Marxism off rolling down a hill.
And as the snowball went, it picked up all kinds of things, right?
What we're seeing right now is a mutated stew of Marxist conflict theory, the critical theory,
theory of the 1930s, the new left
that kicked off with Marcuse in the 60s,
Derrda's and Foucault's postmodern analysis.
The way that that postmodern analysis was laundered through
queer theory in the 90s via Judith Butler
and through post-colonial theory, Edward Said,
Homie Baba, Gajari Spivak, all the way up.
And now that has, that thing got
toxified and then memeified, right?
And it trickled down through Tumblr.
So if you think about it like this,
here's another nice way to think about it.
Pretend I have a bright light,
and the further I get away from the bright light,
the dimmer the light gets.
Yeah.
Okay.
I think of if the light is the truth,
we're getting away dimmer,
but the truth still shines bright.
Okay?
The critical theorists,
the postmodernism,
is like
a rotting chicken
and the more
it just rots
and decomposes
that's all it does
there was no
no better thing
they might
well someone will nitpick my analogy
and say well what about the real chicken
you know give me a break
imagine you started with a rotten chicken
and then you just like let it ferment
and keep fermenting and keep fermenting
it's toxic and toxic right
it's not like the sweet grapes
of truth that are fermented into the wine
of the of the modern world.
It's like the rotting chicken of Foucahom Dara
that are just degrading into Tumblr-level activism, right?
This is what we're dealing with here, right?
So those ideas got all picked up
and were used explicitly for political reasons,
and it gets laundered through and dumbed down as it goes.
So there's a sense in which some of these people try to hide
and they'll say, well, you know,
that's not real critical theory.
Yeah.
No.
But the toxicness of critical theory, when you go back and you read Markuz's essays on, say, repressive tolerance, it's just as bad then.
It's just more academic and it's steel man by really powerful intellect, so it looks like it's a lot better, right?
But it's still rotten right to its core and right to its bones.
So I think what we need to do is that stuff has been allowed to sit and ferment in various areas of the humanities.
postmodernism and postmodern philosophy really didn't get a hold in in I mean it's not even it's not really even popular in France where it got kicked off it really got a hold in English literature departments yeah because when you can reinterpret anything endlessly boy that's useful in art right all of a sudden I can de contextualize one piece of art and with another piece of art and I can I can put them beside each other and juxtapose them and create a new piece of
piece of art. Reinterpreting things endlessly in the artistic world has some utility and some use.
It allows us to create new meaning. I want people to do that with art. I don't want them to do that
with the cure for cancer. I don't want some postmodern person to like pull up the the ingredient list for
HIV drugs and say, we're going to reinterpret this and then market it. That's bad. Don't do that.
In the realm of science you saw during the BLM riots and the COVID lockdowns, there was a letter signed by
1,200 public health experts. They had very fancy degrees. They had wonderful, really impressive training.
And they said, it's bad when conservatives go to church or when they go protests their civil liberties
being taken away. But it is good when BLM goes out and steals Nike sneakers and riots because
white supremacy is a lethal public health threat that predates and exacerbates COVID-19.
So you see this language seeping into the science. But it,
That doesn't sound very scientific to me.
They're taking the credibility from their work in, say, immunology.
Yeah.
And they're using that to launder through the BLM activist vision of the world, right?
Yeah.
And all of the political ideas that are contained within the BLM organization,
such as the deconstruction of the family, the abolishing of the police,
and buying Patricia Guller's Five Houses, right?
These are all the things that are part of that.
And I mean, we have a little fun with it.
The point is that these people are in very real ways doing deep damage to the credibility of science as an institution.
Of course.
Because they're using it to bolster their credibility in other areas.
And this is not appropriate.
This was never what this was designed to do.
What I wrote back then was medical experts.
It said COVID-19 meant we have to close businesses,
cancel weddings, council church, and mission funerals and stay at home.
Most of us through tears and broken hearts listened.
And I have and do and did advocate for lockdowns where they were appropriate and where they were necessary.
I think that they were needed in some places.
I think that that lockdowns, particularly in the early part of the pandemic when we didn't know what we were dealing with,
were entirely justified.
But in that early part of the pandemic, when they were doing that,
And Los Angeles, downtown Los Angeles, filled up with 35,000 people saying, you know, Black Lives Matter.
And I believe that the life of every black person is important.
I believe that we need to be fair and treatment equally.
What a controversial opinion.
I can't.
It's such an unpopular opinion.
But when you have a Black Lives Matter rally and they say, well, this is okay.
people are looking around saying well wait a second
you're you're deciding what spreads and what doesn't
based upon what suits your political ideology
you've politicized your field
and now we no longer trust you
and the
the cynical sort of
attitude of of the postmodern theorists has been
yeah but it was always already political
yeah that's what they think they think everything was political
So my thing is I have been very vocally pro-lockdown, very, very vocally pro-vaccine.
And when that letter came out, I just looked at this and I said, you people have sold your inheritance of credibility and trust for the mess of pottage of a single rally in L.A.
And I cannot believe that you did it.
You sold your credibility for nothing.
Well, on the point of the-
On the point of the lockdowns and the very valid.
vaccine. It's funny now to look at it because I think that the state absolutely has a right
to certain emergency police powers during a pandemic or something like that. I think that vaccines
have a long history and there are various ways that the state has coerced vaccines and that
has perfect standing in American politics. But the issue is that these people who are signing
these letters and the Dr. Fauci's of the world who go on TV and lie to you and say, the masks,
don't work, and then five seconds later, they say, you need to wear the masks. I only lied so that
my nurses got more masks when, and I'm only slightly paraphrasing him there, when they squander
that credibility, then I say that every time they open their mouths, I become 15% less likely
to abide by their lockdown orders or to get the vaccine or use the passport or whatever.
Yeah, the professor of epidemiology, Seth Prince, S-U-J-U-S-U-S-U-S-N-S-U-N-S-P-R-I-N-S, said that public health officials needed to, quote, pick a side.
Can you imagine telling people that we've picked a side?
Yeah.
All of a sudden, people who are like, well, I'm on the other side and I need health care, why would I trust you?
Right.
Why on earth?
you know, why would any police officer ever take advice from a public health official again?
These people have used their platforms to pick aside and say it should be the goal of public health to abolish the police.
That's from Epielli.
She quoted a graphic that she had originally made for protesters and for police, and she changed it and said,
as one of the original creators of this revised graphic, disarm, defund, and abolish.
That's what she said.
All of a sudden, if you're a police officer and the professor of immunology,
says, I no longer believe that police should be allowed out, and I want to defund, disarmament,
abolish them. If you're a police officer or a police chief in a major area and you need
information for how to keep your police officers safe, are you going to go to that professor
of immunology? Is that what you're going to do? No. So these people have, by deciding to use their,
the platform that they got for health care to launder through their political ideas, is
is breaking the credibility of everybody.
And the point here is I think it can't be overstated.
The politicization of everything,
because they think everything is already political,
if that's what you buy into,
if you think that everything is always already political,
then you have no problem dragging politics in.
But when you think everything is always already political,
then anytime someone who disagrees with you says something,
you're now analyzing what they said through the lens of,
okay, what is their political goal here?
But I would like to stand up for...
Sure.
No, I see that point and I think I agree broadly.
But to stand up for these insane leftists for a second.
Or, you know, I guess it was expressed most concisely by the second wave feminists when they say that the personal is the political, right?
This is where this idea kind of breaks out into the mainstream.
When they say that, they make a real point, which is that my personal life, the way that I interact with my husband as a housewife of the 1970s,
way I interact with my society, the way that I interact with schooling or go to work, that has
a political basis to it, that it rests on certain political premises, rests on a very
political arrangement of society, it rests on a religious foundation too. And I, as a feminist,
I'm going to question all of that. And I'm going to say, a woman needs a man like a fish
needs a bicycle. And I'm going to say, as Simone de Beauvoir said, you know, Jean-Paul Sartre's
Trumpet and a very famous feminist herself. She said, women should not be allowed to stay at home
with the children. This is a political matter. If we let women stay at home, the politics will never
change. So we've got to change their personal decisions, coerce their personal decisions,
and then we'll have a better polity than we currently have. I think just in the most modest way,
aren't they making an important point that our private decisions exist in a political context
because we're all living in society together?
So I think...
How do I say this?
There are two ways in which to handle that sentence.
First off, people who say, you know,
a woman needs a man like a fish needs a bicycle.
Imagine if we went to, like, I don't know,
found an endangered species like the panda.
And someone said, we need more pandas.
And I said, the female pandas need a male panda
the way to fish needs a bicycle.
Right.
This is how the human species.
species repopulates and keeps going. So I think it's absurd. If you take it at its best,
it could say, well, socially or my value or whatever else, but it really just turns out to
the idea, a sort of an atomistic view of life, where I am complete unto myself, disconnected
from anything. And so what they have, the critical social justice, has taken a high, low
coalition where at the level of the individual, my choices should be absolutely unencumbered,
But at the level of society, society has to be adjusted entirely so that my, to accommodate all of, to accommodate, well, to they would say to be fair, to accommodate everybody living how they, the life which they have constructed for themselves according to their way of knowing, right?
Yeah.
They would say this as liberatory.
Yeah.
Right.
They think that they are liberating themselves from the clutches of enlightenment liberalism and its demands for objective truth, which is really just a prison, right?
Foucault was once quoted to saying,
someone said, do you want to go to heaven?
And he said, I don't know, am I allowed to leave?
Right, because if I can't leave, it's just a prison.
Right, right.
That's the self, a gentle automation unchecked by anything is what matters, right?
So they would say that for everyone.
So they would say they want to liberate us from having person, from having responsibilities.
This is why they hate Jordan Peterson so much,
because they're saying we want to liberate ourselves from having the responsibilities of everyone else
and people encumbering them on themselves.
and Jordan Peterson comes along and to take on as much responsibility as you can.
Right, right?
It's an opposite idea in a way.
But you mentioned here enlightenment liberalism as sort of that objective standard that they're rebelling against.
But could one not also point to enlightenment liberalism and say, ah, therein lies the problem.
Because out of enlightenment liberalism, we get a whole lot of treatises about tolerance,
we get a whole lot of tracts about pluralism, we get a sort of cracking up perhaps of the
certainty of the truth. I mean, this is what Hamlet is about, right? Hamlet is basically about
Martin Luther, as far as I can tell. It's about the crack up of this, this monopoly on truth in the
West. And so could one, I'm not saying that I'm saying this, but I suppose I am saying this,
that one could look back at this moment and say, rather than the vindication of objective truth,
there began this descent into you do you.
I would say two things about that.
As someone who has defended Enlightenment liberalism, fairly robustly, I say we have a version of Enlightenment liberalism, which I'm seeking, is one which suffices as a conflict resolution strategy.
The Enlightenment liberal is going to say that when there's a conflict in society, we have particular methods of doing so.
democracy, the rule of law, applying equally fundamental human rights, and truth, right?
Enlightenment liberalism cannot provide your life with the meaning that undergirds it.
It was never meant to do that.
That's not its goal.
Enlightenment liberalism says that there's Muslims and Jews and Christians and atheists and feminists,
and these people all need to be able to somehow get along and work with each other.
And the postmodernist comes along and says, aha, why we follow Enlightenment?
liberalism. We can deconstruct all of that. And then once they've deconstructed everything,
all of those conflict resolution strategies are now gone. Right? I think this is a very good point,
but it does require one answer here, which is John Locke, father of liberalism, John Locke, writes
the great letter concerning toleration. And he says, we got to tolerate everybody, you know,
because that's how we're all going to, that's how we're going to resolve conflicts and get along
in society. And we're going to tolerate everybody except for a,
atheists. Atheists have no claim on toleration. Actually, they cannot be tolerated or the
society is going to fall apart. Now, today, of course, nobody quotes that part of John Locke.
But it seems what he's getting at here is we need to have some common ground. We need to be
standing on some common ground here because if we, with regard to morality, ethics, the way we
view ourselves in the universe, because if we don't, you couldn't even have that conflict resolution.
Right. And this is kind of part of the problem where we're at with postmodernism is that the postmodernists are standing on an entirely different thing.
I think part of the problem is that postmodernism only ever spits itself back and redefined and bastardized versions of the concepts that we use, which is why when they say racism, sexism and homophobia, we're against those things. And we say, I'm against those things too.
They have an entirely different set of definitions for what those things mean, right? So when you say, I'm against, you know, I would say, I would say, I would say,
say I'm against transphobia. I don't think that Caitlin
Jenner should be beaten up on the way to buy eggs
and cheese and get groceries and do
other things that Caitlin Jenner. I think that's not a problem.
By the way, good luck beating up Caitlin Jenner.
Caitlin Jenner is the greatest athlete
that's ever lived, you know? I mean, good luck.
You're not going to beat that guy up.
But they would say that transphobia extends
even to your thoughts.
There was a paper that
was written by, I believe it was Robin. I want to
say Robin Nembrough from Yale, who argued
that
if to avoid using a
trans person's chosen pronouns, you use their name. So if I say Caitlin Jenner instead of she,
that that's still a subtle form of transphobia because I haven't used the opportunity,
because I've used the opportunity where I would have normally used a pronoun to sub it out.
And in doing so, I have denied Caitlin Jenner's, I have failed to affirm Caitlin Jenner's female identity, right?
The Enlightenment liberal would tell you to toss off with that.
But the postmodernist would say no. And so you're right. The postmodernist would say no. And so you're right.
The postmodernist, the core assumptions of the postmodernist are inherently social, radical social constructivism of absolutely everything, right?
And so that is really the core of the problem that we're seeing, because that's the thing that filters down and uploads so easily into a world of Photoshop, right?
That everything is just socially constructed just uploads just so wonderfully and simply onto the internet.
that kind of nitpicky kind of 2016 era Tumblr activism uploads really easy when you just want to reinterpret everything and say, well, this really means this, and this really means this.
That kind of stuff uploads so simply into that world, right?
And that's where it kind of can take off in a way that slow, careful, rigor doesn't really take off.
Yeah. Right. Like I can take a meme of, so somebody said, oh, I can't remember who it was, but if you know what a diminutive is, like when I say my cat, like, who's a good boy? That's a diminutive.
Yeah, yeah, megaluch. That's my, that's my Italian diminutive. Hey, megaluch. It's a little like, yeah, cute little, a little megalo. Yeah. So the postmodernist person comes along and says, I deconstruct gender binder all all the time, but I always talk to my kid, good boy, good boy, good boy, because gender is just a diminutive linguistic construct.
That's it to them.
And they've reinterpreted the whole thing.
And you go, look at that and you say, I see how you did that.
It's complete nonsense.
But I see how that work.
I see what you're doing there.
It's just endless, endless reinterpretation of the signs and symbols because that's the entire world, the discourse in which they live in, right?
So everything is just discourse.
So when the Enlightenment, liberal says, I believe that there are facts about the world that are indubitable, that are true, that are correct.
But there's something that we can contact with immediately you're all already stepping away because what the postmodernist is going to say is going to say no, no, no, no, no, no.
You're filled with so much bias and you're filled with so much a longing for power.
And nothing that you say can be taken at face value.
And you're badly motivated.
And so we have to deconstruct your motives.
And you've been socialized in.
And so by the time they're done, there's no stable, correct, true, or absolute sentences because every sentence.
that you say could have been reinterpreted anyway.
The world is constructed in systems of power.
Right.
Science is just a system of power.
Now, you might want to tip a hat to Foucault a little bit and say some of the people who are urging for some of the COVID legislation to stick around permanently.
Foucaulte might have a look at that and say, CIT.
told you so.
Yeah.
Right.
The problem is that Foucault thinks that's the whole world, right?
Yeah.
These guys, I mean, there is a way in which Derta has a point about some stuff in which
you could say, yeah, things can be reinterpreted.
We can, we can take something old and use it for something new.
I can juxtapose these two different paintings to create a new piece of art.
That's okay.
And there's something about Foucaulte where you could say, yeah, you know what?
There are certain times when, when.
someone's credibility in one particular area of the academic world becomes, to use a term from the economic world,
fungible, and then extend them to other areas where they use their, say, credibility and I don't know, mathematics to opine on all kinds of different things,
which is why we might ask Michael Jordan or LeBron James or Tom Cruise about moral issues, right?
Because it extends their credibility and their social credibility extends out.
And we might say, Fuku has a point about some of this stuff.
The problem is not that, sure, sometimes power gets abused by people.
And sure, sometimes people take this stuff out and go in wrong directions with it.
And sure, sometimes institutions who have credibility and we trust to do the rigorous work of providing us truth, use that trust to launder through political ideology.
That can happen.
But to say that that's the whole show.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that's everything always everywhere is just wrong.
And so what I would want to do is I would want to say is that the ideology that's been
constructed out of their ideas needs to be.
I mean, I would say that you and I are acting somewhat deconstructively on a meta-narrative
here.
Go on.
Deconstruct that.
Unpack that, please.
You might be acting in a deconstructive way on some of their metanarratives.
And we might be wanting to point out to them that.
that part of their tactics rely entirely on creating social asymmetries where they're allowed to deconstruct you, but you can't deconstruct them back.
And that's the point about intersectionality, by the way.
That's the thing that Crenshaw thinks that she can put her linchpin on.
The universal solvent of postmodernism sits in the jar of personal experience, which can't be deconstructed, right?
That's what you can't deconstruct my experience of living as a woman.
as a black woman and she couldn't understand deconstruct my experience as living as a
Jewish white male who's converted to Christianity in Canada and or deconstruct your
your experience of of of swarthiness in podcasting in Tennessee hair yeah you know she
would say you can't deconstruct those things right and and then they have the
standpoint epistemology which says that the person at
that everyone can see the dominant view because it's dominant and the this on this bottom view under
here right that that's the view that nobody sees or understands and one might want to ask them
given that you show the same views as Coca-Cola who's the dominant view in society at the moment
Coca-Cola and the administrative state and big tech and so now we've obviously run way over time in
the interview but I don't care my producers want to go to lunch too bad I in our
remaining minutes here. I need to ask this. I'm too depressed by everything you've told me.
I need to know the answer. People have proposed many different answers to this problem of the
wokeness and the kind of postmodern gel, the jelly that we're all living in where nothing makes any
sense and we can't really seem to move. Some people have said, we ought to go back to Enlightenment
liberalism. Just restore the, go back in time to the values of Enlightenment liberalism, that'll be great.
Some people have said we need to go back a little further still. Maybe those Catholics had a point. Maybe we need to be a little firmer in our declaration of truth. Some people have said that we need to, you know, I think of the identitarian types, that we need to basically be if the left is going to be racist, we need to be racist. We need to have a hyper focus on race. If they're going to be atheists, you know, we're going to be atheists too, but we're going to choose to perform certain religious rituals just because, you know, they're good or something.
thing or they're, but it doesn't matter if they're true, but they're, you know, anyway, they're
conducive to society and people have all these different ideas.
What's your idea?
I want to see nothing less than the return of the logos to prominence and Western civilization.
Sounds quite.
Yeah. And I could think of quite a few philosophers who might want to have that with me.
And they might construe it differently.
They might construe, some would construe the Logos as Christ.
Others people are going to construe the logos as truth.
Other people are going to construe the logos as wisdom and understanding reality, but the logos needs to come back.
Searle, when he, in his view, says that we could take Daredes deconstruction and we can deconstruct it right back and show him to be a classical metaphysician, right?
The acid of postmodernism eats everything including itself.
It doesn't leave anything left, right?
So once you do that.
I want to, before you go on, I'd want to make sure nobody missed that point.
that you can use Derrida to undermine Derrida.
You can use the sort of postmodernism to undermine the postmodernism and turn it into
whatever you want.
We can turn Derrida into Pope Gregory the Great if we want to, right?
It's just words, words, words.
Well, to be fair with Derrida, he would say it's endlessly open to interpretation.
It's always endlessly open.
He wouldn't say you can interpret it just any way you want, but I would turn that around and say,
well, Derrida, I guess what you're saying is open.
and since you buy the death of the author
and that the author doesn't get to decide
what the work means after it leaves his pen
I guess you don't get to decide
what your work means after it leaves yours
the way I mean this goes back to the foundation
would you do that with the foundation right
all of the postmodern stuff is operating
as our friend
I wish he was my friend
our colloquial friend John Searle points out
is that all of their therefores
and as a result
and in light of
and all the inferences
that they claim from their claims
are based on the very rationality
that they're trying to get rid of.
They're using rationality
to try and get rid of rationality.
The point is that
if you ever succeeded in doing that
you'd have undermined rationality
which means that your whole critique
would have been undermined
from the get-go.
So what I would say is
to put it simply
when someone says to you
there is no truth
the response of
is that true
should tie them up and not.
Yeah.
Right.
And typically the way that they've done is to kind of live with a sort of detached irony, right?
Because nothing matters.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So the way that we go out of this is that we can't go back.
We have to go through.
That's the only way out of this is through.
We can't undo it.
There's no unweaving the rainbow to steal a phrase from Richard Dawkins, right?
We can't undo it.
There's no way back.
there's no stepping out, we have to go through it.
So I think the first thing that we want to do
is something that we need to make sure that we're doing
when we're attacking this stuff is to get clear
about the constellation of concepts
that populate the motivational economy of the people
that are pushing this stuff.
We want to get really clear about how all of these things
relate to each other so that we can see
the endless circularity that they use
to try and make their stuff go.
We want to understand their power moves and social
pressure tactics that they use
and why they, when they,
when we get into an argument about truth, they instantly switch to moral shaming because they're not interested in having debate about what the facts are.
They're interested in gaining social power. We need to understand that. We need to move through.
And then I think we don't return. We bring through with us.
Before you go on, I just have to clarify here. When you say, you know, they're using these ad homonyms and they're just moral shaming and whatever.
They're attacking you. And you say, we have to not try to avoid that, but go through. What do you mean go through it?
like just take it or oh oh no i mean that having the wherewithal for example white fragility when
someone says you have white you say i'm not a racist they say you have white fragility yeah you have to
immediately expose that as a kafka trap okay yeah you have to me suppose oppose that and say look
what you're saying is that if i say i'm not racist i have white fragility and that white fragility
is proof that I have racist and you know that I'm a racist because I have white fragility, which proves that I'm a racist.
You immediately have to call the bluff on it.
Right.
Their whole game is to attack the assumptions that you make.
The response is to say all the games that you're playing is relying on my assumptions too.
A nice way to do this, I mean, if you're going back to the Caitlin Jenner thing, when they say,
this person is wearing a dress
this person is wearing makeup this person has got a wig on
this person identifies as female
why is that not enough
and you say can men wear dresses
well yeah okay can men wear makeup
yeah okay so then what does that have to do with anything
with being a woman right right you have to
you have to demonstrate the absurdity of it right
you have to show that their own assumptions
are are that they
that the whole to be
trans to go from male to female relies on the existence of a gender binary.
You couldn't go from unless there was a male and a female to go from and to go to.
Of course, yeah.
So I have no, if someone has gender dysphoria and says, this is the only way that I can live,
we can have a discussion about that and I would probably be okay with that.
If someone says, but you have to actually believe now that I am this thing that I claim to
be, I can say, no, there's a biological reality here that undergirds this, right?
So when someone moves with you on an ad hominem to immediately expose the tactic for what it is
is of absolute paramount of porn, expose the Kafka trap, expose the circular reasoning,
expose the argument via insinuation, expose the unjustified inferences at all times, everywhere,
always.
When they say you're misinterpreting me and they want to say, well, you have to read this
4,000 page book, you immediately say, if you're demanding charitability from me reading you,
then you must give me the same
charitability in the way you read me.
And if you don't,
then I'm justified.
All these social and argumentative asymmetries
need to be called out immediately.
You go through them.
You can't go around them.
You can't avoid them.
You have to rip them apart.
It's a great point.
This is a very Dantean point.
I like the only way out is through
that Dante, you know,
to give us the vision of heaven,
he doesn't get to just jump right up
and go to heaven.
He has to go down through the very bowels of hell
and crawl across Satan
up to purgatory and up to heaven.
Yeah. So then the second thing that you do is you have to take the things about which social justice is pointing at, which give it its plausibility, you have to be able to show how those don't justify the philosophy and the social ontology. Their social philosophy that they've created out of this, their critical social justice doesn't hold together. You have to drive that apart. Then I think that you have to, there is a very strong tradition. I think most people hold to it. They're kind of ducking.
and covering right now because all of the cultural megaphones are owned by woke people.
And we need people, I mean, John McHhorter went, I think yesterday or the day before on Bill Marshall
and just lit wokeness on fire and it was absolutely beautiful.
We need more of that.
So I think going through it means that we have to come through on the other side with a version
of Enlightenment liberal, which said, enlightenment liberalism, which says this is a conflict
resolution strategy built around democracy, human rights, property rights, property rights,
freedom, the power utility and strength of science, the usefulness of markets, and then say,
we're going to keep that through, but we're going to adopt an understanding of that,
which allows us to filter out the postmodern view of the world, that inoculates us from
that, right? That's what we want to do. If, I mean, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the,
the Wuhan Lab of Wokeness have unleashed the virus,
and we need the vaccine now, right?
So what we're going to do is inoculate ourselves from it
by understanding how these Kafka trap works.
We're going to bring back the logos.
We're going to bring back reason and objectivity.
We're going to bring back an understanding of the,
although I myself may not be able to be fully objective,
we can create universities and systems of peer review,
which, rather than functioning as ideal laundering factories for woke activism,
can actually suffice to be places where people can criticize.
And within that criticism, we can hammer out and we can polish off all of this subjectivity and get to truth.
And then I think the Enlightenment liberals need to understand that human beings crave meaning
and that the Enlightenment liberal framework is to create conflict resolution within society.
within science, within truth, and within politics.
But it does not create meaning.
So how do we create meaning? That's all I'm interested in.
This is why I kind of am being somewhat derisive of the Enlightenment liberal thing.
I want the meaning, darn it. Give me a system with meaning.
I mean, if we would just want to talk about meaning, that's a quick five minute thing.
The meaning of life is found in the drinking of woke tears.
No.
No, I actually think that a lot of people who've been swept up in awokeness have been swept up because they've been drinking it out of the culture.
I'll make an even more controversial claim, and you can edit this out if you have to.
Bring it on, please. I want it.
Donald Trump is the first postmodern president.
Yeah, I agree. I agree. Well, the only way I'll disagree or push back even slightly is Obama may have anticipated that.
Obama may, I see your point on Trump, and I'd like you to go into it a little bit more,
but I think many of the eccentricities of Trump, I think you see prefigured a little bit in Obama,
but I'd like to hear more about your point on Trump.
I think that Obama would have been, there was a wonderful essay written by James Lindsay
talking about this exact thing, about different eras.
So you have the initial era, then you have the reconstruction era, then you have, for example,
Okay, the liberal era in the, or so FDR, that era.
Then you have the new conservative era starting with, say, Ronald Reagan and moving all the way up.
And now Obama could have been a new liberal era, but that movement, Obama, I think, was a liberal.
Okay.
But Obama started getting attacked and criticized as being not far enough by the up-and-coming millennial class of journalists, creators, and all the rest of it.
that the postmodernism was coming.
I think Obama may have seen it and was trying to operate within it
and figure out what to do with it.
Yeah.
Right?
Especially after getting Schlaught in 2010.
Yeah, yeah.
I think he tried to figure out.
I think Trump just intuited it.
There's a little video where Trump says,
I could be presidential.
I could be presidential.
Do you remember this video?
But that would be boring.
There's another video where he's talking on camera
and then he kind of stops for one and says,
excuse me, can you step aside out of the shop and then goes right.
and then goes right back to it.
I think Trump intuited and understood.
I don't think Trump's ever read Judith Butler.
I don't think he's read gender trouble.
I don't think that he's ever read Orientalism by Edward Seida or of grammatology by Jacques Derrida.
I think that he intuid.
I think he sat for 11 years doing the apprentice and saw how the media ecosystem work.
Yeah.
And then I'll make another claim.
So we're going to do this real brief.
If we're talking about Q.
QAnon is postmodernism on the right.
Yeah.
Q&N is postmodernism.
And it's also you could describe it as an oral tradition, right?
Because it always gets banned everywhere.
So it's just in the retelling of the story that it recreates itself.
And the old story of it only exists in the ruins of dead forms that are ossifying and decaying away in internet archives in various places.
Right.
But 1980, Ed Rollins puts everything on the table and fights hard to get Ronald Reagan.
elected.
Yeah, yeah.
Then who did Ed Rollins bring on?
He brought in who, Lee Atwater.
And Lee Atwater is the one who ran the Willie Horton ad to get George H.W. Bush
right?
So you have, we're getting Reagan elected.
And from Reagan, we degrade a little bit to Bush, right?
But we're still maybe the most qualified man to ever be president is George H.W. Bush.
He's got a great resume that guy.
Yeah.
And a good man.
But the operative around them is Le Atwater.
Now you fast forward to the Bush era, and it's Carl Rove, and who was the Atwater's chief disciple?
It's Rick Wilson.
Really? I actually didn't know that.
Rick Wilson was taught by Lee Atwater.
Rick Wilson ran the ad against Max Cleland in 2003.
2002 to get Saxby Chameless elected.
So Ed Rowland sold his soul to get Ronald Reagan elected.
Rick Wilson sold his soul for Saxby Chameless.
Right?
But hold on, go a little further.
That ad has Rick Wilson actually defended this.
I will afterwards, if you want, I can send you the screenshots of this because Rick
left him on the timeline and I can dig.
And he defends that ad and says, I didn't say anything false.
No, what you did is you had a picture of Max Cleland
juxtaposed or turning into Osama bin Laden.
I can't remember whether they juxtaposed or had him turned into and said that he didn't
have the courage to lead.
Max Cleland is a triple amputee from Vietnam who opposed what George H.W. Bush was, what George
W. Bush was doing in 2002 with the Iraq or on the basis of the costs to the future and not
wanting to give him a blank check.
And Rick Wilson basically came out and said, you are Osama bin Laden.
Okay.
You want to know why Trump gets off attack?
a gold star mom, Rick. You set the paradigm.
Right. Wow. What an amazing tidbit. I actually had no idea about Rick Wilson's role in that.
I'll do you, I'll do you even one better than that. You step forward. People are saying, well,
the populism of the GOP of the racist populism of the racist populism. It goes back to Sarah Palin. Who
picked Sarah Palin? Bill Crystal. Steve Schmidt was the one in the campaign.
It was in the campaign. Steve Smith, John Weaver.
You know, it wasn't just
Schmitt, though.
It would Bill Crystal
and I think Charlie Sykes too,
but certainly Bill discovered her,
was advocating for her.
And then, yeah, you get Steve Schmidt
and guys like Weaver and somehow
you get Sarah Payland.
The entire Lincoln Project
has on its hands the fingerprints
of all the bad parts of the
Trump presidency.
Right? All of those guys are
absolutely responsible
for all of this. If we look at
the men who the people picked,
Reagan.
Yeah, yeah.
How many men was George H.W. Bush-Merry 2, 1.
How many men was women, sorry, was George H.W. Bush-Marry 2, 1.
How many women was George Bush-Marry 2?
1.
You know, those are the men that we're bringing in, right?
Mitt Romney, the straightest shooter you could possibly imagine was picked by the people.
Who are the consultants?
It's the Lee Outwaters, the Rick Wilson's, the Steve Schmitz, the John Weavers,
The rot in the GOP can be entirely traced back to the people who for years, for absolutely for years, in the name of a certain kind of economic program and in a certain form of foreign policy, ran ads blatantly attacking people like Max Cleveland to the point where even John McCain said that he refused to campaign with Saxby Chambers because of that ad.
Yeah, yeah. And now when Donald Trump attacks a gold star mom, which was bad, it was terrible, these guys are, I am incandescent with rage. I'm sorry, Max Cleveland would like to have a word, sir. Yeah. Yeah. Now, you know, I should have been salting the ground for this for years. I should point out for the fact checkers. I should point out that, you know, Reagan was remarried. But in his defense, his wife left him. He did not want to get remarried. He was actually very, very against it.
Yes, certainly he lived a very upright life. Bush, you know, of course, Bush, that's one of the great love stories ever in politics, Bush Sr.
And yeah, you do see a sort of decay. And then ironically, these hypocrite GOP consultants who created the modern GOP, now they turn on it as though their hands are totally clean. It's totally ridiculous.
And it's all the bad stuff too. Yeah. Like you trace everything bad that Trump did.
is there any attack ad that Trump ever ran
that's anywhere close to what Rick Wilson did to Max Cleland?
And he defended it by saying,
what in the ad did I say it was false?
That Max Cleland lacks courage?
I mean, this is a triple amputee.
And they crop the photo so you could only see his head and shoulders
so that part gets left out.
Oh, we're juxtaposing different things?
Where do we see the ripping out of context
and the juxtaposition?
That sounds like, hmm, sounds like postmodernism.
Sounds like there is a kind of postmodern conservatism.
In fact, we could say that we're living in, I don't know, hugely tremendous times, you might say.
Right?
And these guys are all upset about it, but like let's look at the history of Charlie Sykes.
Who did Charlie Sykes bring on board?
Who did Bill Crystal bring on board?
All of these guys mainline the very people.
And we're left now with a group of people in the GOP.
I'm thinking of Kinzinger and Cheney and some of these other people who, who,
who have mistaken Bush-era platitudes and talking points at, um,
for eternal truth.
Yeah.
That's right.
That's right.
They thought that the ossified talking points of the Bush administration were the bones
of eternal truth and they're not.
Yeah.
Right?
This is not correct.
So this is, this is absurd.
And so to me, I look at the Lincoln project and I think if you want to know grift,
yeah.
Don't come at me.
Don't come at you or Ben.
Yeah.
Let's have a conversation about Rick Wilson, Steve Schmidt.
John Weaver.
Right.
Stuart Stevens.
All of these guys who were wanted to go blood and guts, you know, attacking war veterans, bashing people's patriotism.
If you're not with us, you're with the terrorists, all of that stuff for years.
Then Trump comes along and says, you are fake news.
And they're just like, well, this is the enemy of the people.
We need to start the Lincoln Project.
You can donate here.
Yeah, right.
And they'll run ads on more.
Morning Joe in Washington, D.C.
They'll run their ads in places that would never have any effect on the election, but that
will milk Democrat donors out of a lot of dollars.
Right.
I mean, it's the utter insincerity of this.
And so there is a point.
And I mean, there's some good and there's some bad.
The good people who are still within, I would say, a Bush-ish kind of conservative
paradigm.
I mean, people I might respect.
I think I would still respect David French.
I think David French is honest.
But unlike, you know, some of those other guys, David French went to war and is a veteran.
You know, I really like David personally. He and I have always had a great personal relationship.
Some of the things he was written recently, I find it difficult to take a charitable read on.
But, yeah, he's a nice guy.
You know, but you can read David French and say, I disagree.
But I don't think that David French is running an entirely cynical operation.
But I think that some of the other guys are being entirely cynical.
I mean, yeah, yeah, that's fair.
You know, I was getting made fun of by John Stewart when I wrote liberal fascism years ago.
What have you done?
And it's like, I'm sorry.
That was the interview where I first realized Mr. Goldberg, Mr. Jonah Goldberg.
I'll say your name because you deserve it.
That was the first interview where I realized that there are conservative charlatans.
Because John Stewart exposed you for what you were back in what 2009?
It's a joke.
It's absurd.
And so when they say that the conservative movement has been intellectually hollowed out,
we might want to ask who did that.
Who's in charge for the last 30 years?
Well, you know, I love this point, too.
I guess this sort of ties it in together, which I'm sure my producers will be happy about
so they can go to lunch.
That there is these.
I'm so sorry.
No, but I, you know, what you're saying is so important for understanding, you know,
the broader culture and we can knock the left and how the left brought us here.
but also understanding what that means for our side, how our side has indulged this, how we represent
this now. And for those who say the awful Trump era people, they have betrayed true conservatism,
capital T, capital C, trademark over the E of, you know, 2006 or whatever, you think, well,
how did we get here? It didn't, this didn't just spring out of the air one day, you know,
alone in a forest. This is a consequence of other ideas and other actions.
and a certain ideology, you know, that perhaps has reached the end of the line.
And I think there's a group of conservative people, and you touched on this a little bit who've said,
hey, if the left is doing this and it's working, we should indulge it too.
And this is going to be part of the book I'm writing, which I am writing, on the tactics,
which I explain how this works.
And that's not going to work because if you step onto the postmodern ground with the people
who are postmodern, they're native to it, right?
This is like having a battle of play on words with a speaker of a native language and you just learned it yesterday, right?
Like if I learned Spanish tomorrow and I tried to get into a poetry contest with a native speaking Spaniard, that's going to not go real well unless we're doing free verse.
But, you know, like this isn't going to go well for me.
Maybe if we're doing a haiku and I only need eight words or something, but I'm going to lose.
If I learn how to play hockey yesterday and I'm going to step on the ice against Connor McDavid,
this is not going to go well for me.
So for us to adopt those tactics bad,
the thing that we ought to be doing
is adopting the tactics of the Enlightenment Liberal.
And what I say, the tactics of the Enlightenment,
sorry, the principles of the Enlightenment liberals.
Yeah, I prefer the tactics of the Spanish Inquisition,
but I agree.
Some of the principles in the Enlightenment are fine.
We need to bring the Enlightenment principles in,
and then we need to have tactics
that pull them onto that ground,
because once you pull them onto the ground of objectivity, their houses crumble.
Yeah, that's true.
And I suppose then we can pull them back even further to the glories of Europe, Christian unity,
the high church.
But we'll have to save that topic for another time.
Wocal distance.
Everyone, go follow Wocal.
I'm sure they've already followed you after your very illuminating thoughts, but you can follow them at W-O-K-A-L-U-S-Distance at W-W-L-Distance.
And stay tuned for that book with words.
And having written a book with words and a book without words,
it is a much tougher undertaking to do one with words.
So I commend you for that.
Wokel, where else can people find you?
So right now it's just the Twitter.
Wocal underscore distance.
That's my Twitter handle.
That's where you'll find me.
I occasionally do interviews on Benjamin Boyce's podcast on YouTube.
So if you search for Benjamin Boyce on YouTube,
he's got a lot of wonderful interviews.
He interviews from really great people.
Yeah, that's where you can find me.
I appreciate you having me on.
Absolutely. We're going to have you back. It was fabulous. I'm so glad you came on. You're extremely intelligent. And I appreciate that. I, you know, I try not to ever compliment Canadians. It just goes against my nature to say nice things about America's hat. But, but I will in your case.
Well, as a Canadian, being polite, it would be untoward of me to accept it.
Fair point. Local. Thank you so much for coming on.
Thank you. I appreciate it.
