The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - No Mercy / No Malice: Truth
Episode Date: July 1, 2023As read by George Hahn. https://www.profgalloway.com/truth/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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I'm Scott Galloway, and this is No Mercy, No Malice.
Democracies are built on shared truths, autocracies on shared lies.
But what is the truth?
What can we trust?
Truth, as read by George Hahn. The search for truth is the pursuit of comfort in the face of doubt.
Over the past few centuries, the scientific method, and the empirical proof it offers,
has increasingly become the world's go-to for answers.
We plant and harvest crops based on meteorology, not astronomy. We administer
levothyroxine, not leeches. Statecraft has a mixed relationship with truth, as it offers an
alternative form of comfort, acquiescence to authority. In an uncertain world, a strong leader who promises bread, shelter, and reasons why someone else is to blame for our problems has a seductive power.
Mass media, beginning with the printing press and speedballing with broadcast media,
has made the state's relationship with truth the biggest arrow in the quiver of both democracies and autocracies. As Sasha Baron-Cohen
said, democracies are based on shared truths, autocracies on shared lies, but both are shared
via media. Recent events in Russia are troubling. A Russian chaos in the leadership of a nuclear-armed state,
but also heartening. They validate that the world cedes advantage to truth.
Regimes based on lies end badly. Joseph Goebbels, the architect of the Nazis' anti-truth regime,
helped Hitler build Germany into a global power,
but its dominance was unsustainable.
The day Hitler shot himself,
Goebbels murdered all six of his own children and took his own life.
Putin is Goebbels' heir,
the modern master of nihilist propaganda. Rather than institute any
specific lie, Putin's objective is to undermine the notion that there is a truth. As Sean Illing
wrote in Vox, he's exported it to the West,
funding advertising and social media campaigns to sow confusion in American and European politics.
Steve Bannon brought the strategy to the Trump campaign with the descriptor,
flood the zone with shit.
The ultimate irony is the U.S. financed and built our adversaries' weapons of choice, social media.
As Ian Bremmer puts it, we used to be the largest exporter of democracy.
Now we're the largest exporter of weapons that attack democracies.
Lies are steroids.
They're effective in the short run but carry severe side effects
that manifest in unpredictable ways over the medium and long term.
Putin is discovering nihilism begets apathy,
and a populace that doesn't care about anything ultimately doesn't care about its leader.
Last week, a trusted thug-turned-mutineer seized a Russian city and drove an armored column halfway
to Moscow. Instead of resisting the traitor, Putin's nominally loyal citizens
responded with the same apathy he's beaten into them. In the U.S., Trump's disinformation campaign
did not win him re-election, and it may land him in federal prison. Beyond creating apathy,
anti-truth as a theory of governing suppresses innovation and economic growth, as neither the market nor the laws of physics respect lies.
The founders of Moderna are billionaires.
RFK Jr. will go down in history as a stain on his family's legacy. Where success is a function of proximity to power
instead of actual value registered,
sycophants triumph over innovators.
But ultimately, the country or company fails.
The truth also makes for a better business strategy,
as it illuminates problems,
rendering them more vulnerable to attack.
The Musk zealots posing as advisors enabled the mother of all let's-buy-it-so-we-can-break-it moves.
Submersibles imploding and $45 billion immolating in an instant
are both manifestations of the same techno-narcissism that infects the U.S.,
believing your above basic principles of citizenship, truth, or physics.
Rule by force of personality requires a combination of charisma and ruthlessness.
Those who possess it are not great at sharing,
so they often drop the baton or hold on too long,
which has happened in both Russia and China, where lone leaders have extended their tenure past constitutional limits.
Truth is easier to pass on than narrative.
Contested transfers of power don't go well in anti-truth regimes.
There is no referee, no framework that allows the losing side to retire from the field.
Political disputes become wars, and autocrats have to jail or kill their opponents.
Democracies offer the second-place finisher a position in society, and because they accept the role of dissent,
the presence of the loser isn't
an inherent challenge to the prevailing power. The runner-up can become one of the nation's
most respected citizens, like Jimmy Carter. Ladies and gentlemen, war may sometimes be
a necessary evil, but no matter how necessary, it is always evil,
never a good.
We will not learn how to live together
in peace
by killing each other's children.
In an autocracy,
the best they can hope for
is securing safe haven in a foreign country before being executed in their own.
Fun fact, after an assassination attempt on an autocrat, a country is 13% more likely to move toward democracy if the attempt is successful.
Elections in autocracies are coronations, testimonies to power, not truth.
In 1927, Liberian President Charles King won a third term with 234,000 votes despite there being thousand registered voters in the nation. In 1995, Saddam Hussein won 99.99% of the Iraqi vote.
This year, Xi Jinping became China's first party leader since Mao to achieve a third term in a
landslide. 2,952 votes for, zero against. Autocrats suffer from their anti-truth diet when they begin to
believe their own lies. When truth is not valued, flattery and conformity prevail.
Putin's generals told him what he wanted to hear, and he grossly miscalculated the cost and benefit
of invading Ukraine. This happens in democracies too, when truth is sidelined.
George W. Bush developed a faith in alternative facts that defined his presidency.
His historic blunder in Iraq was based on intelligence,
which should have been badged belief dressed up as fact. Common to both regimes was, is, the exiling of dissent.
Truth can admit doubt, but authority cannot survive it.
Over the long term, democracy is steadily beating autocracy.
A hundred years ago, for every five autocracies, there was one democracy.
Today, democracy is the most popular form of governance.
Truth can be hijacked, but it's difficult to kill.
A reason it's so enduring.
You can manipulate, distract, and conceal, but it remains. Ricky
Gervais made this point deftly.
If we take something like any fiction, any holy book in any other fiction, and destroyed
it, okay, in a thousand years' time, that wouldn't come back just as it was. Whereas
if we took every science book, every fact and destroyed them all,
in a thousand years, they'd all be back because all the same tests would be the same result.
Despite garnering cultural relevance, lies have not prevailed at the ballot box.
In races identified by the Washington Post as competitive in 2022, just 10 out of 47 candidates who denied the legitimacy of the 2020 election prevailed.
And 9 out of 9 election deniers running in state elections for offices with authority
over the voting process lost. Neither party is free of lies. The liar of the month, RFK Jr., has established the illusion of domain expertise
by repeating lies with confidence, including how vaccines cause autism and U.S.-issued
remdesivir treatments were designed to kill Ebola patients. But the truth will prevail. The American people will recognize
that all peer-reviewed research confirms
vaccines do not cause autism
and that Ebola killed remdesivir recipients,
not remdesivir.
Kennedy is polling at 14%.
But that's another way of saying
he's 50 points behind the frontrunner,
who the majority of his party believe shouldn't run again.
Side note, the trolls demanding that real scientists debate RFK Jr. miss a couple key points.
That debate has already happened in labs, trials, and billions of injections.
And yes, the dissenter's voice is important.
In the case of vaccines, that voice was the control group.
And it was nullified billions of times.
Another side note.
Last week in Cannes, I had dinner with the CEO and co-president of Spotify.
They are impressive men, and I love Spotify's service.
But it's also becoming a platform to rival Meta's spread of misinformation
when it fails to fact-check owned content it distributes to tens of millions of young men.
I have written about my insecurities as a teen and young man.
It wasn't that I didn't like what I saw in the mirror, but that I wasn't there.
I was invisible.
My translucence was a function of trying to shape a narrative and person
around what I thought others would be most impressed by or wanted to hear.
This artificial soul had a difficult time developing into physical form
that could be present and counted on.
I believe part of becoming a man is presenting yourself in your situation
in your most authentic form, risking upset or worse, indifference.
And that's the question. authentic form, risking upset or worse, indifference.
And that's the question.
When we look in the mirror before judging the image, we should ask ourselves, am I here?
Is this really me?
Life is so rich.
I just don't get it.
Just wish someone could do the research on it.
Can we figure this out?
Hey, y'all.
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We'll bring you the answers you need every Wednesday starting September 18th.
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Hey, it's Scott Galloway, and on our podcast, Pivot, we are bringing you a special series about the basics of artificial intelligence.
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