
Loading summary
A
Ezra Klein. So hot right now.
B
Oh, no.
A
Did you ever expect to be referred to as an unlikely thirst trap?
B
I did not. And I try to ignore that it's happening. It also has this funny quality, some of this coverage of how now it's like I took off my glasses and grew a beard and it's very. She's all that. It's like, oh, like, maybe he's. I always look the same to me.
A
Well, an unlikely thirst trap feels like the most backhanded insult or compliment. It's like a Rorschach test for whether or not you feel good about yourself. I don't know what way that's. Is that supposed to be a nice thing? Unlikely thirst trap?
B
I don't. When you are profiled, it is not supposed to be a nice thing.
A
Okay, so you'll take unlikely thirst trap.
B
I think that's also an important thing to know about. Just the whole genre of profiling. It's never supposed to be a totally nice thing. Usually not supposed to be a totally mean thing. It's trying to create energy.
A
That's interesting. There was a rumor in that that you'd had to adjust your lighting on your podcast set to make you look less attractive because it was distracting from the real substance of the.
B
It is a not true rumor.
A
Wow.
B
And. And it's going to be a even weirder thing to discuss. Like here, while you're sitting there, like, three times as ripped in front of me as we talk about whether or not I'm hot.
A
I know it's. I thought that that was an interesting profile, but. Yeah. How do you feel about having a mini celebrity moment like that?
B
You try to focus on the work, and I mean that really seriously. I think that if you start to see yourself in the third person, it is very, very dangerous for doing good work. It's like the. The input of good work is independence of mind. And for me particularly, it's a lot of time spent by myself reading books, thinking about things. Once the world's idea of you gets into your head, it is poison. And I think that's true, by the way, for, you know, people get profiled or have mini, you know, moments. I think it's also just naturally true for everybody now who has social media profiles and has this kind of constant, like, front stage that they keep up. I always tell people who, like, come to me for advice in journalism or who are having some kind of pop in the press that you really have to be intentionable. You have to be intentional about maintaining as much of a Backstage as you can. And when I see people who aren't having a pop like destroying their backstage, I worry about them. The streamers worry me. Like, in an almost paternalistic way. I watch the amount of their lives they're putting online, they're putting in front of a camera, how little is left for them. And psychologically, I think it is gonna do a lot of people a lot of damage.
A
Everyone feels uncomfortable watching that.
B
You ever read super sad True Love Story by Gary Steingart?
A
No.
B
It's amazing. Amazing book. It is as prophetic a book on this moment as anybody has ever done. It was probably done 10, 15 years ago. And everything in it, it's all about a world of streamers and sort of America coming apart and people having everything around them raided in public. And everybody in it is look, smacking. There's a whole thing about how books smell bad. It's sort of like declassee to have physical books. So at least we haven't done that yet. But you can really have these moments right now where you realize we have built the dystopia. We have done the thing the sci fi writers warned us against doing just in all directions, all at once. And it's just hope it turns out well this time.
A
How do you think about protecting the backstage?
B
I keep a lot of time quiet. I don't go to very much. Did you read Lena Dunham's new book? It's Great Fame, Sick. And she talks a bunch about the way everything creates more of itself. Everything you do creates more of itself. And so if you get on different circuits, it just. It eats you, it eats the time. So for me, it's like the way I think about my work. Most weeks, I bring out three things. I bring out two podcast episodes and one call. And the week is just very much organized around that. And I just more and more and more try to cut out, like, everything that is not directly feeding into one of those three pieces of work or is not. My children, my family, and deep friendships or like, personal care and time. Right. And that's already a lot. Like, even as I say those 5ish things to you, I feel pretty full. Yeah.
A
Yeah. And the fact that I guess one shortcut is to just make all of the other stuff part of the main thing, to turn all of the private life into the public life. Think Mary Harrington talks about a digital hijab that she wears where she covers up a lot of the parts of her that she doesn't want.
B
Oh, that's a great.
A
The world to see a Digital hijab.
B
That's a great coinage.
A
She wears this thing. She told this story. She finished her first marathon, a half marathon, something. Some race. She's into running. And she took a selfie at the end. Cause that's what you do, right? I'm proud of this thing. And she went to post it, and she sort of saw this universe split, which was, how much of this is for me and how much of this is for the Internet? And, yeah, I mean, it is very easy to be distracted from doing work.
B
I'm curious how you handle this, because you have a tougher job on this than I do. So my work, I can define it much more tightly. You know, it's primarily about politics, current affairs, geopolitics. I bring in some things I care about, like meditation, but for the most part, it is not natural. I have to choose to let it colonize the things that are closer to my core. But yours, like the topics you touch on the show, they're very personal, so anything can become content for you.
A
It's been a purposeful. I think I'm quite by disposition. I'm quite a private person. My personal life's always remained very private. And that's been something that a bunch of friends gave me advice on early on, and I'm really glad that I followed it. Once you open that door, I think it's very difficult to reverse it. People are interested in, oh, who are you dating now, and what does this mean? And who's he aligning himself with? As soon as you open that door, the snowball continues to roll. Mercifully for me, I think almost purposely trying to be as boring as possible with your personal life is a great prophylactic. People just get very, very. They'll move on to what is more easily consumable. And for as long as Destiny exists, I am not going to be top of the list. Like, there was a period where Destiny's private life was just made the most public thing over and over and over again. And Hasan will get in bother over and over and over and over again, or Nick Fuentes will come through, or Huberman will come through. You know, there's a lot of people that are like, easier access than me, who I think my biggest defense is purposefully making my private life very boring and not really talking about it all that much, and people just move on. And that for me is like, I'm completely fine by that as my strategy.
B
The other thing that I think is important is not exposing yourself to the algorithms all that much. So I don't tweet. We've started putting clips up on Instagram and even doing a little bit more of that. I feel the pull of it, the want of it. So I'm a big fan of all these mid century media theorists like Marshall McLuhan and Neil Postman and Walter Ong and all of them. Basically their main idea is that every medium changes the user. So we think what we're doing when we turn on the television or turn on X or turn on Instagram or read a book for that matter, is we are consuming content, we are choosing and we can make better or worse decisions, right? We can read better or worse people watch better or worse shows and their whole view is no, it is always using and changing you. There's a great Marshall McLuhan quote where he says, I'll butcher it a little bit from memory, but he says the content of a medium is the juicy steak thrown to distract the watchdog of the mind. And his point is that while you're sitting there getting mad at a tweet, what's actually happening is that your sense of how ideas should feel and look how long they should be, while you're sitting there looking at Instagram, your sense of what everything should look like, it's all changing. And as it changes, you change with it and you. And particularly with these algorithms that create constant rankings. Another super sad true love story thing, it creates a constant feeling of, well, shouldn't I, shouldn't I be competing here too? And what you can do, and what I've seen a lot of people do is they get into local maximums, but long term minimums or degradations where you're doing a lot to be as competitive on say Twitter or X as you can be. And you don't realize that in the long run the trade you're making on that influence is the way you think is degrading. And so the long term work is going to be worse. And in the long run, it's hard to maintain a career where you have to be interesting over an extended period of time. And I think people who are trying to do that need to be very, very, very intentional. In the same way that an athlete needs to be very intentional about avoiding injury and burnout, getting two captured by
A
one black hole, being sucked into one particular medium. There's this great story, I think it's Dostoevsky or Nietzsche. And the first part of their career they were writing by hand. In the second part of their career they started writing on typewriter and they explain the difference between the first and the second, they say the sentences got shorter and punchier and their thoughts occurred in a different way. Their writing style changed because of the medium. And that's them just being facilitated by a new output medium, not even absorbing things in a different manner. So when you've got it going both ways, this bidirectional thing, I'm going to be influenced by what I see on this particular platform. Yeah, it's going to be deranging.
B
So one thing that I think about, and I've never quite been able to come up with a clean enough theory to start using, but we can work it out here together is I think we need a better politics of attention. And one of the ideas that influenced me, which came from an academic paper that I don't remember the authors to cite, but is to think about attention as a public good or a collective resource. And attention then is subject to tragedy of the commons problem. So a tragedy of the commons problem is when everybody has access to a grazing field. And so it then becomes very quickly a problem where people will begin trying to graze as much of the field they can. And then everybody has to do more. And soon enough you've exhausted did this public good. And I think our attention is like that and we only have so much of it and we have it as a collective, not just individuals. And we are being like attention fracked. And the more competition there is for our attention, the more aggressive everybody is about trying to get it. I don't know if you get on as many political emails and text message, you know, things as I do.
A
00 God bless. Yep.
B
But they have gotten so loud. They come with all these siren emojis now. And it's always like, it's Chuck Schumer and Ezra and I'm. I'm on my knees begging. Right. Everything is like the end of the world. Everything is an emergency. A lot of these places are like I always joke that X is like gain of function research for takes. It's just everybody competing to take a normal take until you can turn it into something that has viral contagion. And then occasionally they do it too well and it escapes contagion and destroys their lives. That's how X works. And. But collectively the effect is our collective attention is irritable, is short. It's changing. The people we want are changing to again, just stay on the medium thing for a minute. There's a great. It's not a controversy, it's a Neil Postman argument that he makes in amusing ourselves to death, which is always one of my books I recommend to people. And he says that people often say to him that, how can you say television? Because this guy's writing around television is dreck. Like, look at Sesame Street. And he says, I don't worry about the dreck on television. I worry about Sesame Street. Because what Sesame street is doing is teaching kids that education should actually be entertainment. He said, the trash on television is no problem. Everybody knows it's trash.
A
It's where you're subtly changing, masquerading as something else.
B
It's where you're changing your expectations for what everything else should be. So, I mean, right now we're moving into a period in politics where I think in order to be a successful politician, you, you have to be attentionally capable. You have to be able to earn attention in a way you didn't have to before. Zoran Mandani, Spencer Pratt, Graham Platner, Donald Trump. Right. You can do it from different James Talarico. You can do it in better or worse ways. But what you can't be in a competitive race any longer is a somewhat boring talker who's just really good at
A
deliver on the policy. I understand the fundamental economics of this. I'm great with my constituents.
B
Yeah. How's.
A
You need more aura.
B
How are things going for Keir Starmer?
A
I mean, Yeah. A man that is the equivalent of a ham sandwich. Did you see this tweet? It's at the very bottom. Did you see that tweet earlier on today? The very, very bottom. It's hiding down there.
B
I did, yes. I saw both of those.
A
Yeah. So I had to double check that. Hedemocrats is the Democrats official properties.
B
Democratic National Committee.
A
Yeah. Correct. Yeah. And I'm like, is this a parody account? It's got to be. So the Democrats tweet, fired up, ready to go. It's time to take back Texas. Stephen Miller replies and says, the Democrats made history in Texas by nominating their first transgender Senate candidate. And Hedemocrats reply, shut up, you ugly fuck. And that reached at least 50 million people. It's like 300,000 likes. I get it. The he did it first thing of pointing from one side to the other. But maybe this is just my sort of British properness coming through. The thought that a the online representative account for one of the parties saying, shut up, you ugly fuck. Is that not absurd? Like, that feels kind of deranged to me.
B
It is deranged. But this is a little bit what I mean about the whole medium. Right. Because one thing that does one thing that every movement like this does, and I take Donald Trump honestly as a bit of a first mover here, is it is shifting people's sense of what political communication should sound like.
A
Agreed.
B
So, I mean, that is the outcome, I would say, of a long process of learning that if you tweet like a normal, sober, stolid, boring institution.
A
Boring, boring.
B
Barack Obama's, I'm a big Barack Obama fan. That guy's Twitter account. Not great.
A
Not sexy enough.
B
Not sexy enough. And so this is the way everything changes it actually. It changes the expectations, it changes the people and it changes what can succeed. And so sometimes maybe they, I mean, I guess you can ask the Democrats if they went too far or not. Maybe to them it's a huge success. But this is what I mean. When you have to think about these mediums, you have to think about the attention, you have to think about the norms, you have to think about the discourse as a kind of public good. What that is, doing that right there is a tragedy of the Commons problem. It's very hard for at the Democrats to be noticed. There's a huge cacophony of voices. The voices that get noticed are extreme. So here's the thing. You noticed them. We are here talking about at the Democrats. Rejoinder to Stephen Miller.
A
I can't remember the last time that I talked about at the Democrats.
B
So they probably just succeeded. That's a w. But that's a tragedy of the Commons. Like Stephen Miller, by the way, a deputy chief of staff to the president is tweeting about James Talarico. Whatever else you want to say about Talarico, an incredibly decent person, an incredibly decent man in politics who tries very hard to treat people on both sides with respect. Stephen Miller Deputy Chief of Staff his reaction to Ken Paxton, by the way, it wasn't even like Talarico won the primary last night. It was. Or a couple nights ago it was Paxton was first transgender candidate. So again, the, you know, I don't want to sit here and just like tut tut and chin stroke, but it is a degradation of the entire system.
A
It sounds so uncool. I can even feel my own sort of cringometer of being out of touch occurring as we're talking about it. Like, what do you mean? You both within a couple of years of each other. Are you really going to be the footy duddies, finger wagging at people, these kids on the Internet having fun or whatever? And like, I don't know, man, it feels like extracting from A system that it shouldn't be. It feels like there's something that's going wrong with regards to that. I guess one of the other, one of the biggest talking points that we've had over the last couple of years was around what happened in the 2024 election, especially independent media sort of being involved in that. Did you know your gut controls your energy, your recovery, how well you absorb everything that you eat? And the one nutrient that keeps it all running properly is fiber. Well, it turns out that 95% of Americans don't get enough of it, which is why I'm such a huge fan of Momentous Fiber Plus. Most fiber supplements are a one trick pony, one type of fiber solving one part of the problem. Fiber plus is a three in one formula built to tackle digestion, gut barrier strength and blood sugar stability all at once. I use this every single day. It is kind of hard to get enough fiber just through food alone. And best of all, Momentous offers a 30 day money back guarantee so you can buy it, try it every single day for 29 days and if you don't love it, they will just give you your money back. Plus they ship internationally. Right now you can get up to 35% off your first subscription and that 30 day money back guarantee by going to the link in the description below or heading to livemomentous.com modernwisdom and using the code ModernWisdom a checkout. Do you think if the left had had its own version of Joe Rogan that the last election would have really changed?
B
The election was close enough in the battleground states that I think you end up in a situation where you can change any variable. And imagine moving. I don't remember the exact number, but something like you would have needed I think 150,000 votes to switch. I mean those votes would have had to have been correctly, like apportioned. But it was in know, just a handful of states. So maybe not just Joe Rogan. Like I always say that the way to think about this is not a liberal or illiberal Joe Rogan. It's candidates who are comfortable in the kinds of spaces that we mean when we talk about Rogan. Like the point is not getting like one guy who is more on your side. The point is, you know, Harrison Walls having been everywhere and having been capable of talking more effectively comfortable of person. But let me pull back on something you said a second ago. I've been thinking a lot about virtue and politics and virtue. I was gonna say it's not a word we use that much. But I actually think particularly like in your corners of the blogosphere. We were talking about blogs before we started of the podcastosphere, RIP it is something we talk about. And I was just doing a show that'll come out shortly about a bunch of the kind of more masculinist philosophies on the right, people like Bronze Age pervert and rawag nationalist. And one of the things I was thinking about is how much those visions of masculinity have a primitivism to them. Right. It's this desire to rediscover a stereotypically testosterone. So much more competitive, dominance oriented, aggressive. Right. There's a view that modern man has been warped into and constrained into this soft, cooperative, like against their own instincts. Okay. The thing that I was noticing how when I actually read what these guys were writing, the thing that I was noticing was so absent was the idea of self mastery and self discipline as a fundamental dimension, not just of like manhood or masculinity, but just of humanity. In fact, a lot of these places seem to take self discipline and self mastery, with the exception maybe of like a homosocial weightlifting component, as a negative. Right. It was evidence of the way modernity had warped us into this attenuated shape that works for, you know, modern feminized liberal democracy. Right. That's the argument. And so you see, I think this is partly true on Trump, and you see it with Stephen Miller, this gleeful rejection of norms of behavior that once sort of reflected, I think, a kind of self discipline. Right. Politicians don't talk the way Donald Trump talks. Right. They are disciplined. They know not to just unleash on the people they don't like in a way that is destructive, most of them. And it was this wiping away of that as a kind of show of that you would not be held back by the system as it existed. And so there's a message in what Miller is saying. And then now you see the Democrats trying to ape it. But what I do think it's going to create, I think what it's already creating is going to be a swing back to a desire to see political virtue, to see social virtue demonstrated in leaders. Everything creates its opposite in politics always.
A
And so this sort of statesmanlike bit more decorum.
B
Yeah. It'll have to be a version that works for today.
A
It'll still need to be sexy. You gotta have aura.
B
You need to have histor, you need to have aura.
A
Correct.
B
But Talarico, I mean, the reason Talarico is dangerous to them and I'm not saying he's going to win. Texas is a hard state for a Democrat to win in. But the reason Talarico popped in the first place, the reason he ended up on Joe Rogan in the first place, is he is able to talk through a kind of progressive Christianity in a language of morality and virtue that people found exciting and that you didn't really hear from Democrats anymore. And I think he was one of the first moments, and he's raised more, I think, than any Senate candidate in the country, based on this. And I think he's one of the first moments where you really see where the pendulum is going to swing back to, because I think people are looking around and they're seeing what it looks like when we unleash ourselves in a way that conforms to algorithmic. Media. And I'm not saying everybody dislikes it. Some people feel real excited by it, but I think most people dislike it. Even people I know who are Trump supporters, they don't like the way this all feels.
A
You like it in the way that you like having a McDonald's. That, at the time, it's kind of enticing. But afterward, you feel a bit shitty. And if you have too many of them in a row, you actually start to reject the system a little bit. It's interesting. I was having this conversation with Arthur Brooks yesterday, and he was saying, the moment that you break any kind of addictive cycle, the first thing that you have to do, at least following evidence for a broad range of aggregated addictions, is you have to get mad. You have to be angry at the thing. Like, I'm sick of being at the mercy of this thing. I'm sick of being at the mercy of porn. I'm sick of being at the mercy of drugs. I'm sick of being at the mercy of alcohol. Sick of being at the mercy of scrolling on my phone. Getting mad is a really effective first step. And I wonder at what point people just get bored. Cause this is evolutionary arms race of bullshittery that keeps on happening online. Now, if the Democrats tweet, shut up, you ugly fuck, again, it gets a tenth as much attention. We've already seen it.
B
Yeah.
A
So unless you're gonna continue to play that game. Okay, well, what's new? Well, what's new is the equivalent of a sundress and a cake. Right. You know what I mean? Like, it's something that feels a little bit more kind of vestigial.
B
I feel like there's been a move. And again, you don't see that tweet set where we're using as our text here, a rich text, if spare. I already think there's a move towards something sunnier. I mean, if you had to use one word to describe the aesthetic of Mamdani, it's sunny. You could say a lot of other things about him. Right. And people disagree with him. And, you know, everybody can have their arguments about what he believes. You never saw that guy without a smile. He didn't. I mean, if you ever just looked at the Mamdani smile, it's like Trump had this scowl even in his second presidential portrait. This is not me ragging on him. He has a portrait in which he's scowling. It's a very unusual portrait. It's this kind of like looking down and Mamdani, the smile. An Angirad Artos had this great piece in his sub stack. The ink about, like, the Mamdani's smile as rhetoric and Talarico Mamdani. You start to see something new working. And of course, it will only work for so long, and we'll see where it goes. It's not the only thing working, but that Stephen Miller, the Democrats exchange. It sucks, right? Like, who wants to feel that way? No one. And so it's a way in, not a way out. And I do think the winning move in politics in the next couple years is gonna be the way out, not the way in.
A
At best, it's a sort of gleeful dancing over somebody else done in the same way as two bullies fighting against each other. Kind of take a degree of satisfaction from having a pop. It's not. Yeah, it's not sunny. It's performing sunniness. Right. I care less about what you think of me. Oh, no, actually, we care even less about what you think of us than you think that we do. Yeah. This arms race sucks. I guess I'm kind of interested. Do you think that you are at the center of a Democrat civil war at the moment?
B
At the center of a civil war? I don't know. Do you think I am?
A
It seems that way on the Internet, if you read the right pieces, there's certainly an orbiting. And I wonder whether it's because so few people are able to talk on many different sides. That might be it.
B
I think the Democratic Party is having a big debate over what it should be. And I think that the book that Derek Thompson I released last year, Abundance, which. It was one of these things. I mean, I've released a book before. Things catch Fire for their own reasons. And Abundance became in A way that is remarkable. One of the texts that became the thing people used to have an argument they wanted to have, which was. Which is not necessarily the argument we're actually having in the book. But abundance sort of became at the center of this war between what I'd call the populist wing of the Democratic Party and the liberal wing of the Democratic Party. And what was funny about that fight, to me, so abundance, the book we did, was about the way in which liberalism, Democrats of various stripes, left to center, have made it very hard to build where they govern. And so in places that tend to be blue, like New York or California, it's been hard to build homes, hard to build clean energy. Texas, where you live, they build just more homes and more clean energy than blue states do. Not because they're necessarily more pro affordable housing and definitely not because they're more politically pro clean energy or worried about climate change. They just have created a structure in which it is easier to build things. I've talked to climate tech entrepreneurs, not just doing sort of normal green energy, but doing things that are much more on the cusp, much bigger projects, and their politics are Californian. And they're just like, I can get things done in Texas, in Arizona, and I can't get it done here. Right. And what was interesting about the fight that book kicked off then is, is the book was very much embraced by the people it was actually criticizing. So Gavin Newsom embraced that book, Right. He talks all the time now about we need to be Democrats, need to be a party of abundance. He uses another term that I have called a liberalism that builds. And so did a lot of people from the outside of the party. Obama's talked about the book, right? The part of the party that was actually in power that we were criticizing kind of grabbed onto it. And the part of the party that is insurgent sort of reacted against that. It's like, well, abundance kind of became for them the face of like the Obama ism. The sort of the Obama side of the party keeping power. And they want sort of a more populist party. Here's the thing, I just think most of this fight is fake because, you know, Zoran Mamdani just this week released a big housing plan. And it's a housing plan all about making it easier to build and all about cutting through bureaucracy and red tape and making it faster and cheaper. And in Los Angeles, Nithya Rahman, Democratic socialist, running against Karen Bass, who's the Democratic mayor, is also running, taping things in overgrown fields that the LA City is suing to stop from becoming affordable housing. The New Democrats, the Congressional Caucus released a thing about how to build more clean energy and create clean energy abundance. So one of the hard things for me in judging this debate is there's an online discourse that because of the nature of online discourse, becomes very, very factional and it becomes very angry and people who are people sort of create a fight in it that they're used to. But to me, like the whole thing abundance is doing is cross cutting divisions that exist not just inside the Democratic or not just inside the Democratic Party, but also between Democrats and Republicans to sort of create new syntheses on things. And so I just don't see the fights that people are scoring on Twitter there as being even the fights and the difficulties that our ideas really face because in practice it's much more about how hard these things are to get done. And I also think that there's like a whole technology side of abundance that has proven a much, much harder climb because of AI than it was when we were writing that book. So I'm always happy to be a character in various people's discourse fights, but I tend to think that the particular one that has been present here has at this point been pretty belied by the reality of who is embracing these ideas.
A
Well, you're one of the few liberals that's sort of openly critiquing liberal governance failures. Do you ever feel like you need to walk on eggshells a little? Because there is a degree of purity, spiraling and othering on the left. The right seems to be prepared to welcome anybody with whatever history they've got with open arms.
B
Well, unless you say, unless you say Joe Biden won the 2020 election and then Donald Trump will primary your like whole career into oblivion.
A
That is kind of he who shall not be named for joining the right. That's the Voldemort of the right. That's correct.
B
But I want to say something interesting about this because this I think reflects a difference in the two parties right now. What Donald Trump did very effectively is he collapsed purity on the Republican Party down to a single dimensional point, which is loyalty to him. So he is willing to accept a tremendous amount of views so long as you are loyal to and say nice things about him personally.
A
This is a single ordinating principle.
B
Exactly. The left, which does not have a
A
leader in that respect, a plurality of ways that you can get in trouble.
B
Exactly.
A
Whereas there's just a unity of ways that you can get in trouble on the right. That's so interesting.
B
Yeah, has. It's a little bit of like the fox and hedgehog thing. So the right has this one big thing. You have to accept this one and not just lie. Right. The 2020 election stuff is a lie. But the problem they're about to have, the problem they're having right now, is that what it means to be loyal to Trump is a more complicated thing than it was in the 2024 election, because he's doing things right like the war in Iran. And so what it means to be loyal to him is not just you're pro Trump, but you can believe whatever on vaccines, you can believe whatever on now. You actually have to, as a member of the Republican Party, you know, sign onto. You can't like this. You see this happening. And so you've had like, very MAGA people like Marjorie Taylor Greene and Thomas Massie, you know, who 100% were on board with all kinds of election bullshit from Trump, but they got pushed out over other things now because they weren't loyal on the current policy, the single
A
ordinating principle has fractured into the Democratic
B
Party, or maybe I'll call it like the broad left. It's not like it was four years ago, but what it has is an agenda, and a set of different factions have a platform and an orientation and a set of ideas you have to be loyal to. Do you believe in Medicare for all? Like, how do you feel about billionaires? Or how do you feel about wokeness? If you're sort of more in the sense they're trying to create a programmatic test. And you know, that has a problem in that it like, it keeps more cohesive and coherent coalition if you're able to do it, but it makes it much harder to welcome people into it.
A
I've learned from over a thousand podcast episodes that the easier you make your health routine, the more consistent you'll be. It's like golf, right? You want to keep it simple and not mix a bunch of pills. You want the eye of the tiger, not the DUI of the tiger. That's why I'm such a huge fan of AG1. One scoop contains 75 vitamins, minerals, probiotics and whole food source ingredients in a single daily drink. And now they've taken it a step further with AG1 Next Gen, backed by four clinical trials. And in those trials, it was shown to fill common nutrient gaps, improve key nutrient levels in just three months, and increase healthy gut bacteria by 10 times. Even in people who already eat well, gone are the days of needing to buy a load of pills in the gym parking lot from some juice bro in a cybertruck. But if you're unsure about it, AG1's got a 90 day money back guarantee so you can try it every single day for three months and if you do not like it they will give you your money back. Right now you can get a free AG1 welcome kit that includes a bottle of D3K2, an AG1 flavor sampler and that 90 day money back guarantee by going to the link in the description below by heading to drinkag1.com modernwisdom what if we step outside of the more political dimension of this and we talk about the cultural left, the people that contribute to the discourse online? Because at least with that people can be dissenting of Trump but broadly still be seen as part of the right. I'm not convinced that the same level of the same amount of ballast is in the system for people that are on the left now. Maybe this is declining. I think that you're right, it was significantly more pure five or six years ago. But I'm just interested as somebody who seems to be departing or at least criticizing in a manner that I wouldn't have heard five years ago. Whether that ever plays into the back of your mind where fuck. I mean, I'm going to press post on this thing, but I know the subsequent nuclear fallout that's going to occur once I do.
B
I like to think that I have tried to hold this approach to my politics and work for a long time. I mean the thing that led to the moment I've had over the past couple of years was a sort of early and pretty aggressive argument that Biden should step down. And that was not a popular thing in the Democratic Party when I made it and it caused problems. So I have a view that and by the way, Abundance, which releases last year, I mean the columns and essays that led to that started in 2021. So I was writing all this at a different time. I think you have to be self critical as a party in politics, both for two reasons. One is you're probably making mistakes and two is that if you believe in getting things done and you're failing, you have to try to figure out why. Whether that getting done is winning elections or that getting done is building homes or whatever it might be. But to take the broader thing you're saying because I don't want to present that as too idiosyncratic, I think one, this has all gotten easier in part because I think the weird moment in the platforms has Fractured. So here's another theory I have. Whoever dominates Twitter pays for it three to four years later. And in 2020, progressives dominated Twitter and they convince themselves of a lot of kind of wild ideas. And those ideas came and bit them in the ass in 2024. And Kamala Harris got really hung out on different ads that got run against her with things she had said years before. Even right now, James Talarico, the attacks that Ken Paxton and Republicans are using against him have to do with things he said like three or four years ago, right? Like God is non binary, that kind of thing. So the thing is then Elon Musk bought Twitter, made it X, sort of drove a lot of the left off of it, opened up the floodgates to the right on it. And now the right has ended up in a somewhat similar place where they have gotten attached to Nick Fuentes and the more conspiratorial incarnation of Tucker Carlson and the sort of Twitter anon world. And people are talking themselves into much more wild and conspiratorial things. And this is going to hurt them is my prediction in two or three years when the bill on all this comes due. Which is all to say that I think you cannot separate the dynamics we are talking about from algorithmic social media. I think that is fundamentally what is shaping these fast rise and fast falls in coalitional purity in kind of extreme ideas taking hold. And in a sense where you get so consumed in talking to your own side that you lose a sense of where other people really are. And I mean, that's the most dangerous thing in all of us. It's not having some of these ideas. I mean, I agree, by the way, with many of the ideas people now deride as wokeness. The problem is when you don't realize you have not done the political work to make those ideas legible to others or to sort of win enough support that you can push other ideas out of the marketplace, you stop. Instead of doing politics, you're doing posting. And politics is a constant balancing of disagreement. Politics is an act of endless pluralism in a liberal democracy. And posting is not. Posting is for your side to to and get in a lot of energy to hate on the other side. And posting tends to habituate people to a very, very, very bad and very weak form of politics.
A
So you're saying that people sort of believe their own hype for a while, that becomes its own kind of derangement and then at some point in future.
B
Well, I'm saying that in the way we were talking about the algorithms earlier people get into these one up dynamics to sort of prove their purity. So Mamdani, right in here in New York, when he ran for mayor, he just had to straight up disown a bunch of things he had said on Twitter a couple years ago. Right? Like that the NYPD is anti queer and a lot of politicians on the left are just having to be in A. Yeah, 2020 was a crazy time. Like I said some shit. And that came from being in a online milieu where people were getting pushed to like see and say stuff that was ever more out of the mainstream as a way of proving that they got it.
A
You're optimizing for the platform and your
B
corner of it, correct?
A
Yes. You're optimizing for this very specific echo chamber. You've got this arms race of attention and also you're trying to do something which garners as many eyeballs as possible. Eventually somebody, when that dust settles a little bit, gets to look at it with a clearer set of eyes and go, what's this, what's this thing that you said not that long ago and sometimes it appears in an ad or
B
you're now running statewide in Texas or citywide in New York and all of a sudden it just, it wasn't for them. You were saying something to the person you had seen two seconds ago on social media and now it's being blasted out in an ad running all across El Paso. And it wasn't for the median voter in El Paso.
A
The Internet is forever. Do you consider yourself, given this interesting position and especially with the book where it's put you in terms of criticizing liberal governance, do you see yourself as further left or further right than previously? Or are you just in exactly the same spot?
B
I don't think my politics are that different. I mean, I see myself as a liberal and I've been a liberal for a long time. And like the American tradition, it means different things in Europe and other places. And I have fairly recognizable liberal goals. I want universal healthcare. I want more like economic egalitarianism. I want people to have just the ability to live a flourishing life, but in the way that I think has traditionally been a big part of liberalism. And think about Obama, for instance. I believe very strongly that the work of making a fractious, complex, multi ethnic democracy function is honorable, important work. And that requires not just policies, but certain political virtues and approaches to politics that keep conflict from spinning out of being constructive and allow it to spin into spaces that are really destructive.
A
If you were to design an incentive to do the opposite of that. It would be social media.
B
Yes. And so I, yeah, I, I think I'm, in some ways I'm probably further left than my temperament makes people think in terms of what I believe about things. But I also think that policy is not really the way people code other people's ideology. What makes you more far left? Is it believing in the maximum level of universal healthcare you can get to? Or is it your view on climate change? Or is it your view on what level of political compromise is okay? A lot of the places where people get really angry at me is I am much more open to political compromise and I'm very open to Democrats running very different candidates in very different places, including candidates who are much more conservative than me, because I believe disagreement is very real. And one mistake I think a lot of people make when looking at politics is they don't really credit how different people are from them. And so if you're in a political bubble in New York City or Austin or Los Angeles, what it takes for a Democrat like Joe Manchin to win statewide in West Virginia, I don't think it's conceivable to you. You don't know anybody. Like, you don't know what it means to win working class voters in West Virginia. He does. He was like the Democratic mvp. Right. I don't have Joe Manchin's politics. I find Joe Manchin incredibly irksome. And I also understand that his job is not my job. And so one of the things I'm. One of the things I worry about because I worry about where this country's politics are going. And I am very deeply opposed to Donald Trump and maga. And the way the politics work is I think it's really important Democrats win Iowa. I think it's really important they are competitive in places like Nebraska, which they used to be. In 2010, Democrats held, I believe, both seats in West Virginia, in the Senate. That's unimaginable now. And so the question of what kind of big tent would allow that, where you can have a Zoran Mamdani here. But Rob sand, who's this more moderate Democrat running statewide for governor in Iowa, who's great, he's running on getting rid of the two party system. He's not running as a Democrat to appeal to liberals in Brooklyn or leftists in Brooklyn for that matter. He starts every town hall with, he has Republicans stood up. He says, I want everybody to clap for the Republicans in this room, the Democrats to stand up, everybody clap for the independents. And then he has Them all do the Pledge of Allegiance or sing the Star Spangled Banner together. And is that my politics? Exactly. Is that how I would run a rally? Probably not. Would I win statewide in Iowa? I sure fucking wouldn't, man. But Rob sand might win statewide in Iowa and Rob sand is a hero for that. And so you gotta believe in things. But also I do think the question, I mean, I think in the Trump era, I take more seriously than I used to that building the stability of our politics was an incredible achievement. And many countries don't have that. And in many countries they had it and it was lost. And believing that in America we cannot break this thing is a mistake. And if you do believe we can break this thing, then you actually have to think about what kinds of politics bring it back. And that's why I'm not excited, even if it works intentionally, about seeing a doom loop of vice and venality, because even if you can win that way, you are breaking the thing by doing it. And so the question of how do you win virtuously is very important to me because I think for all the other things I want to have, you actually need a working, peaceful politics to get there.
A
Who's your ideal Democratic party candidate for 2028?
B
Yeah, they don't exist. I mean, I don't think there's a perfect Democrat for 2020. And to the extent if there is, we don't know them yet because they've not been under those lights yet. I think I am a sort of unreconstructed admirer of Barack Obama. And if Obama were running today, he would have to run differently than he did then.
A
More aura.
B
He had a lot of aura then man, online aura. I think if you're running today, he'd have more online aura. That's the point. Right. You can't transpose who he is post presidentially to now. Right. He is a human institution. He's like a monument in some ways. So he's not going to be who he was even when he was running in 08. But I think he did something that's really hard to do, which is one, he contained many of the country's contradictions inside himself and was able to make people even who disagreed with him quite deeply feel seen. And he was able to combine two forms of moral imagination that I think are hard to combine, which is, one was a sort of moral imagination of policy, of things like universal healthcare, which he basically achieved. Right. It's like a. A lot of people had failed on that before him. Could we make health care systems better always. But Obamacare is no small thing. And the second was a moral imagination on politics itself. In a country that had the kinds of racial divides and legacy we have and had in a country that in the Bush years felt very divided, he made people feel politics could be different. And the tragedy of Obamaism is that it got worse that he was able actually to pass quite a lot of the policy he promised, but he was not able to make politics and this country's divisions feel better. In fact, they felt worse. And the thing that I think no one has an answer to is how to resuscitate that side of his moral imagination in a way that does not feel naive or hopeless or cliche.
A
If you're trying to go from Joey Chestnut to Joey Swole, the RP Strength app is the best place to start. I've been in the gym for two decades and it wasn't until this last year that I had some of the best training sessions of my life. And RP was a massive part of that. Actual scientists built this thing around the obsession to beat up their high school bullies and provide the most science backed effective path to maximizing muscle gain. It tells you your exercises, how many sets, reps, the weights, everything. So all you have to do is show up and lift. If the RP Strength app could wipe your ass for you probably would. And it adjusts automatically every week based on how you're actually progressing. For me, following a proper evidence based plan has made a massive difference and if you're serious about your training, it'll do the same for you. Right now you can follow the exact same training plan that I use and get up to $50 off the RP Hypertrophy app by going to the link in the description below. Heading to rpstrength.com ModernWisdom and using the code ModernWisdom at checkout that's rpstrength.com ModernWiry and ModernWisdom a checkout. Yeah, it's an interesting one to look to. What happens in 2028? You know, it was so fascinating to me being in the UK and starting to come online with realizing just how tumultuous America was politically and then observing that unfold and then starting to be a part of the conversation. I guess because I started modern wisdom in 2018 and then to roll it forward and to think about what happens in just two years time, just two years from now kind of blows my mind. And I don't know. I don't know what people are looking for on either side in 2028 anymore.
B
Do you follow? Do you? I don't know how deep you are in politics. I know you've had Bernie and people like that on the show. Do you look at the Democrats, you think that one?
A
No, no. But I also don't look at the conservatives and think that one either.
B
I mean, my basic read of the field, for what it's worth right now, is that the ones doing the most interesting things are Gavin Newsom or AOC are Buttigieg. And then the big dark horse I think that people should not underestimate right now is Jon Ossoff, who is the senator from Georgia. He was in a reelection this year. But when I look at the Democrats, those are the four who I think have figured out attention in this era. And one of my views on politics is that attention is its own competency now. And that if you are not capable of earning it and wielding it and using it and breaking through on it yourself, then you actually cannot compete at the highest levels.
A
Certainly not right now with the way that the ecosystem sits at the moment.
B
And I don't think it'll be different in 2020.
A
You got to play the ball where it lies.
B
And there's also something about one of the great, I think, character mistakes of Democrats and center left parties. Actually. I think you see this with Keir Starmer in a bunch of places is people who are too formed by institutions, they're afraid. And one way I often put this is I think right now one of the problems in American politics is Republicans are under formed by institutions and Democrats are over formed by them. So Republicans sort of in the Trump era, they're too contemptuous of institutions, too contemptuous of institutional authority, too contemptuous of the norms of institutions and how you act inside a company. Just rip it all up, doge it, chainsaw it. It's all bullshit anyway and that's wrong. The problem for the Democrats can be that they can become a party of Tracy flicks. And they are so framed and molded by like from birth, having competed their way, you know, through every school, you know, through every competition, through every company, through their politics in a party that is much more pro institutions than the Republicans are. And people who come through institutions like that, they often reflect those institutions. They begin to talk like them. You can hear the institution when they open their mouth. Keir Starmer speaks like he is the government.
A
Right.
B
Like he can feel like he's like got like he feels like a bureaucracy.
A
Correct.
B
And I'm not Even saying that as a negative on him at another time, that might have been more, you know, a doable thing. But I don't think that works in this media environment at all. Like, you have to feel honest, authentic. You have to like, like a real
A
person, like an actual human.
B
People can. People can sense that before they can sense anything else about you. And so when I see some of the Democrats who are running, but they still talk like someone who is optimized. And to be fair to them, this used to be a thing you optimize for. And it worked to win over, like local editorial boards at small town newspapers. They were optimized to be somebody that the editors of newspapers thought seemed like a competent, decent person. And it might be. And it is, I think, a shame that that has become some kind of a liability, that you need to have some edge of wildness to you. But it is what it is, a
A
new skill set as you rise up through the ranks. Yeah, yeah, it's interesting. There's kind of a common thread here, which is that you almost get locked into a mode of thinking from a particular domain that you're in, whether it be a platform, from a particular niche that you're in, geographically, culturally, from a particular time that you were in, in your career, and what was useful then, and the inability to be prepared to update that, and also the potential hypocrisy of having updated that, that creates its own challenge too. So you're sort of fighting against it, I guess, when we're talking about a more active left, like a building left. Right. The word deregulation gets used by Elon Musk and it also gets used by you.
B
It does.
A
And you clearly don't mean the same thing, but the same word. Doing two jobs is a problem in politics. Right. It sort of lets one team's project ride the slipstream of the other and you end up in this sort of semantic game, back and forth. How do you tell the difference between your kind of deregulation and Elon's in a simple way that you can explain around a dinner table?
B
They have different goals. I mean, what is deregulation? You are removing rules. What is regulation? You're adding rules. Is adding rules or removing rules good or bad? Well, how the fuck would you answer that question?
A
Depends on the rule. Is.
B
Depends on the rule. And so, look, I consider Musk to be a tragedy. This is a guy who is clearly a genius, who is the most capable industrialist of our time, who built those industries on public private partnerships. Tesla is built on government subsidies on government tax credits. There is no electric vehicle market in this country without the huge amount of money we, and California by the way in particular, pumped into making that market real. Tesla would have gone under without an Obama era loan guarantee, SpaceX, SpaceX's NASA contracts, and Musk at some point, and I mean you can basically chart when it happened because he was sort of a Democrat in semi good standing. He was like pro Obama, right? He radicalizes, he's online way too much, he gets Twitter brained. Twitter has been bad for no one the way it has been specifically bad for the way that guy thinks. And his information environment is so deeply toxic. And there's a world where he joined the Trump administration and tried to increase state capacity. And yes, that might mean chainsawing through some of what the government did, but with the goal of making it possible to do more in space, with the goal of making it possible to do more effective research into battery technology, and instead he cuts completely indiscriminately. I have friends who got layoff notices that the email read. Dear first name, last name, you have been terminated for cause. Which cause? Who was that emailed to? So, like Musk's project, deregulation is a traditional Republican thing. He didn't make it up. But the point is that right now, the government often imposes too many rules on itself and that makes it hard for it to do things. So if you look at the Mamdani housing plan that came out this week, block by block is what it's called. What he is doing in that plan overall is he is removing rules, he is deregulating what is required. When New York puts in money to build affordable housing, that in order to build affordable housing in most jurisdictions, certainly blue ones in this country, because you are using public money, it triggers a bunch of government rules that make it much more expensive because a lot of interests have come up and won their way into the fight. And so they've been able to force higher building standards and higher wage standards and higher environmental standards. And all these things might be good on their own, they really might be. But what you've done is make it twice as expensive or 3 times as expensive or 4 times as expensive to build affordable housing as to build market rate housing. And so the taxpayer is getting a shitty deal and you're not building enough affordable housing. There was a story in Washington D.C. a couple years ago about how they had ended up building affordable housing units that were costing $1.2 million per unit. These are affordable housing units with again, public and Nonprofit dollars. There was one particular build where I'm worried I'll get the numbers wrong from memory, but I think it was something like the same developer built affordable and market rate next to each other and the affordable cost something like 800,000 per unit and the market rate was like 400,000.
A
And.
B
And you just can't achieve the goal is affordable housing. And so what I care about the point of abundance, the first sentence of it basically of the book is, what do we need more of and how do we get it? And so the thing that separates different people in this debate for me, the abundance debate, the debate about plenitude, is first you have to decide what do you want more of? I want a lot more green energy. Donald Trump does not. So the fact that he is deregulating what it means to build coal or oil in this country is not a big abundance win because he's trying to achieve something that I don't support. He's actually made it harder to build wind and solar. So you can regulate government to make it harder for government to act. You can deregulate it. You can use rules well and poorly. And when you get your politics wrapped up on the axle of having emotional reaction to the means, to the tools you're using, then you got a problem. The idea that deregulation is owned by the right, or for that matter, that regulation is owned by the left, it's not true, but it's a way of shutting off your thought. The right regulates things all the time. The left deregulates things like it's just a stupid.
A
Yeah, no, I agree.
B
Stupid way of thinking.
A
This proposal for abundance is a lot about rolling back red tape, but I know a lot of people are concerned about what that means for unchecked power of potential AI overlords. If you've got a very small number of people who are controlling a massive amount of influence and a massive amount of the economy, how does the rolling back of red tape help with that solution?
B
So, two things. So one, I want to say abundance is not about rolling back red tape. There are places like building housing in dense blue cities where you probably do need to roll back what people call red tape. But that is useful where that is the problem on AI, I believe we need a lot more AI regulation. This is why I don't buy the sort of deregulation, pro regulation dichotomy. There are places I want to regulate more, places I want to regulate less. I think the abundance question on AI is different. I have a lot of concern about the Power concentrating on Anne. I've covered these guys forever. I've had Demis and Sam Altman and Dario all on my show. Right. I've been in this since GPT2, I guess. And you do not want power concentrating with them. And at one point, and some of them will still say that they don't want power concentrating with them, although in practice they don't always act like that.
A
Now.
B
Yeah, Sam Altman, I think in OpenAI seemed to be more pro regulation a couple years ago than in practice. The Greg Brockman as president has helped fund this super PAC that is dumping money against candidates who want to regulate AI. And so it's like on the one hand they'll come to a hearing and say we want to be regulated. Then somebody will run for office saying we should do some light regulation. It's like not you, not by you, we don't. So you have real money in politics problems. And I by the way, just as a broad thing, this is not something we wrote about in abundance, but like I just believe in much, much, much stronger money in politics regulations. You should amend the U.S. constitution to say money is not speech, money should not be as protected speech when spent on politics and make it possible to regulate it. There's an effort to do that through state houses happening right now. But I think the abundance question on AI is at two levels. One is we think of AI models, right? People argue about are they using Gemini or ChatGPT or Claude, but AI is, you know, Jensen Huang of Nvidia always makes his point. It's like a five layer cake. And there's an energy level, there's a chips level, there's all this infrastructure you actually need. If we want the US to be continue to be kind of AI competitive or even AI dominant, you're going to need to get that infrastructure, right? And in order to then not make that a energetic disaster, you're going to need to use the data center, build out to create a modern grid and create much more of electrostate, not a petrostrate. Right? Like there's like a whole set of questions that are raised by the physical AI buildup. But then the second thing I'm actually writing about this right now is we are having so many conversations about what we don't want from AI. What do we want from it? What is the public agenda for AI? What does the public want? What are the public goods? Because they're not just going to come on their own right now if you talk to any corporation that is really tooling itself. For AI, they are spending huge amounts of money on compute, just buying enough tokens. But they are often restructuring themselves as an organization in order to become legible and make their problems legible to the systems. So for AI to be able to solve a problem for you, you need a couple of things. One is there needs to be money behind the problem, because if you need a lot of compute to do it, it is costly even now. The second thing is the problem needs to be legible to the system. So what I mean by that, for instance, is AlphaFold, which I think is the most impressive thing AI has done yet, which is the protein folding, solving the protein folding problem. The reason it was possible to do that was there was this thing called the protein database, which had been. It was arguably the cleanest scientific database in existence, certainly one of them, where people had been keeping really high quality data on every single protein that we had mapped its structure. And that meant there was one place where the data was structured in a way where you can set the machine learning loose on it and it could learn the data, begin to predict based on the data, and then also begin to create synthetic versions of that data to extend its predictions and then be able to test them backwards and so on and so forth. Okay, there are a lot of problems that might have that shape, but you will have to create the data that the machine learning can work on for them. In government, that's often not done. So here's a very simple use case I keep talking to people about. There's no reason that the IRS can't have. I mean, build it on Claude, build it on ChatGPT, build your own. They could have an LLM that does your taxes with you. The IRS knows how much money you make, so they have ground truth there. They know the tax code, they write it a lot of the time, or at least certainly help in the regulatory system to define it. There's no reason most people have to pay an accountant. More broadly, you could have an AI that act as a concierge to anything the government might be able to do for you because it knows you, it knows your situation and knows what the government is capable of doing. Very, very hard to navigate the government right now. But you have to make the underlying data and system legible so the AI can learn what it needs to learn. Drug discovery, energy. There's a lot of questions like this where, for instance, on drug discovery, I don't know how good AIs will be on drug discovery. I've talked to different people who disagree on It. But if you look at what AIs are good at, like, did you follow the solving of this Erdos thing theorem?
A
Yes, yes, I did.
B
Okay. So I talked to some mathematicians about this. My dad's actually a mathematician. I haven't talked to him about it yet. I should. But this particular theorem, what it was able to do was sort of two things. What it was able to do was it knew kind of everything about mathematics. So it was able to combine approaches from fields that were not primarily thought to be useful in this particular theorem. But there was one mathematician who was like, oh, I had thought about doing this, but it was super labor intensive. So I just didn't bother. So it also is able to be tireless in doing that. It did not do, I think, what you would call truly new, groundbreaking mathematics. It didn't invent a whole new field here. It did something very clever and very labor intensive. And that is how a lot of
A
advances happen, synthesis plus hard work.
B
So think about what's called orphan diseases. These are diseases. My wife actually has one of them that are quite rare. So there isn't a huge amount of money in solving them. And that means unlike say something like diabetes, where there is just a functionally endless number of drug researchers working on diabetes drugs and a huge amount of money behind it and like the best people in the field on these things, you don't have that. So that's a great place where being able to have a lot of compute. And then the federal government saying, if you invent this thing, this is basically what we did with Operation Warp Speed, right? We said, if you invent this thing, we will buy it and then we will hand it out at low cost. Right. That's how we made the COVID vaccines. You could do that across a huge number of diseases. And say, if you're able to solve any of these, here's what we will give you. It is worth it to us, the public, to have cures here. And we'll make those cures cheap. And we'll put work into making the regulatory system amenable to this. They also did that in warp speed. We'll put in work to trying to create better databases. We'll clean things up for you, but we will create a prize system, an advanced market commitment system. What do we want AI to solve? Because right now the private market is putting a lot of money into that question. But the public sector is only thinking about what it wants to prevent AI from doing, which is important. I'm a big believer in AI harms. I'VE been talking about existential risk for years, but you also need a theory of AI goods, and right now we don't have one.
A
Most people don't realize how much being dehydrated impacts their performance, which is why for the last five years I've started pretty much every morning with Element. Element is a tasty electrolyte drink mix with everything that you need and nothing that you don't. This orange salt in a cold glass of water is like a sweet, salty, orangey nectar and I really tell the difference when I take it versus when I don't. It plays a critical role in reducing muscle cramps and fatigue, helps to optimize brain health and regulate your appetite while also curbing cravings. Best of all, they have a no questions asked refund policy with an unlimited duration so you can buy it and try it for as long as you want and if you don't like it for any reason, they'll just give you your money back. Plus, they offer free shipping in the US right now. You can get a free sample pack of Element's most popular flavors with your first purchase by going to the link in the description below or heading to drinklmnt.com modernwisdom that's drinklmnt.com Modern Wisdom it's interesting. I had Nick Bostrom on the show and superintelligence more than 10 years ago now. 2014, 15, something like that. When that came out was kind of my introduction to Holy shit. There are a lot of ways that this could go very, very wrong. The X Risk of X Risks. And then his new book was basically okay, what happens if this goes right? And even on the path to it going right, there were tons of different ways that it could go wrong. It is, it is kind of mind blowing to me that there is any time being spent on anything that isn't AI safety at the moment. You know, I'm aware. Climate change, something that we need to keep an eye on. It's not going to happen within the next decade. Birth rate decline. Something that I've talked a lot about on the show too. I think, you know that's going to happen more quickly than climate change is, but still not on the timelines that we're talking about here. Do you see Tristan Harris's new thing, the AI doc?
B
I haven't seen the doc, but I know Tristan.
A
Ah dude, it's really, really good. It's really, really interesting.
B
I have come as a person who is in that world for a long time. I've come to a probably Slightly different view on the right way to approach AI.
A
You're gonna give me a white pill? I really need one.
B
What would a white pill be? I never know the pills anymore. There are too many of them.
A
Hope.
B
Feel better.
A
Hope. No, look, I, I.
B
You the. You cannot solve a problem whose shape you do not know. You can't. So it's good to talk about AI safety. We should be pumping money into, say, mechanistic interpretability. We have made big strides on interpretability. Shout out to Chris Ola at Anthropic, who's been a hero in this and is now hanging out with the Pope, I guess, apparently. Yeah, good thing to see good things happen to good people. We should be trying to understand these systems. But so much of the AI conversation, the mind is attracted to these speculative scenarios. Mass automation where there are no more jobs. Recursive superintelligence, self improving superintelligence that slips out of our control like overnight. Here's the deal. If we create recursive superintelligence that slips out of our control overnight, which is sort of how like the AI 2027 scenario works, we better just hope for the best, because I think we are kind of fucked in that scenario. I don't think it will happen like that or that quickly. I agree, but we want as good interpretability as we can possibly have. But the other thing we want is to be in constant work on regulating the existing nature of these systems and at their frontier and testing the systems and working on them constantly. Because in the same way that the AI companies, the ones who were founded on a theory of safety like OpenAI, which and anthropic were like, well, we can't make it safe unless we build it. You cannot figure out how to regulate it unless you regulate it both for good and for bad. And so my view is that the political system needs to get in the game on the system that exists right now and not endlessly debate a speculative scenario that it is not going to be able to respond to until you're there. That is not how politics works. It's not how anything we do works. So, yes, that does imply a certain amount of pessimism if we end up in the extraordinary fast takeoff scenario. I don't think we're in the extraordinary fast takeoff scenario. And just by the way, I have always thought, and have always had this argument by effective altruist friends and actually Dwarkesh Patel, who's a great AI podcaster, just sent out a little substack making the same point. The capability to wield power is more than intelligence. A lot more. And so the world is full of friction. And the super intelligence scenario has always had this dynamic where it isn't just like the thing becomes recursive, improving and super powerful and super. But it also never makes a mistake on its way to taking over a world it doesn't understand. And have you ever dealt with smart people? Like, is Donald Trump the smartest person in the world? No. He's got a, like, incredible animalistic instinct for power and other people's weakness. And he's made a ton of mistakes. And, you know, dorkish in his piece is like, maybe Stalin is the person we're talking about here, but Stalin also is not like, the world's greatest genius. I think there's like a real mistake being made on how easy it is to translate intelligence and information into power.
A
Yeah.
B
And I am just skeptical. Like, again, we can all come up with a sci fi scenario, but I can't forever argue against the absolute worst thought experiment you get. Then we're just in a world like, yeah. If all we're dealing with here is an endless effort for you to come up with thought experiments that the regulators can't match, you will outmatch the regulators very quickly, which is why the regulators should be increasing their competency by actually dealing with AI in the present moment. You get better at things by doing them.
A
So you're saying that the most dangerous AI isn't the smartest one. It's the canniest one.
B
I think that's true, but I'm saying that the AI safety debate has been caught in thinking about the future for too long. And now we're in the present. And so the thing to do is to figure out how to take some of these fears, which I take as serious. I do not. I am not somebody who's dismissive of them. I have a P doom sitting in the back of my head. But you have to take them and do something in the now because now we're at the point where AI is here. For a long time, there was nothing really to do because AI was speculative. Right. You could try to be running your experiments in these labs, but that's all you can do. Now. The thing is, here we actually have quite powerful AIs. They're getting more powerful all the time. Congress, we need to probably build more capable institutions that actually have expertise on regulating it and are able to hire some of the best people because the market for AI researchers is more expensive than the current civil service rules we have for hiring really make possible to compete in. And you have to, like, be getting your hands dirty and trying to, like, make what we have work well and also be like, trying to create the goods that can give it a direction that is safer.
A
Well, think about who was involved in The Conversation from 2015 to 2020. Ish. Philosophers. A lot of philosophers. And if you watch the new AI doc, it's maths grad, computer science programmer, futurist, technologist, and it's moving more. But you're saying this goes even beyond that to people who are policymakers. Like, we need to bring those sorts of people in to actually get involved in this too. So, yeah, it's gone from being as hypothetical and theoretical as possible to now something where the rubbers really met the rubber.
B
I am like. My view on this is not that I am dismissive of the possibility of future ed slip out of our control or frankly, even, although I am more skeptical of this, the possibility of mass automation. What I am saying is that it is long past time to start working on the systems that we have now as regulators and stop debating a hypothetical. You do not have a way to stop the hypothetical. Have you read Eliezer Yakowski's book?
A
Yes, I have.
B
On the show the argument. As did I. The argument is shut it all down. That's where it goes. And for better and maybe for much worse. Maybe he's right. I mean, his view is 98%, if we create superintelligence, we're fucked. But we're not going to shut it all down. And so the question is, given what we have and where we are, start actually bringing the system, and the system's under democratic control, what would you do?
A
Let's say that you had God's eye coordination power.
B
I would have probably three or four buckets. So one, I would put a lot more money into evaluation than we're currently putting in publicly. Actually, Trump and Musk gutted a bunch of that. But I would make our public evaluation capabilities incredibly strong. So that's one thing they were trying to do that sort of. In Biden, I would start doing a lot of regulating AI around kids because I think there's actually a fair amount of consensus on that. And so you could move on that. I think we should be quite careful about running this experiment on children. I think that the idea of kids growing up with a bunch of AI buddies and lovers, I don't think we know how it will warp people's sense of how relationships should work when they have those before they have real relationships.
A
I think I've heard you say that the kind of childhood that you had could have fallen prey to this kind of.
B
Yes, I was a very lonely kid. I was bullied a lot. And I was also a smart, nerdy kid. And so what would it have meant if instead of having to sort of fight through that and find my, you know, best friends and figure it out as I did, like work with the friction the world gave me, which made me who I am, I could have disappeared into frictionless digital relationships. Friends, tutors, lovers. Like, I think that's actually quite scary.
A
I was, I was the same, except for being a lot less smart and nerdy.
B
Oh, I don't know. I think you're probably underrating yourself, but. So I would do a lot on kids, I would do a lot on actual goods. As I was just saying, I really want to see a public goods agenda for AI. And I think there are harms we can begin looking at now in the way AI is used and what it is given autonomy and power over on when human beings need to be in the loop. I think that there's pretty good thinking on safety. Something that isn't in the AI 2027 thing that I think is smart is AI should always have to keep a legible chain of reasoning notepad in English that the moment we start letting them come up with their own languages and we really have no capacity to see how their reasoning.
A
The black box has a black box.
B
I don't want to make the black box too black boxy.
A
Yep.
B
And so, so you, you want to start working with what you have now. And you know, I'm not saying I have like all the ideas in my head, but there's enough on the table that I think we could begin. And I also, by the way, I thought whether you want anthropic doing it is like we can argue. I think having a fair number of restrictions on how AI can be used for surveillance for Kill Chain questions is wise and I particularly worry about surveillance. I am both in a kind of macro way against using AI to create the Panopticon, but in a micro way. A lot of the machine learning tools being used to make the lives of workers measured and miserable right now are inevitable.
A
When is that being used?
B
You read a lot about this on, you know, with Amazon and delivery drivers. I've read things about like eye tracking software. There's all kinds of software being used in different places. I don't want to do it by memory because it was in minutes as I looked at the report. But to Just track how productive workers are. It's like having somebody always watching you to make sure you're never slacking off. And what I would say is that using machines to turn people into machines is inimical to human flourishing. And I do think we need to think harder in politics. And AI is going to push this on what actually human flourishing means. What does it mean to be a human being in the age of AI? What does it mean to learn like a human being? What is human dignity? Right. The Pope is right about that.
A
People are already feeling this, like, thought entropy thing kicking in. This, like, lifting with an exoskeleton suit on that my capacity to actually be able to think properly is being degraded. And I know Pema Chodrun, one of your favorite writers, talks about sitting with uncertainty instead of running from it. AI is like, in a sense, the most powerful uncertainty killer ever built. Right? You have instant answers straight away. You never need to wonder again. Even. You know, I think about the before times of Internet use. There was friction even in your search, right? To go onto Google to look for a thing to go, is that. How reliable is that particular forum? How reliable is this particular poster? Have they got an agenda on there? Oh, it's not got a security certificate on this particular website or. I'm going to have to scroll for a little while to find the specific type of answer that I'm looking for. And then I'm going to have to scan the document, as opposed to having the equivalent of sort of refined NASA ready to eat dehydrated, reconstituted food that you can just squeeze from a toothpaste tube into your mouth.
B
The simplest thing I tell, I sometimes do college speaking and I'll get asked by kids, what should I do AI? My answer's always read books and paper. You should have a practice of cultivating the form of attention, the form of sustained attention, without reaching to resolve every question that occurs in your mind that books create. People think of books, I think, as a technology of information, that you download information from a book into your head. But they're a technology of thinking. They are a scaffold for thinking. And what is happening when you read a book in paper and are not distracting yourself every two seconds is connections are being made in your mind. Like the value of a book is not just the information on it. It is what happens in your mind when you read it. And one of the things I feel very strongly about with my kids, one of the things that I worry about with integrating AI into schools is we talked about Attention at the beginning here we need as human beings to cultivate healthy forms of attention and AI. One of its seductions, even for smart, agentic, as we now call them, people, is the constant feeling and simulacra of productivity. It gives you.
A
Yep.
B
So you're reading something, you go and you look it up and you're. And it all feels very productive because you are this constant information. There's back and forth. And I do, I use AI for research. I learn things from it. I'm not, I mean, I think you can hear in this conversation. I'm not like a pure hater. But if you are not spending time thinking and reading away from screens, you're just, you are allowing something to atrophy that you will not get back. And what I worry about with a lot of smart people I know is that AI makes you feel superhuman and it's making you less than human. And I've watched a lot of people seem to use AI a lot more and their work is not getting better, it's getting worse. I hear about people of all these agents running on their behalf now. And they come in in the morning and it's prepared this huge summary of everything. And it's like, what about reading a physical newspaper instead of now absorbing tons of book reports from your AIs? Right. Like, where is your space? Where is your mind? The ghost of productivity. The illusion of productivity is something that you have to fight so hard, I think, in this era, because, I mean, even prior to AI, it sure feels like you're doing something productive to sit there on your laptop, on your iPad, and even when your brain has stopped really working, you're flicking back and forth to the news, to your email, you're seeing things on social media that sort of poses information, but it's all distraction. Wearing productivity's clothing.
A
Yes.
B
And you have to be really vigilant against because deeper productivity often doesn't look or even feel like productivity. It's taking a walk and having an idea. It's like the second hour reading an actually pleasurable good book in a coffee shop. These things are deeply human experiences that the reason books worked and the reason we festoon rooms in them when we want the rooms to look smart, which is what we're doing in here. There's a reason we associate them with intelligence, because they're not about what's in the book. They're about the way that people who read books are trained to think and attend. And that will ultimately make you much better at using AI.
A
Desperately compensating with all of the bucks behind? No. I noticed with myself that one of the best questions that I asked myself on an annual review a couple of years ago was, what do I think is productive that isn't? And what do I not think is productive, but is? And going for a walk without AirPods in.
B
Wait, what did you come up with on your second list there? I want to hear it.
A
Driving without consuming anything. So no music, no podcasts, no nothing else. The same with going for a walk, dinner with friends, massively productive, hugely productive. Come home and I've got five new ideas, or I feel a little bit more peaceful, or I've just got to listen to someone else entertain me or got a new perspective on something, or I've not thought about my shit, even simply the space that you create, the void that you create between thinking about your shit and thinking about your shit by hearing somebody else extemporaneously think about their shit. To you, you're like, oh, brilliant. I thought about someone else's shit for a bit. Stuff that isn't productive, but I thought was sitting at my desk when I'm not working. I've just got the laptop open. I'm like, oh, maybe I'll pick up some productivity panties here. Slack. Almost ever being on calls when I don't need to, like, just. Just checking in calls. They have all of the trappings of something that looks like progress and productivity, but when you think about what's actually happened at the end of it, it's almost never anything productive. Lying in a hammock. Lying in a hammock. Unusually productive. So what comes to my view?
B
A bunch of those I'd agree with. Travel huge. And I always want to be careful about the language of productivity here, because the point is not to do it
A
in service, only travel. Yes, yes, yes.
B
For me, the absolute best thing I can do for my productivity is go to a coffee shop or some beautiful space. The aesthetic richness of the space is meaningful for me. And read paper books for a long enough time to get into a state where my mind has settled on that being what it's doing. So that's very, very, very like. That is, I think, the most important thing I do for my work. Walking. I don't listen to or read things for the most part on the subway anymore. I just sit there.
A
Like a psychopath.
B
Like a psychopath. It is amazing how much it's like sitting there staring forward. You feel weird now on the subway.
A
Do you know the Rory Sutherland line about this? To do with smoking? He Says sometimes you just want to stand in the corner of a room and stare out of the window. The problem is, if you do this without a cigarette, you look like a friendless idiot. But if you do it with a cigarette, you look like a fucking philosopher.
B
Yeah, yeah.
A
So aesthetics count for a lot.
B
Yeah, they do. So really just taking breaks in general. Yeah, I mean that, like, I think actually the thing, if you want to just boil down a lot of what we just said, aside from reading, it's that just staring at a screen endlessly is bad for you. It's good for you when you're doing it intentionally and for long enough. But, I mean, I cannot tell you how many times I have solved a problem on a column that I had been banging away at the keyboard on for hours or days by just leaving.
A
You can't white knuckle creativity, dude. You don't get to white knuckle it.
B
And so there's. So there's a lot of that. I mean, the gym is obvious, you know, you get a lot of ideas. There are showers. I mean, this shit is all. It's all there. But I think to draw it out of the creativity space or the productivity space, the thing that is being said here is you need to make space for yourself to be a human being and do human being things. And AI is going to be better at being a machine than we're going to be at being machines. And so trying to make yourself into a better machine. Like, everybody thinks you're using the AI as a prosthetic, but again, the lesson of McLuhan and Postman and others is eventually the AI is going to be using you as a prosthetic. Or certainly to maybe be more specific, the organization that pays for both you and the AI is going to be making you a prosthetic of the AI in the same way that Amazon has made people into prosthetics of the boxes they pick up and the delivery vans they drive. And trying to be as little like a machine as possible, or at least create big spaces where you're not acting as a machine is, I think, can be really important. If I had to make a bet on how I would educate my kids and you told me you can put them in a school that is going to be at the cutting edge of using AI, like an Alpha School or whatever, or you can put them in a school that is like St. John's University or something, and it's going to be all paper and pens, I would go that one. Because there will be AI. It will be out there. What I need to develop in them is the ability to be a human being. And one of the dangers whenever we get really excited about a new technology is we over adopt it in a thoughtless way. And then the technology colonizes our minds and then we can't realize how much we have lost attentionally in terms of our own independence, in terms of our own depth. So just like all the things we're talking about, take breaks, take a walk.
A
It is so much good. It's the sort of shit that your mum would happily give you an answer for. Like she's happily got the answer for it. What's that line? Is it? I think it might be a Nietzsche one where it's like, I beg you, my friend, sleep well and go for more walks. It's just always a solution.
B
Oh my God. Really? Advice Nietzsche should have taken.
A
Yes, agreed. You mentioned earlier on about this challenge, this positioning that we've got at the moment around encouraging people, both sides, encouraging people to better themselves. Perhaps a little bit of an aversion of this self determination, personal development, at least traditionally coming from the left, but maybe also coming from the right now. I think the left talks a lot about structural barriers for women. Do you think it's got an equally serious account of what's going wrong for men at the moment?
B
I don't. I think it knows it doesn't and it's beginning to try to think about what to do about that. People like Gavin Newsom are taking that a lot more seriously. I want to get at the thing you said underneath that, because I think it's important though I think a very damaging thing that happened on the left, I'll call it liberalism, to be more on my own stream here, is that it began to see individualistic explanations as excuses for structural dysfunction. And so it became hostile to any politics or moral structure that was also about self improvement. And one that's a betrayal of the long history of liberalism, which has always been about self cultivation. Like go read your Kant or your John Mills or for that matter your great liberal politicians like Frederick Douglass or MLK or fdr, Lincoln. But when you give up on that, you're giving up on one of the fundamental drives. So you want a society that is taking seriously all the ways in which structures oppress and coerce and impede people's flourishing. And also what you're trying to create space for is for them to use their agency and their energy and their will to flourish. And so you need both sides of that. You need the vision of the just society. And you need the vision of the flourishing self cultivating person. And I do think the left became hostile to this and particularly became hostile to it when it was male coded. So when it was coded in the way that self help is for women. Right. More therapeutically, more relationally, it was much easier. Esther Perel, Brene Brown, other people like that who have more of a vision in that, that went down easily. But in the male space where it's a little more testosterone. When it got associated with the Joe Rogans and modern wisdoms and some. I shouldn't say that, but the Jordan Petersons is maybe the better way to put it. I think there was a pushback because also some of those people did have very aggressive right wing politics. And so these things got linked together in their minds. And instead of saying, okay, how can we take the impulse in here that is clearly making Jordan Peterson into some kind of international phenom and also try to answer it and have something constructive to say about it, there's sort of
A
a rejection of it, discard it entirely because it's rejecting the structural inequalities that people are facing by saying that there are things that you can do and to pull yourself up by your bootstraps.
B
What is surprising to me, and I'd be very curious for what you think happened here because you know this world a lot better than I do. Not the right politically, but somewhere this went is I don't really the way that Peterson and maybe Doug Murray and people like that, it seemed to like what came after that was Andrew Tate and Nick Fuentes and people who have, I think, no real concept of virtue. Right. I got my disagreements with Jordan Peterson on lots of things, but that guy thought a lot about virtue, thought about myth, thought about, you know, and overthought about it. Overthought about it. Somehow the right, like Bronze Age pervert, it pushed towards vice. So the left gave up on virtue and the right rejected it. Now, I shouldn't say the left and the right because lots of people in both, just like normal ass people raising kids and loving their partners and doing their job and volunteering in their community and going to church. But maybe it's like an algorithmic dimension
A
of things, the quiet middle three quintiles.
B
Yes, but at the apex of the attention economy, I do feel I watched this happen. You're not going to convince me it didn't. The left became quite hostile to ideas of individual cultivation like oh, let's just say you'd using your privilege and the right Moved in a way where it became vice, maxing, to use the term
A
that Darthausen uses, kind of caricatured it to a degree that the most extreme version of this, I mean, certainly, I think if Jordan hadn't had his time away, if he hadn't done the God pivot in the same way, if he'd continued to do the clean your room, get your bootstraps and pick yourself up by them, I do think that that would have probably curtailed a lot of the vacuum that other voices got sucked into. Now, who knows how that would have actually played out. But I definitely get the sense that, wow, there is this big cohort of largely men, largely young men who have increasingly grown up in fatherless homes, which is a problem that the left should be very concerned about, right? They're looking for a patriarch figure. They're looking for someone to tell them, how do I become a. It's the equivalent of dad, how do I shave? Or I fancy this girl in school, how do I talk to her? It's the equivalent for that. But life wide. And if you open up that market but then remove yourself from it, it's just going to suck in anybody that can service it. But perhaps not quite at the level that that first mover had been able to do. And I think that that was. That was definitely a big part of it. It's been kind of fascinating to see this conversation unfold because everybody is talking out of both sides of their mouth, which, for instance, one of the big criticisms that I can certainly have of most of the pro male advocates and most of the people that are on the right are men's mental health isn't taken seriously until it affects women or other people. Lip service is paid to that, but no one really cares. And there aren't very many therapeutic models that sort of speak to men in the way that they want to be spoken to with regards to understanding their desire for progress and conquer and mastery and also providing them with solutions that they can move forward on, as opposed to just, hey, come in here, talk about your feelings. Your issue is that you're a defective woman as opposed to a man who needs assistance moving forward linearly. But also that same group of people that say that that's a big deal and claim to be advocates for men will happily mock a guy who opens up about his emotions on the Internet. If you see a video of a guy who's crying or is really struggling or is down on his luck, there is not this sort of camaraderie that you're Claiming that is supposed to be there. That's like just a huge hypocrisy. This is Men are good. Tom Golden's got a substack and he identifies this. It's like, guys won't help other guys that are struggling emotionally in that sort of a way, whilst saying that men's mental health needs to be taken more seriously. It's like it's the equivalent of not putting your money where your mouth is with regards to this. But on the left, the kind of complete denial of self agency, of sovereignty, of modern men being made to pay for the sins that their grandfathers benefited from. A patriarchy that they no longer feel a part of, as Christine Embers says. And you go, okay, well, on both of those sides, it doesn't feel like much progress is being. At least much productive progress is being made. And then if you do begin to try and have this conversation, I'm aware, like looking the way that I do, maybe it's the British accent, maybe it's the whatever. Like as soon as you start talking about the problems of men and boys, unless you have this painful throat clearing land acknowledgement before you fucking do it, every single time the same boring accusations get thrown at you. You don't care about women, that this is misogyny, rebranded, that this is the thin end of the wedge, that it's a gateway drug to something that's much more pernicious down the line that talking about birth rates or coupling, or it's you trying to pull women out of the boardroom and put them back into the kitchen. And it's just, it's boring and fatiguing when you're trying to make genuine progress and you say, okay, well, at what point can we have this conversation without having to prostrate ourselves for all of these issues that have come before.
B
Let me ask you something, though, because I think you're right about the world of a couple of years ago. But I go on podcasts like this one sometimes. I was just on with Dax and Armchair Expert and have done others. Do you ever. Who are we shadow boxing with here? Because is this still true? I actually do think there's a period where you would get a lot of. I mean, a lot maybe is even a strong word. But in both directions there was pretty toxic and weird social media dynamics. It got very, very gendered and we're very adeptitarian. And now I think there's a lot of hangover of that. But it. And I'm not saying you can't find it somewhere on the Internet. You can find anything somewhere on the Internet. But is it really still there in that way? Like I see for instance, Gavin Newsom on the left is trying to engage his conversation fairly successfully, I think, and in who he's having on his podcast, which has been, I think, a very interesting project. And you know, I see Ryan Holiday, right, who I know has been on
A
the show and I think Obama, Obama made a pivot long ago. Yeah.
B
I mean his post, I mean Obama was always this is a thing, right? This was a very. This thing we're talking about is a very punctuated moment because Obama had a very aggressive politics of self cultivation, right. A very big. There's a society and there's the individual and you have to act in a certain way. You have to be a certain thing for your family. And his post presidential project was about young men. Right. That was like a big thing he did. And so like there was this period online where things got really fractious between the genders and other things. And I think everybody is having some trouble knowing if they can declare it over.
A
Yeah, I understand what you mean.
B
So do you still experience it is, I guess the question I was going to ask you.
A
Absolutely.
B
From where, like who if I was
A
to put out any kind of a reel online that talks about sex differences still the blank Slaters and will come in. There was one that came out yesterday. There's one that came out yesterday that said the differential in terms of housework around the house between men and women. A really interesting study. If you look at the number the amount of housework time that is spent by single men and single women living on their own, women do 200% the amount of housework, their standards for a home tend to be more clean than men's do. And I mean, this has been shown up in the Simpsons and Family Guy and you know, all of the kind of cliches for a long time. But a ton of the comments are to do with. Well, the only reason for that is because women are socialized into thinking that they have to have higher levels of presentability and that it's judgmental and social conditioning that's caused this thing to happen. I don't think that that's the case. I think that you can make a pretty easy evolutionary psychology explanation to understand why that would not be the case. If you talk ever about anything that's to do with male self improvement and the challenges that they're facing with regards to that. I mean, a good example of this was there was a study that said men need Two guys nights out per week in order to maintain optimal mental health. It's a pretty big study and it was pretty well researched. Every single comment was boo hoo, poor patriarchy. Tell me that you're a man child without telling me that you're a man child. I think when you see what Sabrina Carpenter at the moment, the lyrics, the broad culture that's happening is not unifying. And it's not unifying from both sides.
B
I would agree, I agree it's not unifying. But I think this is the thing I'm trying to get at here a little bit because I'm not disagreeing that either these comments are real or some of these dynamics are real. I think one of the things that we have to get over in the culture is one expecting anything to be unifying but treating the comment section like the actual reaction.
A
What would be a more real reaction?
B
I think the other people in the conversation, I mean, because my perception of this, right, which I track more, what the people in politics are saying and what the other journalists are saying is that this conversation about men doing poorly is everywhere. I mean Richard Reeves book was a big deal and it's completely. At the Democratic Party it had this sort of ridiculous thing, was going to spend tens of millions of dollars on his problems, on men. But. But the idea that you can just say like toxic masculinity, be done with it. I'm not saying you won't find that in a comment section. I'm just saying that it actually doesn't feel to me like where the zeitgeist is. But I think there's a lot of shadowboxing with it. So I mean I again, like, I'm a well known liberal commentator out here talking about how much we need liberal politics of virtue and broadly getting a good reaction to that, not never getting shit for it. But I don't know, I don't expect to never get shit.
A
It's interesting. I wonder whether the accelerator was pressed and we're still sort of coasting close to maximum speed, but it's not actually being increased. That might be a way to look at it, at least in my perspective. You're right that talking about the problems of men and boys, talking about the problems of men and boys is not seen with the same dismissiveness that it would have been two years ago. Talking about the solutions for the problems of men and boys, which is really what matters, like identifying the problem is only interesting insofar or useful insofar as it allows you to find a solution that to Me still gets the hackles up of a lot of people on the Internet and whether comments are tastemakers. How top down versus bottom up is this? It's kind of hard. What are you aggregating it from?
B
Well, that's what I mean. That, I think is very hard. I think we have very distorted views of the public, and this has been one of the ways we've been deranged by algorithmic media. And I think a couple of years back, people reflected that they thought it was real. And so the tastemakers and the elites began to sort of, like, fall in line to it a little bit. And I think that has stopped to a large degree. And I think people have sort of reasserted independence from it. But obviously, like, the. The buzz is still there, but not mistaking the buzz as, like, the thing. So, like, look, I don't know what the solutions are that you're describing. I'm sure there are some I might agree with, some I might not. I don't feel. I will say that even compared to what I thought was true a couple years ago, I don't feel this particular conversation to be electric fenced. Right. Like, I believe there are differences between men and women. Like, something I've said on different shows is that one reason I think that some of the vision of masculinity I'm seeing and like, the, you know, take the shackles off of men. Right. Seems wrong to me, is that you have to, I think, start any vision of masculinity with the reality that men are stronger and through testosterone, more aggressive. And so self mastery has always been an important part of visions of masculinity like self mastery. And the constructive channeling of those impulses is, like, foundational to any healthy masculinity. And mostly, I think people understand what I'm talking about when I say that I have boys. I think about this a lot.
A
Capacity for restraint is increasingly important.
B
Yeah, you're not gonna convince me that I don't have to channel their aggressive impulses in healthy ways. And I just think in politics, I mean, again, I think Newsom is interesting because he's somebody who. And you should have him on the show. It'd be a very interesting conversation. But he's somebody who I think is very. He has a very sensitive touch for the politics of a moment. And, I mean, you look at his book, like, Young man in a Hurry, the one he just released, which is unusually interesting for a politician's book, which is not a high bar, obviously, they
A
should put that on the front Cover
B
it is very much about this question of like, I mean, you could really understand that book is a confrontation with a certain kind of maleness. And he's very explicit about that in a way I find interesting. So to me, my sense is like, the water has changed here. I will say I think the other thing though is that I have often thought the division of the problems into male problems and female problems. I agree that there are different questions for men and women. I also think that there's a broader set of questions that are part of the AI thing and are a little bit more unifying about. We actually need to find ways for human beings, just continue to be human beings and become more so. This is one of my obsessions, and it's not to change the subject. We can talk, keep talking about men, but I think there are more things that everybody is going to need and ways in which we have turned modernity as a try to keep people useful in the ways the economy needed them to be useful. They're going to need to be rethought in more fundamental fashions, starting with education. And that actually has some specific mill questions around it. I think Richard Reeves is right when he says that modern education is not well built for boys. But in a funny way, we've been so used to framing this as a competition between men and women that the possibility of framing at least some things correctly as a competition between humans and machines opens up some avenues and pathways, I think to talk about things that are more innate to humans of both sexes and also separately innate in both sexes. That maybe would have been harder to do five years ago.
A
It's certainly going to be easier to unify if you have a common enemy, because that happened previously. It was just between each other as opposed to together against something else. Yeah, yeah. Look, it's. It's interesting. It definitely feels to me like. I hope that it's not just lip service that's being paid to something because evidently in 2024 that was a blank space that because left untouched resulted in a lot of people going to the other side right from the left like that young men really, really seem to depart from. They didn't feel like they were part of the. What was that line? There was a group for underprivileged or underserved communities and there was 13 of them. And the only one that was missing was men. That there was every different version of this. This is Richard Reeves big post about
B
in 2024 that wasn't true. There's a men for Harris thing that like there's a whole.
A
The White Guys for Harris movement.
B
I think that. Right, yeah.
A
I have mixed feelings about that, I'm sure.
B
But you live by the affinity group, you die by the affinity group.
A
That's true. That is. Can't be.
B
Like, there's no affinity groups for me. And then they do one.
A
Well, it's interesting on the. What are the groups that are falling behind? That was the issue that Richard took with it. I don't know what he thought about the White Guys for Harris group. There was definitely some sort of prostrating of the self there. That felt a little strange. I'm interested as you sort of think about being somebody who has public opinions, who is putting these sorts of things out on the Internet, having the changing landscape and having this sort of very long career of saying things that might have felt true at the time but can be pointed to in future. How do you avoid being too deranged by the criticisms?
B
By the criticisms.
A
Yeah.
B
That's not where I thought you were going to go with that. I don't know. I think it's the same thing we were talking about earlier. You have a backstage. I have people whose reactions to things are bellwether for me. And if there's a huge amount of critique of me at a certain moment, and that happens every so often, I try to take it seriously and think about it. Doesn't mean I always change my opinion on it. But I think you need your own internal compass. Again, I will say I have pretty aggressive algorithmic media hygiene. And so I'm not out there looking for reaction.
A
The reason I ask is, you know, we're talking about a need for a degree of resilience. Degree of resilience in terms of individual agency now, up against what's going to be happening with AI already up against what's been happening with social media and screens and distraction. And there's a great article by Ethan Strauss which is called Criticism Capture is More Warping than Audience Capture.
B
Oh, yeah. And I've not read that article, but I think there's something really to that.
A
It's one of the most canonical things that I've read for the modern age. It's so good. And it basically says that people begin to change their positions more to either in advance, defend against, or as a reaction to the existing or potential criticisms that their work is going to receive.
B
I think that it is a very tricky thing. I will say this. For me, it is a very tricky thing to know the difference between absorbing critique and synthesizing good points. From it and absorbing critique and not wanting to touch the stove and because they kind of feel the same inside and there's not like one way to do it. But I do think it is important. I try to think about this a lot. That critique is often a form of in group disciplining. One thing I found over the years is that nobody is hated like an apostate. So the right to start there, and I know this from my friends there, it's like, if you are on the right and you turn anti Trump, the hell you get is nothing like what I get as a forever anti Trump, openly anti Trump. Nobody cares. In fact, I've perfectly good relations with people I have to report on for the Trump administration because they never saw me on their side. It's a stable relationship in a way. Similarly, on the left, nobody's hated like an apostate.
A
The small differences make the most noise.
B
Yeah. But also it's a possibly effective action.
A
Get in line.
B
Yeah, get in line. And maybe you will. And so you have to be very careful about that inside yourself. On the one hand, you want to be able to hear critique, and on the other hand, you don't want to be scared of it. One of my practices is when there's a lot of critique of me, I will often invite one of the critics on the show and just kind of talk it out and see where I agree and disagree and if I can sort of pull it into the spaces where I can deliberate about it. But if all I'm doing is exposing myself to the roar of anger at a moment, what is getting algorithmically boosted? That's not constructive. I will say the other thing that I'll sometimes do is I find it's quite important for me in terms of how thoughtfully I can integrate feedback when and in what context I absorb it. So being at dinner and getting pinged on my phone where somebody sends me a mean article about me, sometimes friends are like, did you see these terrible things people are writing about you? And it's like, thank you. They didn't have my personal way to reach me. But you do. And now you've brought it to my attention at dinner.
A
Yeah. You're a conduit.
B
Yeah.
A
I didn't. This horrible thing that happened.
B
I know people are mad at me. I'm aware. But the thing that I'll now do is if there's stuff collecting, I will put it together and I will go print it all out. Or if it's videos, you know, watch
A
a video, you create a portfolio of
B
30am when I'm resourced and have energy,
A
resilience is highest and can think about
B
it during the day as opposed to at the end of the day when I'm like, trying to transition between the subway and my kids or, you know, dinner and bed, whatever it might be. So it's like everything else, right? You need a certain. If you're getting a lot of it, I think you need a certain level of. Of discipline and you need to walk this balancing line between not getting overwhelmed and not shutting out. And I'm not saying I always do it well, it's not a thing I would say I've mastered.
A
Yeah, it's fascinating for me to see somebody who I'm just. However cantankerous and controversial and inflammatory some of the topics that I talk about are or have been, none of them ever come close to politics. Politics is always going to be ground zero for this, right? It's always going to be ground zero. And just the preparedness to step into that over and over again for me is pretty fascinating. I think in the past, I've heard you describe journalism as organized curiosity, given how the last few years have gone. I remember as well you talking about Vox on the idea that better information leads to better politics. Do you still believe that? You still believe that now?
B
I'd probably alter it a little bit to say that it's not just the information, it's the information environment. Because it's hard to say did we get better or worse information. What we got was more information and then the way the information was sorted algorithmically and other things. You can have better information than at any time in history and worse. And we did. And so the way I would say it is I do think better and worse information environments, attention environments. I really do take that layer, as we've been talking about pretty seriously. But is it a, like a direct thing? I don't know. I will say one of the things that has weirdly made me very hopeful about how politics still can work is the experience I've had on abundance. And the point is not that just like me and Derek did, this abundance is synthesizing things like the YIMBY movement, the yes, in my backyard housing movement. It's synthesizing where I think some of the smartest green groups went on decarbonization and recognizing you need to do that by accelerating green technology and then figuring out how to deploy it at scale. There were a lot of people and ideas and so forth that we were kind of putting into that. And I have watched, I have Watched in a matter of a couple of years, ideas that were quite marginal. I mean, the first piece on this I did before, we called it abundance, I called it supply side progressivism. Then I got to a liberalism way less. Yeah, right. Then liberalism that builds, which is pretty good. And then Derek got abundance. But the point was that the left didn't talk about supply. We only talked about demand. We talked about how to redistribute, we talked about how to subsidize, which are important things, but we didn't talk about how to create more of the goods we needed. Now we do all the time. So there was a big intellectual argument, again, not just mine, and it worked. And now everybody from Newsom to Morahili to West Moore to Mamdani to everybody, right? I just did a California governor's forum where the top five Democrats in the governor's race did a housing forum with me and they were all just talking about how to make it easier to build and how to cut construction costs. So like I have watched good information, good argumentation. There's a Rand study about how much it costs to construct per square foot in California, Texas, Colorado, they were all familiar with it. This one study had been incredibly influential on all of us. So it can happen.
A
What are you paying the most attention to over the next couple of years?
B
I mean, AI I'm trying to help create a better liberalism more capable of competing with illiberalism. I'm trying to create a better liberalism more capable of competing with illiberalism. I obviously pay a lot of attention politics. I cover Israel, Palestine a lot, which is just a tough ass issue. There's a bit of a mix of I'm paying attention to everything you would think I'm trying to pay attention to. And also the constant curves in the road. Right. Did I expect us to be spending the year talking about war in Iran? I didn't really, but now we are and that's part of what I'm paying attention to. And so more things will happen that I'm not expecting and seeing. My work is a mix of being connected to the news, connected to longer range intellectual efforts in politics, and then connected to shows that are more about the point of all this, which is a more beautiful and humane world with novelists and meditators and people like that. And so it's all like for me it's this constant calibrating of am I too far in this direction? Too much news, not enough ideas. Too many ideas, not enough news, too much politics and not enough humanism. And you know, there's no way to do it but by feel and by attending to the moment.
A
Sounds terrifyingly human. It does, it does. It sounds like it sounds unusually in touch, I think, with what people's experiences of life are and certainly being on the outside and watching sort of what goes on with politics. So much of it seems to be this very sterile detachment from what people's normal day to day lives are like. The reporting on it too, also doesn't take that as if people wake up on a morning and all that they're doing is mainlining politics and political governance into their veins.
B
You really don't want to let the algorithms replace your intuition.
A
What's that mean?
B
That I think a lot of people, because they give their attention over to the algorithms and then the algorithms decide what they want to see. That, that process I just talked about, where you're constantly calibrating and recalibrating and really trying to think about, what am I attending to? Well, if the way you get information is you open up X in the morning, or Instagram or TikTok or whatever, the algorithms have decided what you're attending to, there's much more room for intuition. When you're reading a print newspaper, you looked around and looked at what you were interested in and turned the page and maybe saw something you didn't think you were interested in, but you were, and you were saying it sounds very human. It's all human in a way. We're all humans doing it, though. I think different spaces make us feel less that way. But I try to create a lot of space for my own judgment to exist and to, like, feel what different things feel like. One thing that I have, one way I believe my own mind works differently than I did 10 years ago is I just am much more in touch with how embodied it is. And the signals come from the body, not just the mind, including in a. I don't know how much you feel this way, but I was thinking about this in podcasts. I have a Questions document. I don't follow it. How do I know where I'm going? It's like my skin prickles. What the fuck is that? And yet what makes me a good podcaster is not the Questions document. It's the skin prickling.
A
Correct.
B
And trying to become more and more and more in touch with that over time. Again, these are the kinds of things that I wish school would do more of. It's like I want to teach my sons how to listen to their bodies.
A
It's very difficult to teach Instinct to teach taste. It's not scalable. It's going to be different and idiosyncratic for every person and yet is one of the most, if not the single most important thing that you can continue to develop.
B
But I think you can teach and I think you can help people cultivate the connection those things need to come through.
A
Even just explaining the primacy of it like this is something that's important that you should pay attention to. Do not outsource your taste to the AI.
B
Yeah, but you have to feel. Right. This is one of the worries I have about a lot of things is they disembody us.
A
Correct.
B
And I never know less about my body than when I'm really scrolling. Do you ever do that where you move from a paper book to your phone which I will sometimes have both out and you can really feel the difference like how much I'm in touch with the body on the physical like print slow versus here you really do become a brain in a vat. And I'm not saying it's all bad. I don't want to be overly a luddite here. I have a phone, I have a computer, I work on the Internet. But I do think yeah, developing intuition, developing taste, that's a very personal, very mysterious thing. But developing the ability to listen to what's happening inside of yourself that through meditation and movement practice and other things, it's like I just would like to give people, kids a lot more meta training in their attention and mind and you know, I think we do. We are over torqued on information and need to push, particularly in this era, harder or I would like to see us push harder on. I don't even know what to call it, like the art of thinking, the art of feeling just as much. I always think that going back to some of the trends in podcasting a few years back when I guess it was Ben Shapiro's line facts don't care about your feelings. I always thought it was a big. I was really disagreed with that line because. Not that facts care about your feelings. Facts don't care about anything, they're a fact. But you should care about your feelings. Feelings are very intelligent and the dismissal of them is. Which is not obviously just a Ben thing. It's a mistake. Right. You want to be in touch with the way things feel. There's a lot of intelligence in that. And again the AI can't feel the way things feel, but you can. And so that's a capacity to cultivate.
A
It's fascinating. I had a conversation with Alex o', Connor, and he was explaining how the sort of modern world of rationalism, focus on science, trying to optimize your thinking tools. And the dismissal of religion, story, mythology, narrative, narrative arc, personification was getting people to reject that that felt most real to them in place of something that you told them was more real but felt as fake as it could be. Like, if you see facts and figures, they're not as compelling as a story of a person that this affected. And you can just continue to scale that all the way up to, well, you can try and reverse engineer virtue from first principles, but it's like actually a really hard. It's a very difficult and clunky thing to do, as opposed to, you know, when I did, you know, when I behaved in that way, I didn't feel good. I didn't feel good when I said, when I lied to that person. As opposed to having to be able to show me your proof of why lying is wrong on this whiteboard, it's way harder. And, yeah, I'm completely on board. I think the demand is going to be for people to feel more.
B
Although I would take this in both directions, actually. We mentioned Pema Chodron, who's a Buddhist teacher, was recently on my show, and I'm a very big fan of a lot of her work. And her work is very much about tolerating the feelings we don't want to tolerate. And one of the reasons I think it's very important to be in touch with what you're feeling is not always because you should listen to it sometimes. Actually, I think so much of life is driven by these little embodied contractions we barely even notice. But because we don't even notice that they're happening, we follow them unthinkingly. And so it's such a weird balance. On the one hand, I completely agree with you said it was Alex o', Connor, what he was saying. On the other hand, of course, there are many, many, many times when the way the world works violates what feels true to us. And so having the information is there so you can make good judgments about it. But if you don't know that that information is happening in you, you're actually going to be much easier, much more easily moved by it than if you do. Right. I have become one thing that I'm proud of myself because it has been very hard work for me, like genuinely hard work for me, particularly in personal relationships. I have become better at knowing that I am uncomfortable, and so I don't run away from it. But when I didn't know it. I was much more led around by it because I just knew I didn't want to be there. But I didn't take time to sit in the space because I wasn't fully feeling it.
A
You're just reacting to it.
B
I was just reacting to it. So that to me is some of the genius of getting better at listening to your own body. You actually know if something's happening that you're going to need to sit through rather than react to.
A
Heck yeah. Ezra Klein, ladies and gentlemen. Ezra, thank you. That was blessed. What's coming up next?
B
Who did I just tape with? Just tape with Ian Bremmer had a great conversation about the Crazed State of the World.
A
That could be a title for pretty much everything that you're doing at the moment. I appreciate you, man. Thank you very much. All right, see you next time, everyone. Dude. If you are looking for new reading suggestions, look no further than the Modern Wisdom Reading list. It is 100 books that you should read before you die. The most interesting, life changing and impactful books I've ever read with descriptions about why I like them and links to go and buy them. And you can get it right now for free by going to ChrisWillX.com books that's ChrisWillX.com books.
Guest: Ezra Klein
Host: Chris Williamson
Date: June 22, 2026
In this intellectually rich episode, Chris Williamson welcomes journalist, author, and podcaster Ezra Klein for a far-reaching discussion about the ongoing transformations and internal struggles within the Democratic Party. Using the lens of attention, media, and politics, Klein and Williamson explore political virtue, the effects of algorithmic media, masculinity in society, and the challenges facing human agency in the age of AI. The conversation is peppered with moments of humor, candid reflections, and a focus on how both personal and political discourse is being shaped by technological and cultural shifts.
Timestamps: 00:00 – 07:26
Ezra on Celebrity and Backstage Protection:
Comparisons to Streamers & Social Media:
Timestamps: 07:26 – 16:51
Medium is the Message:
Tragedy of the Commons – Attention as a Collective Resource:
Political Communication in the Digital Age:
Timestamps: 18:29 – 25:26
Virtuous Leadership and the Backlash Against “Vice Maxxing”:
Political Outrage as Junk Food:
Timestamps: 26:01 – 35:06
Is Ezra at the Center of a Civil War?:
Left vs. Right on Purity Tests:
Timestamps: 35:06 – 40:18
Posting vs. Politics:
Future Political Shifts & Coalition Health:
Timestamps: 40:59 – 42:03, 80:10 – 90:26
Healthy Attention and Productivity:
AI as an Uncertainty-Killer:
Timestamps: 54:05 – 79:29
Deregulation: Left, Right, and the Real Goal:
Abundance is Not Synonymous with Deregulation:
AI: From Speculation to Practical Policy:
Timestamps: 90:43 – 110:52
Left’s Historic Blindspot on Men’s Issues:
Algorithmic Media’s Role in Gender Polarization:
Timestamps: 110:52 – 116:49
Timestamps: 116:49 – 120:36
Timestamps: 120:36 – 128:22
On Attention as a Resource:
"We are being like attention fracked. And the more competition there is for our attention, the more aggressive everybody is about trying to get it." (10:39, Ezra)
On Political Discourse:
"X is like gain of function research for takes. It's just everybody competing to take a normal take until you can turn it into something that has viral contagion." (12:00, Ezra)
On Social Virtue’s Return:
"What I do think it's going to create, I think what it's already creating is going to be a swing back to a desire to see political virtue, to see social virtue demonstrated in leaders." (21:54, Ezra)
On the "Big Tent" Necessity:
"I am much more open to political compromise and...running very different candidates in very different places, including candidates who are much more conservative than me, because I believe disagreement is very real." (42:07, Ezra)
On AI Safety:
"The mind is attracted to these speculative scenarios...If we create recursive superintelligence...I think we are kind of fucked in that scenario. I don't think it will happen like that or that quickly." (70:13, Ezra)
On Human Agency vs. Optimization:
"If you are not spending time thinking and reading away from screens, you're just, you are allowing something to atrophy that you will not get back." (82:44, Ezra)
The episode closes with Klein expressing a hope for politics and society oriented more toward virtue, human flourishing, and the cultivation of genuine attention—warning that our information and technological environments must serve these ends, not the other way around. Both agree that reclaiming our attention and self-mastery is both a personal and political imperative for the turbulent future.
Next up for Ezra: A conversation with Ian Bremmer about international politics and the “crazed state of the world.”