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tv   Batya Ungar- Sargon Bad News  CSPAN  August 9, 2022 2:26pm-3:59pm EDT

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>> yeah. >> salt rain p check is due to you both, david, peter. >> a lot of familiar faces here. i don't have time to acknowledge all of them plus a lot of new ones and thanks for coming, all. really fun. >> watch tv now on sundays on c-span2 or find it online any time at booktv.org. it's television for serious readers. >> good morning. my name is sam abrams, i am a senior fellow graph american enterprise institute and a professor of politics and social science at sarah lawrence college here in new york. i would like to welcome you to the american enterprise institute and another edward and howl enhance book forum event. simply put, american journalism today is under attack in this age of intense polarization many major news outletss face pressue
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to push so-called politically correct narratives under the guise of objective, unbiased reporting. so theas question for today is, has the so-called fourth estate, the institution of that largelyr is responsible for checking the government, for providing information to its citizenry and so on fallen prey to a rising pressure from the woke or the pressure to be woke? today batya ungar-sargon the deputy senior editor at "newsweek" said yes. she has a. forthcoming book. it's are great cover. i know we're not supposed to judge books by the covers but this is a great cover. it's called "bad news: how woke media is undermining democracy." she chronicles the radical shift in american journalism over the last few years and what it means for democracy as a whole. i'm looking forward to explaining this and to help me a number of guest. first batya ungar-sargon is the deputy editor of "newsweek." before that she was the opinion
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editor of the largest jewish media outlet in merrick and she has written extensively for places like the "new york times," "washington post", four policy to name a few. she also holdso a phd from the university of california at berkeley and win her book comes out and about a week go get it. fantastic. we are also joined by virginia hefferman who is currently a contributor at wired. she is the author of magic and loss, the internet as art. she's been around the tech world for years. i look forward to finding more about tech. amazing times and so much still to be written about that. before joining the staff of wired she worked for the near times and is currently an op-ed columnist for the "l.a.a. times" she also, like batya, has a phd from harvard. she likes to say that she stumbled onto the internet in 1979 when it was in a back
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office thing, now it is pervasive and i c can't wait to hear hers. views on this. and finally thomas chatterton williams is also a fellow with me at the american enterprise institute, a columnist for harpers magazine and a contributing writer for the "new york times" magazine. he has influenced quite a bit of my thinking and my students thinking. his memoir, self-portrait and white, created i would say at least three, two our seminar exchanges so i thank you for that. it's such a provocative, wonderful piece of work. he can be found all over the place including at best american essays anthology. he has his ma in cultural reporting criticismra from nyu d his ba in a philosophy from georgetown. and i just want to step back and say for a minute, thank you, batya, for joining us here at aei. i notice a lot of chatter late on social media about aei
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universities. do we care about viewpoint diversity? i would bring in people you disagree e with? is early enough diversity of thought? i want to say we have known each other for number of years now and i think, not to put words in your mouth but heard you referred yourself as a lefty and a socialist many times. and i am none of those things. i am much more conservative than that. i think we're both proudly jewish socialists, no way. i think it's wrong to talk about it, not todayth but what i i e with you or not your books and her ideas are so important. your insights are so important. at aei, what universities should be and the wonderful etiquette spearhead for harpers whichch unfortunately was slammed, i'll talk more about that later, this is what, this course is about. about bringing people together with different views, , differet ways of seeing the world and great, we disagree but but l respect the heck out of batya. i admire her, consider her a and want to have you at a table when
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it's safe to hear your views. we can respect each other and my each other and disagree with each other. this is something that's been lost in the academy. i talk about this all the time in my own writing is something i've seen aei be accused of recently and i would say that's just the opposite. at aeiei we value ideas and opinions bute we want more speech, more today, more dialogue and thankor you for beg a socialist effort onor as and being willing to join us at an institution where our focus is on re-enterprise and market, as elevating the world. so it's kind of amusing but i think this is exactly where think tanks higher ed and basically what we should be doing with public discourse, anv i think this is a virtue. that being said, i'm not 100% today a little under the weather so let me do a brief introduction and threw it to are really thoughtful and interesting guests. the argument
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that today's left has by large abandoned the working class to fight the culture war about issues of identity. instead of building an agenda around the needs of actual working-class americans of all races who can be more conservative but left today is pushing highly niche issues rooted in ivy league universities, catholic culture and at the zionism open borders. is utterly alien to most working-class americans no matter who they vote for. and batya basically in this book says there's an institution known as the media and they taken on the following view, quote, it is the belief that america is an unrepentant white supremacist state that confers power and privilege on white people, which is systematically denies to people of color. those who hold this view believe an interconnected network of racist institutions, infects every level of society, culture and politics, imprisoning us all and a power binary -- hate binaries firstly, based on race
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regardless of our economic circumstances as a solution according to those who hold this view is not to reform institutions that still struggle with racism but to transform the consciousness of everyday americans into we prioritize race over everything else. if you look what i've written, i obviously think this is a flawed view, but batya takes this u.n. as dominating the newsrooms today and we had shifted from the world of blue-collar tradesmen if you will, or tradespeople, to not an elite profession where these individuals making this view and that is why we see a woke new system that we have today. i'd like to pause and ask batya, how did you get there? why did you write this book now? walk us through if you don't mind how this book came together and how this view, you put this you together. >> first of all thank you so much to aei for having me. thank you for organizing this event, and sam thank you so much
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for your thought leadership and commitment to intellectual diversity. i'm so honored to be of your i also really, really have to thank virginia and thomas. my book it's at times skating but i tried very hard to maintain the sort of generous reading of why people are pushing the woke narrative. people do this from a place of really, really wanted to see a better world, and virginia is often my model for that. i picture virginia because it is impossible to picture doing anything recent except the best reason. and thomas, you, site from the intellectual leadership you show, you have brought a moral leadership to a very, very difficult time and difficult space. everyday you show up on twitter which is the most horrible place and you are kind to the people who are the most cruel to you, and so i feel so deeply honored to be in both of your company right now and to be here talking about my book, so thank you both
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so, so much. how come my book exists? so i would say there are sort of three primal scenes of heart of this book. the first is when i found out about a 2018 yale study and the study found that there was a difference between how white liberals and white conservatives spoke to people of color, and it found that white liberals dumbed down the vocabulary when talking to black and working people, and i conservatives do not. i remember thinking to myself there is a sickness in the worldview that produces that behavior, and again that behavior clearly councilmen misguided place of wanting to help, right, want to be good, wanting not to embarrass somebody by using like six syllable words or whatever but it's sick. it's a sickness and i remember having this moment of clarity that it didn't like blossom into my full-blown worldview yet but it was definitely a moment for
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me like what are we doing here, that that is happen to us, and then we are calling the conservatives racist when they are the ones who don't do this. that was sort of the first primal scene i would say. the second was learning about the death of despair and the downward mobility among the working class in america, particularly the working-class that is being lost by democrats and lost by the liberals. the idea that people feel so helpless that they are literally killing themselves with alcoholism, with drug, opioid overdoses and were suicides, and of those of the people again who are being shown the most contempt by the liberals, these people who clearly are losing out of the american dream and yet who somehow, our side, my site, the lefty side has become okay with that because of what their political views are. i would say the third primal scene is one that sam you are therefore which was i tried to write a different book actually and i couldn't sell it, and that
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book was about american unity. the polling had shown seismic change on the right around a host of issues that are really at the beating heart of the liberal worldview, issues like sexism and racism and lgbtq rights. we just are not divided among this issues anymore. the left really want a lot of those cultural battles and yet nobody knows it and nobody talks about it and so wanted to write a book called a more perfect union about how united we are as americans around the most important issues at stake in american life, the values of this nation was founded on. finally we united around this issue sunday couldn't sell it book. nobody would buy. editors kept thinking who was the ideas? finally a very kind and are set me and said look, nobody's going to buy a book telling us something that seems implausible. if we are so united why do you think were subdivided? write that book and that is the book i did write.
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>> so virginia, if you want to jump in on that. i mean, by all means please, or i can start some problems, whatever. >> first off, well, batya is my constant interlocutor. i refined lots of my thinking and conversation with her. public and otherwise. i heartily agree and i think before you what this book we agreed about this hypothesis of yours that we have a more perfect union. i'll give you one example. in spite of books best-selling books, best selling books called polarized, i don't know if you're following anyone is following the vaccination rates in this country, but for 65 and over it is 96% have had at least one shot. we've talked a lot in the so-called media about anti-vaxxers and people willing to die for the libertarian
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politics. that seems come if we define anti-vaxxers as people who wouldn't have a one shot of the vaccine, that represent 4% and shrinking among people over 65. so look where all getting the vaccine. we have discovered in spite of some hustling over these new bills that people were willing to vote for, all of representatives am willing to vote for an enormous bailout bill during social services, social programs bill in the form of the two relief bills during covid. things that richard used to say some of these things are decided under our feet. you can have a huge debate about something like racism writ large or you can have a huge debate about the welfare state but the debate goes on and then the tectonic plates move without us even thinking about it.
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i will say that on the subject of racism, and who really knows exactly what that designates now, but i was listening to clarence thomas now, what, now 30 years ago, almost 30 years ago, 25 years ago, his defense of himself against the charges leveled by anita hill, and they were, we remember that he said high-tech lynching but he worked out that metaphor so powerfully using rope as an analogy, analogously to the cameras that he felt he was under the pressure of, and at that time even people like jeff sessions were really taking pains to guard themselves against charges of racism. incidentally, no one criticize clarence thomas for using this medium to talk about what was very much not a lynching ending and the death black man.
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but it was very powerful and i think his defense partly worked because there was a shared idea that racism had been destroyed, especially virulent extermination of racism like we saw during jim crow and slavery, was a touchstone for pain and a touchstone for pain that we all could agree was pain. and i think that as slipped away somewhat. there's a certain amount of doubt that has prepped in around even certifications of like 20th century suffering that we used to all agree on. the holocaust is a great example, which is a touchstone of meaning most of us interest in history of europe in the 20th century, and somehow of all things, instead have of being indifferent to the suffering, there's been an element of doubt about the
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suffering. i reminded of this great line from a lance gary that i can't, i can't get, i can can't get out of my head. i hope you'll spend a minute thinking about this. she has in the body and paint in a book the body and paint, she has, lays out an epistemology around pain and suffering, and her argument is you have pain, you have certainty to her about pain is to have doubt. that even in a small way if someone says i have a headache, there's a little bit of skepticism that creeps in, where if you yourself have migraine use of our lyme disease syndrome, you yourself encounter, you know, have a fearsome allostatic load as jason johnson calls it because of the racism you suffered, that seems plain as day to you, but the pain of other people including those with life
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syndrome or with, who are suffering from diseases of despair or addiction as i i suffered from for a long time, you are absently sure that your pain is not only be on unimpeachably unimpeachable is true, but that it takes precedence over the pain of others. i think there is a willingness when both, both sam and batya talked to say a a certain kinf pain, let's say religious discrimination and bigotry is real, or classism is real. that's a kind of suffering that feels palpable to you, where other kinds of suffering say this allostatic load that what you might call, what the two of you might call woke late jason johnson says they suffer from is somehow less real. or the suffering of the followers of jordan peterson, the sort of right-wing folklore
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expert who's become here to young men, he has i think some people on the right for you quote in your book including connor -- is it -- sorry, reminded of his lasting? batya i don't think identifies as on the right. >> i think he identifies as liberal. >> all right. centerleft. >> libertarian. >> okay. well, who knows what these names mean anymore? but certainly objects to some kind of identity politics maybe calls himself my least favorite thing, a classical liberal, that's my least favorite. i prefer the romantic or jazz liberals, but in any case he has said very interesting thing about jordan peterson who also i think a signatory to the harpers letter at least a sympathizer with the harpers letter? know, okay.
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jordan peterson incidentally also a pill addict says that possibly the followers of men like him feel that their suffering lies in their fear of death, their fear of not needing their reproductive potential -- meeting the reproductive potential, , these kind of existential fears that belong to white men, if hamlet, if winston churchill or something is our paradigm, his suffering is real. his suffering is real and the rest of our suffrage is of little bit of skepticism well, the jordan peterson followers see themselves as plenty troubled, plenty upset, and this like the suffering of black people or say women or other marginalized groups, jews, is less important, is somehow less important or less real than that
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suffering. so i get that the suffering,, that i suffering is real. class race and gender were the three ways you sliced and diced experience at least when i was in graduate school, was constant conversation which one came first. it is a tedious conversation and if the grounded in this epistemology that is pointed out can sometimes be referred to see oppression olympics. who has it worse? what am i come down to is, it might come down to is i think that the media, and i still am confused about what counts as the woke media, i think i'm the only one here who is worked in a newsroom and it was very hard to see evidence of, that somehow, or the work of getting the story about a hurricane in houston was somehow inflected with, you know, something like wokeness
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which still again a part-time getting a definition on. i i mean, i really didn't know w people voted at the near times when i was there. sorry, lost my way a little bit. i guess the point is that we are supposed to accept that possibly by sam, someone with sam's politics, a kind of pro-capless, free markets person, the suffrage comes in way the fountainhead suffers, that there are too many critics who have restrained his awesome freedoms and something like peter teel, another critic of the woke who says there are certain kinds of imaginations are inhibited by this kind of we, idea of we. and yet sam, your reference, i think is germane, your reference that you and batya share religious commitments, religious commitments i also have, is
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another way of saying that is not an entirely individualist project for you, or an entirely individuals project for really any of us. and yet we have individual suffering. and that nobody takes seriously. i mean, or at least nobody fully except as powerful as their suffering. so i guess what i resist is the argument is some idea that complaints of the woke as i say is allostatic load is one of them but the idea that racism causes some wear and tear on the body that your regular confronted with racism and that actually hurts your body. you could certainly say victims of me too incident come sexual assault and so forth have actual suffering in the body. you don't have to imagine it if they been hurt or bruised.
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now we're being asked to imagine that the suffering, like let's take the argument that the newspapers or the media is anti-zionist, the suffering of jews in europe they gave rise in part to the jewish state is somehow more important, needs more ink spilled on it than the suffering of indigenous people in the u.s., or indigenous people in israel. i don't know whether or not they are indigenous. i don't want to get you into the weeds but i think this conversation about suffering, i wish for frankly been your time still had its neediest cases the patient part because we do need some touchdown to imagine what a group of suffering looks like. and i think currently if it's ascendant to imagine that the allostatic load is for some people from systemic racism or
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during jodi kantor is reporting on harvey weinstein thing, that there's some kind of unique suffering because of gender bias and assault, gender-based assault in the workplace. we go through periods like this and i think that the kind of certainty of our politics lies in the certainty of what we see as pain and being asked to imagine religion-based suffering, and it is more important somehow our class-based suffering is more important than other kinds of suffering is just another way of slicing and dicing the polity, and i'm not sure represents more or less progress, or even a very robust critique. >> thomas, any thoughts and response? that was a lot to take on. >> first i want is a thank you for such a wonderful introduction, and thank you also.
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i'm just going, i guess that my hand to identify as a liberal but i have very strong interest in kind of dialogue and exchange and mutual understanding and the attempt to forge new alliances with people from other camps who share similar values or are trying to achieve a similar world. even if you don't agree on everything. i should also say i just really thought batya's book it really persuasive and thrilled to have blurred in it. but you know i think what i'm hearing is some of what virginia was saying i disagree with just because i think i start from a very different premise as a descendent of slaves of american slaves whose father is old enough to be a grandfather and you grew up in the segregated south under jim crow. i don't actually think that my suffering is most real.
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i have always profoundly been aware that actually in contrast, direct contrast to my fathers like my suffering isn't so significant and actually think there's a lot of that i tend to hear i guess i would call my elite peers, top-tier media platforms and really nice universes that you'll pay off for decades, what hear from them as a kind of complaint and a kind of catastrophe station that seems unreal to me because i compared to something better think it's been much more real than what i find myself for those i encounter in dealing with. i just want to flip that and i think what batya is getting at in a book and takes a lot of courage to write a book called "bad news" and to go against that kind of three of triumphant moralism that is everywhere
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found that top-tier media platforms now, i mean i wish you could write a book called good news because i think that would be true to what we are expecting that were not allowed to admit. so that's kind of i guess how i would start off and would love to bring batya back in. >> yeah. well, i think to me the thing they came up for me while you were speaking, virginia, and again thank you so much both of you, this is just thrilling, is that i don't know that my book is about suffering. i think to me the problem with today is i really think that the rubric of using something emotional or personal like suffering to measure what should be political is a huge part of the problem. and to me is very much part of this kind of like meritocratic elite, you know, used to be
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called bourgeois, right, like the idea that happen in a person's are a more important than what happens outside in a real-world in the political realm. we have personalized and privatized politics and to think that is one of the major problems and it's not a reason i think we should move to a class-based model. i think the recent move to class-based model is because so many people working the working-class people are people of , and there being ignored by both parties and the think the woke language, it's a masquerade of social justice that makes affluent people feel like they're doing something when they're actually not doing something. to me the idea of a class-based politics, socialist politics that prioritize the needs of the working class will is about combating the vestiges of racism and the ways in which we have income gaps from a place that would be more real and more political.
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to me the focus on who was suffering, i take your point. obviously we all feel our own suffering. abner smith made that point in "the theory of moral sentiments," right, when you see someone about it somebody you go oh, but the minute they hit the first person cries out you go -- cc crying a little, little bit too much? like human nature. it's a really good point but a thing to me the problem is the focus of suffering as opposed to the focus on solidarity and coalition building, as thomas said, and the idea that there is a political realm, a public realm be on our personal private striving that matters more than what is in each individual person's heart and that is the thing i think we lost in america. we lost a sense of the public, since that there's a place beyond our individual needs and beyond our individual scope that matters that's worth like not insulting someone on twitter because what if you could find
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something in common with them and actually create a larger coalition that is actually multiracial and just i think thomas has really open our eyes to what the polling shows, , whh is that a lot of the woke ideology is very foreign to working-class people of all races including the majority of black americans and latino americans who continue to vote for democrats for historical reasons, a lot of them justified, but i guess the point of my book is in a way the liberals have stopped doing anything for them in return. it's kind of a response to thomas frank's book, what's the matter with kansas? when i i wrote the proposal fr this book i called it what's the matter with liberals? i think we do share a lot of commitments about questions as well, what of the biggest problem facing america. it's just a question of how do we achieve those goals. but yeah, i want to hear more from both of you. >> if i could chime in for one
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second. i actually agree completely. if you go to college classroom at an elite school today it's all about identity and it's what i call the victimization olympics. when you meet people that are going to tell you a host of factors about themselves that usually intends to transmit some sense of harm. i'm this, , therefore i've been hurt this way. i am that's why they hurt that way. when i first meet students i reject that immediately. that's fine, i don't care about your gender, race, ethnicity, any of that. let's try to find something we can all agree on. who are we as a class, one of you to do collectively as a community? i am troubled by the idea that the entire woke framework demands taking on this sort of mantle of victimization in doing so makes it harder to find unity, makes it hard to miss anything sort of forward, makes it harder for us to recognize our potential. i say elite schools because like
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with your book and what i liked about is it does show this transformation from the working beats from the small local newspapers to sort of the much more prestigious jobs come to take a look at who's at the nowadays come people come from elite journalism background or have been -- have the money to do sub stacks would have without having to worry too much about money at this point. researchers over and over and over again, and this is what we do at aei, that those students from more elite backgrounds are fixated on identity politics, fixated on race, ethnicity, culture and victimization and when you go to a less prestigious schools, streets of lower socioeconomic background, they don't care. they do want to talk about. their dinner to learn and get the skills and there to move on. this is sort of the big cleavage where beginning to see and i agree that the democrats don't know how to play it and are pushing harder and harder on this. identity politicking, the republicans have some ground again if you talk about the bigger macro picture of unity.
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of course the struggle without a little bit as well but to try to point where seeing this play out not just in newsrooms but among gen z undergrads, just basic population around the country now and it started with the millennials and if this problem with the gen z years today. >> i don't know what your target would talk but elite just as a democrat will retire but we talk about the woke. the elite, i just reviewed a very good biography of peter thiel, and he is designated as elite, like all of us he was from the elite. he was at stanford, so some of might be identified as elite by amy jo, any relative of mine, is usually the person using the word elite to criticize other people. i think the working class in
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general calls elite the rich, and but okay, so i'm reminded of when i was first writing about the internet, and just to put all cards on the table, i think it's not wokeness or even any trend in the media with one exception, or even the rise of donald trump, that have changed everything. if i were going to point to one, i think there's like a mad grainy call in about an old academic, , old academics and wt they're like and when he zeroes in on is one says he who controls magnesium controls the earth. it are going to say sort of one thing i would say it's digitization that has enacted a kind of insult to brains, and so we're sort of still grappling with what's been done, fragmented our languages enter a
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lot of things up in the air for good now. okay, once again i'm losing my way, this is so immensely interesting. some of the few, the few times i was brought in for real breaking news at the "new york times," one of them was when saddam hussein was executed in iraq, and the "new york times" had reported that his last words were death to the zionists and death to america, the great enemy of the west. and looking back he was met at exactly the same things we thought you would be mad at. this is what iraqis officials told the "new york times." i do not remember this but the video snuck out probably by an iraq he onlooker who had brought a camera and should've had somewhat surprised that can reporting and managed to smuggle it out and it was a first time
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come for some i ever saw gallows, you know, and at the time i was carefully monitoring some very unsavory sites on the web, like the leak was one formerly called -- that had like very disturbing video from iraq. this thing leaked to it and what, i called bill keller, , tn the editor to say, this is not what happened. his last words were not death to zionists and death to america. they were mustafa mustafa mustafa, right? why? why was that the last thing on his mind? it was a listing of it because mustafa was his enemy in tikrit where he grew up. i think you might see where i'm going with this, which is the elite scum we wish that we were at war with another class, but in fact, which is at war with each other.
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we are just curious that like someone in our class at harvard started to complain more about, or at sarah lawrence, complain more about the fact that she's been date rape within the structure of the free market or other things we think should be determining her life. i mean, i don't know when undergraduates were not completely self obsessed with drawing a connection between the ways they grew up and the things they had endured and great social trends. they just don't have much to call on, right? i just finished, i'm also just finished rereading god in minute yell, william buckley, one of the first anti-woke treatises in 1951, and buckley, and it, has two major complaints. all white all-male student body, so is not complaining but anything we might call political correctness turkeys complaining the second when you're going to
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like, sam, but the first what is nobody is christian enough, that even many colored members of the clergy who are his professors are allowing for for a litte agnosticism in a classroom. not just that they're not religious or they are not open to students, jewish students or other historically marginalized jewish populations, but they are not professing that jesus christ was the son of god on a regular basis in economics class. so that's a big thing. the second thing he thinks is it they are shunted got to the site, they have made a got a someone else, sam, ready for this? maynard keynes, maynard keynes, right? that's his of the main objection. i mean, i'm not sure that anyone even in the elite no matter how we define them would remember exactly made keynes was except we are called keynesians now, may have something with
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collectivism. we agree on way too much of them, but the point is we've always thought that our classrooms, people were either conservative or to liberal in our classrooms, and then try to make a cause out of that. like saddam hussein still fighting his little like sharks and just about with someone from tikrit. i know i'm doing it. i know i'm constantly thinking that people i dislike must be to the right of me and must be obnoxious in that the world, and supporters to design my ideology so it has certain people in its sights, and certain sentimental people, sentimental vision of people that i don't know, thomas, if you imagine relatives of yours who suffered under segregation the way that i imagine my appellation
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relatives, but i definitely will take some time to tell you that it's west virginia have been left out of everything at all our resources should go to senator joe manchin because those are my people and i've like some sentimental attachment to them come some actual attachments. sigh think maybe we can talk about the definition of elite is. it's laughable how the four of us meet the criteria for the professional class and our educations, and i think we're turning on some of our peers that rob is the wrong way and passing them off as political arguments. i completely agree with batya that these things turning to like little skirmishes instead of especially enlightening conversations about what we might do with politics. >> but no, the rosebud idea, what about that from citizen kane, moment in our childhood whether it's called, high school or even -- absently. we're getting a ton of questions come in but before i want as
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thompson question if you don't mind related to comment that batya wrote, and you'd written about, i like this come. you wrote journalist who dissent from this worldview, i.e. the work done to keep the mouth shut or face massive public humiliation and those jobs are few and far between. that's certainly the case in higher education, in my own while i kept my mouth shut for years. until land tenure and shortly after tenure i said something to the "new york times" and boom, i had death threats a couple days later an office was vandalized and so on. what do we make of this? how are people to speak out? thomas i'm so impressed by your willingness to speak the way you've done it and it seems, and hope i'm right about this, that your career and your writing continues to flourish even though you may not be in line with these newsrooms and some of these outlets. so please keep writing but how do you see this and batya
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comments on people so different or deviate from the norm. >> you know, it's a complicated question because i think you have to, if you're going to be a writer or if you are going to think publicly, then you would can only do that because you believe that there are things that are correct or there are ways of describing the world that are true or that other ways, and you would need to do that and need to say that regardless, you can't position -- you can't make your positions fit what you think the industry wants to reward. otherwise, it's not worth doing it. i think it would be an unbearable job and it wouldn't be the most remunerative work. you should go do something in silicon valley with peter thiel
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or something. what is an elite? yes, heater teal is certainly one sort of elite but there are multiple elite in a complex society like america is a cultural elite and often times they are very angry and probably internally seething because they are more refined, they are more culture, more education and they are so less well compensated any kind of uncouth voelker elite, and often times these two types of elites self-serve and are binary political system. it's true that there's a culture capital that writers and media people participate in but it's a legend -- >> did we lose him?
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>> i'm sure he will be back. >> okay, i'm sure he will jump back in. so while he jumps on let me ask one final question to the two of you -- your back. >> i'm not elite enough to have a stable internet connection. [laughing] i don't know why. >> that's a structural solution. >> it does that have the sl of tech yet. >> or is it the socialist government in france that limits exactly -- [laughing] >> sorry, i had to go there. >> but i have healthcare and daycare. to your question, sam, i don't want to give -- i think that i probably have been penalized in certain ways that matter but i can't prove it. but how can you ever talk about the fellowships that you didn't get, you know, the opportunity you are about to get at princeton or summer and then for
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some reason didn't happen even though someone told you it was coming your way? these things happen all the time but they happen for reasons i don't have anything do with conspiratorial behind them. you just don't know. at one point david remnick said to me the cancel culture, you work for me or you been for the place and that's true but first of all their still guarantee that tomorrow i will continue to come and also i think if i'm really honest i have an identity that gives me some amount of cover. it's just enough but i don't -- i mean i'm actually not white. i trace my ancestry to one of the primary oppressed groups so i'm allowed, brig i generally, a lipid of -- be grudgingly, a lipid of latitude to what a city cities that it'll think of the able to say it if i didn't have that kind of standpoint, authority in the way that the
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conversation works today. >> i do just want to point out that virginia also knows that she lost many opportunities for writing a piece about her belief in god from the right, , so it's just so interesting always talking to virginia because you have had that experience that it think a lot of people are experiencing now from the other side of the political aisle. >> yeah. actually that was from the left. >> that's right, that's right. >> that's signed his and her what as scientism. and that amount to me going to income zero and job retraining and bargaining. i had to leave journalism site don't know about, i mean, right, you can't calculate the opportunities you have missed but in this case i was at yahoo! news, marissa mayer leslie said she felt humiliated by this piece that had been warmly welcomed by readers on yahoo!
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news. like i was given a lifetime family past to the creationism museum. [laughing] but the left labeled me hashtag worse than isis, as that was one of her criticisms. this was in the heyday of, especially robust atheists, including sam harris and the dawkins crowd. that was bruising. on the other hand, and sam, that's terrible that these threats going kinetic that your office was vandalized. i haven't actually had threats go kinetic, although the winds inspired by tucker carlson, you know, the endless stream of death threats that i still get that are just so terrifying, i mean, terrifying sounding. i have called the police and the fbi about those but nothing has ever turned into actual bodily
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harm to property, , so that's terrible to hear that. but yeah, i mean, the far right and it think thomas and ande this in common, i don't have a great deal of sympathy for the crime family of the trump's, you know, just not elected by the majority, never a majority president, never speaking, it was hard to see who he was talking to. there's no american who doesn't think -- there's no american who believes that when their relatives in mississippi one something like one in eight people had covid, that really can maintain a belief for very long that the virus was a hoax. it's very hard to imagine that he was really talking to his constituency when he refused to get on for the country on a so-called war footing and treat
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covid. so if mississippians who voted for trump were well served by him, they worked so well served -- your protected them from getting sick, and that i think has been a very sad state of affairs. as for trumpites themselves, i'm not sure they seem to misrepresent a million ways but i'll agree, i'll completely agree with you, give you the statistic about 65 and over have had one shot of the vaccine, and we might say well, they know that they are like in a special threat group or maybe they've managed to work around disinformation or something else if the short answer is they all have medicare. these are the only group on the list who were actually usedo having social services. and in my efforts to persuade,
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and. >> wade people to get the vaccine, two of them said no one has ever showed concern about me before, right? if you're used to getting help from your government, thomas lives with free health and national health insurance, batya and i agitate for it, if you're used to that it doesn't matter if you're a trumpites we believe it's a hoax. all those things come out of being abandoned by your government. you start to find which solutions, and i think the solutions if are going back to politics and away from personal experience, solutions the obvious ones and certainly some of them are social programs that view toward the socialist, in my view. >> let me ask one final quick question to batya and we have to open up since have quite a few gas. that is a think a lot about undergrads. they don't always have the greatest attention span. they mean certainly will. i always encourage people to
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read as many sources as possible on the way out, we get to newspapers delivered. my three-year-old said why do with two newspapers are asked for the time i said we had a liberal one and a conservative one, and we just said okay and went on his way. if batya's narrative is correct, and i think there's an awful lot of truth to it, what are we supposed do to with our younr americans? a are not going to take the time to read a hardcopy newspaper. they have gone to read various blogs, follow all the tweets, compare and try to find a clear narrative thread. how do we move forward from this? then i would love to open it up to some of the audience. >> so i think to me a large part of the problem is the class chasm in america that's opened up, this sort of meritocratic squeeze that is pushed
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meritocratic elite to the top 10% and and push a lot of people sort to the bottom, and that college divide being both one of culture and one of economics, all those those don't map perfectly onto each other as tom pointed out. i would say i i think the pro, one of the major problems and again of what to take this away from who is suffering more towards the threat to democracy, is that a tiny elite that america now has all of the politicians speaking to them and all of the media created for them and there's nobody speaking to the bottom 90%. to me the problem is we put such a premium on a college education and rob people don't have dignity and we educated the overeducated like every on this call like frequent show our contempt for those without a college degree while winning everything, all the political representation, all the media representation.
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the first thing we should do is focus, that's what book is so much about the dignity of the working class is usually about balancing, about creating a countervailing force to the massive power of the elites today, the highly educated elites on the left and economic elites on the right. one of the things we can do is think about what does it mean to start to respect people again who don't have the education, and how can we institutionalize that respect? people don't want more welfare. what they want our jobs to give them dignity that allow them to play an active role in building up this nation. they don't want a universal basic income. they don't want to limit elites. it what the playing an active role in building up this nation by working through the dignity of work. i would say the first thing we should do is like tell our kids when they're going to college like by the way you are not all bad for having this education. it's a different pathway for you could maybe this is where your gifts are shunting you but there
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is, everybody deserves dignity. everybody needs to play an active role in building up this nation. and i was a the second thing is people often ask me where can i get good information, what can i get good news? another problem we have is like its it's why get to know all these things? why is it so important to know everything, to know every minute? that's what's going on with the democrats come all this finagling over the infrastructure built and reconciliation bill. what's going to come out of that? it's taken two months of bitter infighting and it will create two with a great deals and passed them both. why threat to be up on every single moment of that? that's culture war issues. you know, the need to know such a culture war thing and it's, white american everything? if something important going to happen we'll find out about it in the month when you're called upon to exercise your civic duty and play an active role, you
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will know the day before. i think this premium unknowing and knowing the truth and doing the right thing is a lot of what we have ended up that is tied into that college chasm. >> batya, thank you for selling this brilliant project. a human dignity project is one of our major initiatives and thank you despite being a socialist you laid out an amazingly clear paper come exactly what we're trying to do. >> dignity and jobs are also big word from our centrist president so seems like we point out once again that with central left president that we are all in agreement on everything. ..
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who were not interested in these outcomes and especially in your book i come around to think that maybe neoliberalism isn't serving this country but we are in this moment where like tron has been defeated. we we can't continue to talk as though it's ten years ago. and defeateded by a president tt even stand has some views in common with. >> absolutely. >> i have quite a few views in common. that's certainly not a problem. >> it's mixed, everything is mixed. it's some trouble at times but is also great invirtue which is complicated .it's not a facebook status update. >> i've never heard someone
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make that, why do you need to know everything? it's a greatpoint . it's a fiction people are looking for. if you want to adjust culture drink from a stream of a culture that calls itself culture. >> i know we have to attend to some audience questions and just received one for everybody which is how do you define wokeness? many of these ideas are anathema by the political right is it an idea that's before it's time. >> i would love to have you answer that because it'san important question . when i say woke i don't mean advocating for police report reform. idon't mean fighting against mass incarceration . these are important issues . what i mean by woke is this
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view that you are either antiracist or racist meaning in every moment you have a choice to be actively talking about and fighting it or to be complicit in it. to me, that more organic because it demands that these views are prioritized meaning we are pushing race before humanity. and what i'm specifically talking about what happens to this when white liberals get their hands on it because then it gets divorced from a class-based analysis that could help people. divorced from things like police reform and it turns into things like defund the police that are in the economic interests of the highly educated liberal elite . so it's about that divorcing fighting racism from the actual work, the actual part
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of the under on the ground that working-class americans would like to see and putting it into the hands of a very highly mobile narrative liberal elite in a way that benefits them and takes platform with these working-class americans. it's not about fighting racism, it's not what i mean when i say the media has gotten woke. it's perpetuating a racial binary that is, gives all the power to the quote unquote whitesupremacists and takes all the power away from people of color which is not how people see themselves and i think isdehumanizing and dangerous for democracy . i want to hear both of you define it >> if you could jump in first on that . >> i really like this term that the senator uses. i'm working on a new book that defines the term as for
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whatever reason it's more of a language that describes it in a pejorative sense. you have to always state what you know because it might be misunderstood so i find it unfortunate because it's such a perfect word. the way it started it really describes. [inaudible] the way peopleon the right use race guilt . but i think when i talk about some of these i tried to use, i think it's more specific and a constellation of things that run together like what's antiracism which would not be what previous generations thought of the word
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antiracism means. but it's a binary view of all these ideas and actions . and it also has to encompass a certain kind of mainstream niche way of thinking about gender. coming out of judith butler and other scholars as a part of what we put under the umbrella of wokeness. so maybe some economic views that people term woke. socialism and things like that, maybe evenrejuvenation of marxism . these things are all, they're not all the same thing but there often times are clustered together and i don't really call them. [inaudible] some people are wokeconservatives .
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there's a term that's much more specific language if we were actually to get a conversation that gets to the root of what's driving us all crazy . >> other questions we can turn to. >> on this perspective i say that's not good enough, what does it mean? >> that is a problem and i think they've done a good job trying to define it but it's not a defining term from a social science perspective. i can't measure it and i don't know how i would engage with it . the world is far too complicated to simplify this approach in my view so i completely agree. another question i have which i think we've dealt with is the hysteria over wokeness on
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the speech police. we exhaust ourselves over this. one piece of data incidentally that stands out. we've seen is that the idea of cancellation is much more prominent among millennial's then jen z. the slightly younger crowd 24 and under is a lot less interested in cancel culture and their slightly older millennial generation. that's a little bit of optimism i have where slightly older, younger americans realize cancellation is not necessarily a good thing. i published a few pieces that have written about thatso i'm curious to know what everybody thinks . >> i've been working on a project with someone who had was canceled in gq and he is interested in what kind of rehabilitation there might be. and do i think that, i will
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say systemic but there were maybe 10 women who were abused by him in a pretty small shop. it seems demonstrably true that they were, there was some quid pro quo to keep it in political terms. there was violations again to keep it in political terms, not aboutindividual suffering but a hostile work environment . so i am interested in forgiveness and redemption as a religious person but i'm not sure that we want a world where that kind of cancellation is somehow no longer allowed. and frankly, i launched lost my contract at yahoo! news because i published something marissa mayer found embarrassing but announced myself as a christian. and she was the boss there.
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and i have no kind oftenure . it didn't violate anything. she could renew my contract or not. and i'm not sure that cancellation was something that we want to see disappear. even though it was my own. so people canceled for i don't know. anti-asian slurs on twitter. several years ago. maybe if it's decided that it creates a hostile work environment or there's a lack of hemorrhaging of people who can't work for this person because of a series of tweets i don't know. that seems like the usual firing thing. it's the usual i can't work with someone i'm uncomfortable with. i worked for michael eisner at disney and he happened not to like working with black people and women in high positions of power. it was uncomfortable around them so he didn't hire them or the fire them if they were someone he inherited.
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do we want to stop that cancellation? that seems like a very free market. you work with the people you're comfortable with and people are no longer comfortable working with people who have anti-asian slurs in their twitter. it's in the public sphere and also there is some laws regarding this stuff. i don't think any of you would like to see a world where someone who had sexually abused or sexually assaulted 10 people who worked for him wouldn't be canceled. shouldn't priests be canceled? >> that's another we have two frame it because i don't like the term canceled. [inaudible] >> exactly. that's what i said he considers himself having been canceled in me too and there are certain people on the fringes who feel like they flirted aggressively with someone and they should be held responsible for that.
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>> this is an assault. >> i think that's a slippery slope, an example of what does it mean to be canceled and what is too much versus too little? i have not assaulted anyone on the other hand, because i suggested identity politics which is a different sort of narrative. >> what does it mean they attempted cancellation? was that at aei? >> they wanted to get rid of it but tenure. i wrote an article based on data but they didn'tt like my questin certain things. >> in the '70s my father was in academia. .. ed unfair to her that she had to publish this book because it seemed unfair to others, unsympathetic and whether to
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not give her three more years to work onthe book . these are these are -- okay, cancel culture are these limit cases where everyone can decide if tht person was kind of well-intentioned or maybe not. >> describes something real that is exacerbated by change. it is not just an opportunity or facing consequences. often times somebody often times inadvertently as yet to be established. the rapidly shifting norm is called out publicly in a new digital realm that exists. we all have to navigate those rules or guidelines. to get called out and made an example of. that institution has a barrage unable to in the heat of the
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moment gauge how long it will last. custards going to be and had to do due diligence what the proper response or no response terminated the person that livelihood this often is not often as not that can never travel around the world as fast as the beginning. and that person -- there so manr examples. >> when i do retrainet a marketg after scientist. [inaudible] x upset about we were not supposed to talk about her emotional experiences. quickbooks knockabout emotional experiences, but i think it sounds like something happened.
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i don't think social media should be in hr department and en masse heads of institutions. one of the smartest proposals said people should put in their contracts 890 day cooling off. that has to happen before their company can terminate them -- they just cannot react. they cannot react too quickly. >> coin base the truth coming from coin base the crypto. [laughter] i love this idea. i want to make my contact now. [laughter] [laughter] [inaudible] >> that is fantastic. things feel especially hot. there is definitely like a thermal idiom there.
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and also for another time i would love to talk about awake in the sleep is two different ways also the stranger participle i think comes out of black english. i was i being told on twitter i was using inappropriate language when ir describe myself speakig phonics. i was a white liberal. >> go back down using that language. >> before it ran out of time i just want to kickta it back it's directly related to your book. i have quite a bit more time if we need it. i like the discussion and a question that's puzzling as we knew that was more selective
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what they can and cannot write. this is were editors i pitched a number of things and if it doesn't fit with the editor once you're going to find something i spent years working on in terms of the data behind it. it is not really always matter for the question as to what extent are we going to end up with basically a duality or polarization of only rightio and left outlets? is a really objective news anymore? when i was at theut uk what i loved about it i'll check into hotel that is a nice they'd asked him what newspaper i like in the morning. [laughter] and i loved it. i liked the not truly objective. as you've said in the book it's hard to be that if it's a particular ideology to it. has the really ever been a
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middle? a demand for a middle, will there be a nonpartisan or appropriate balance and news organization? is there one left? can we have one or we just going to see this in the gap? >> thank you so much for that question. it allows me too go back to the book. a lot of what to talk about in the book is what looks to us as a partisan divide is actually as class divide. and so if you look at the difference i am a manager i have but one screen cnn on the other fox news all day. the real difference between them is a static. it really comes down to whether they are picturing a working-class view or if you are with a college degree. events following analytics i think a lot about wheat think of as partisanship or political divide is actually about class. that is kind of how i see the divide in our media.
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i think partisanship is not a problem so long as everybody is represented. as long as there's partisan for every group. we have now is a conservative immediate landscape that has a band of the working class economically. we have a liberal media landscape this also abandoned economically.ass fox news is really catering to an audience all they have to do luis not smear their values to have a captive audience. they don't even have to talk of other economics incentives which i really wish they. would. looking at the heroes of 19th century american journalism who were populist, they really believe the point of the media, the point of newspapers to wage a crusade on behalf of the working class. there also newspapers for the elite. it did not matter that every paper it was partisan because every subgroup had its paper you had a situation in the so many communist newspapers in accident you would people have literally
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four communist newspapers they would never dream of reading. because they had the communist newspaper that they read. everyone else was so off-base. and that's obviously a plethora. the problem is count because of the problem of the digital media and i really go into the semi book, all of the mainstream outlets apart from that conservative ones are going for that same highly educated elite. because they can track how much money you make and where you live, what you do for living they can track all this through data. they know exactly what to publish in order to get those eyeballs and that attention. i think that's the real problem. the conservative elite of the highly educated for that is the real problemuc here. the only way i think people can fix that people who want to get the news not going to be able
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change the "new york times". i think a point i make repeatedly and i will end with this is that if you are reading this on the internet and you feel that surge of adrenaline, rage, you feel enraged, someone is makingg money. someone is making a lot of money when you feel that feeling. i would just urge people, do not let your heart become the place for somebody else's buck is being produced by make you hate your fellow americans. and i would urge you to take that back. take back that control. >> let me just to the final question then. i love this one. where can they go from genuine nonpartisan journalism? let's a lot of news or little news i nonpolitical space bucks
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democracies built on having a tolerance. having at muscle within you choice in encountering the views of people you disagree with. a great way to do that is to read out what you disagree with. you'reu catering to your views. you find one there catering to other people's views readingth viewpoints from people you disagree with. better yet go to synagogue, go to church meet people in real life you can disagree with. we are moving that muscle and without it we are finished. we will no longer be a democracy. >> really quickly, which publications i think harper's does a very good job of being a genuinely and publishing. the views and stories that can
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align across the political spectrum. [laughter] in the atlantic has quite a lot of writers who disagree with each other. and doesn't toe align the way some other procedures people tend too. as are two magazines i think you can get. and that music of course. >> if they are asking about op-ed definitely come to newsweek. editors are liberal on the left into conservative on the right. every day you will find a viewpoints that will make you very angry. please come and read them. [laughter] looked at the page with the fact we have this going on should shock people.op we really try to keep things in balance but may not be a news
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outlet trying to do this we occasionally failed or absolutea trying. since were reincarnated version. harper somewhere at once worked was the atlantic which i'm currently writing the piece for, really represent news sources if you're interested ready for the los angeles times living in brooklyn i learned you don't pitch a story onme awoke media e even the infrastructure bill before checking when the fires are. so if you are interested in the fires that are disproportionately that hit the west coast i think the los angeles times is a great source. i am a fan of newsletters, but the kind news gathering organizations but choose it on the things you need to t know.
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i don't think we need different views on the california fires. you really need to know what the air quality is i am especially -- i also love the vaccine newsletter for near times just to talk about vaccine rates in the country. and rather than reading, the atlantic just had a a story on y a restoring cloth masks? i guess that does not fit the description of roque. a startup by saying writing about fashion. we used to get our seersucker things in the beginning of the vaccine. but now we need and 95's. what are we talking about? i just do not need an essay on that. but it's meant to make me worry. [laughter] [laughter] okay maybe it is awoke then, i
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do not know. >> i am worried about you out there. >> i do not have my seersucker either. i do have and 95. i was inspired d going to amazon and buy in and 95 mass pretty think health reporting mostly it's about how to be thin or work her magic on people. getting too thin into rich seems to beth the goal of habits and soft journalism. i hate that stuff. if you want to know about that larry nassar fair the fate of olympic gymnastics the michigan newspaper, i do and that's turned into michigan live. which is a website you can get news from. choose the things you actually want to be informed about. if you want toit sit around with people that make you feel part of something and we all do, watch a panel show, watched fox and friends.
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on that warm feeling youfr have friends that are joe and read if you just need to know numbers about hurricanes or in this case in new york might partner is very interested so he looks to see where the plans are. i would go for newsletters on this and stay away from the places with tone if you are being hit with cortisol this is more of an assault than the fren press. this is meant to get into your bloodstream that either feels good or it doesn't. i turned to netflix for that. let's stop there. and i want to say thank you for everyone who enjoy this around the world. thank you for joining us from france. thank you for virginia for joining us here in new york.
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in the book comes out next week. we are not supposed to judge them, we love it. and on the other side it's amazing for. >> will have a mutual friend that helps design the cover. [laughter] checks this was the brilliance of alana neuhaus. thank you so much great thank you all so much for this. what a pleasure. >> such a good book. they do buy it that's a storytelling we did not get into about the 19th century press, especially is really, really compelling. >> for free to follow all of us on twitter. get away from it. we appreciate and thank you all for joining us.
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>> thank you. >> thanks everyone. >> about books programs that were port on the latest publishing news and non- fiction books per week spoke with rich about his latest book on american political trivia. >> how did this project get started? >> it really got started when i was probably about nine years old. i actually started watching c-span. i'm a political junkie i don't know where it formulated. for some reason i have this gravitational pull to it. at interest specifically in it new show, the facts and is interesting. little-known facts and political politics. about political quotations that was all-encompassing. looking for a political trivia book just to buy and all i could find were presidential trivia books. many were question answer, question answer. all this information typed in my head i want to put it together
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in some sort of trivia game. but also one where you can learn something. as well as interesting. 21705 question lighters, put them all together it was interesting to go back. he think about all of the things you think you know print you can go back to sources in one primary source of this happened as well, this happened as well, this happened as well but suddenly you get seven more questions out of it. see what is this a full-time job rewriting a political book? speech it right now i also do some analysis and speaking as well. >> host: now you have mentioned watching c-span at nine years old. however old you are now, are you still watching c-span? >> yes i'm 43 years old and it is interesting. once cable came to my municipality i just started watching it. it became an addiction as a say it's gravitational pull you have
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you want to get as much information as possible. actually entertaining and i really enjoy it. what how did you find out rutherford b hayes is a national hero? [laughter] feature that's interesting if go to paraguay it's a household word. i do not know exactly where i found out. we found out rutherford b hayes earth with very little information about him in the united states. >> affected to go to his birth place in delaware, ohio it's actually a gas station has houses been torn down. what happened was it when he was president and congress was secretary of state is not active in records show that for there is an agreement between argentina and paraguay. paraguay had about 65% of the land it has today. he's credited with that. down there and there's a national holiday for him, there is a postage stamp for him but there is actually a scholarship to ohio university where it
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rutherford b hayes was actually born. there is that reality with the winners got to go to fremont, ohio to visit that rutherford b hayes presidential library and museum and another fact by the way kind of interesting is rutherford b hayes was the only present boarded delaware, delaware ohio. >> when you put this book together, first vote was self published? >> yes it is very. >> what is that process like for you? >> is interesting played there are definitely pros and cons for per the main pro into where you want to put a pecan is you have to do a lot of promotion yourself. i've had to use a publicist for past books. this when i'm using a lot of contacts that i made to promote myself. but basically you pretty much write it and you do all the editorial discretion you do your own editing yourself. it's pretty much ready but use a company called create space which is a subsidiary of amazon.com. you go out and get endorsements for the back so basically you
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write about yourself, you publish it yourself, if you do not have an actual publicist to promote yourself as well. fill in just one more piece of self-serving news. you have dedicated to c-span. >> yes i think that is unprecedented. i don't know anyone else who has done that. should i dedicate it to an individual? where did my interest in politics, political minutia come from? i thought of myself coming home from school starting on snow days and coming in and watching c-span. and then i remember for example all the times i spent watching special order some of the interesting speakers i would watch on the house. at watching some members get more ripple than others. on top of the budget deficit. very charismatic way of speaking about it. i would listen to him speaking they would have others on think about this type of stuff or a much time i spent going through
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the c-span archives as a hobby. it's just fascinating how much you actually find out stuff that's lost to history but you go back for example, i remember i was watching a speech michael the caucus made when bob dylan torch a chevy bush was running for republican nomination. this is in the great lines you here sometimes they also think of the caucus pacifically. bob dole says george h.w. bush is not much of a leader for george h.w. bush but bill is not much been a leader. this time i agree with both of these guys, neither of them as much of a leader. that is just kind of a great line. you can only find that through c-span. i would not have this book had not been been for c-span it was obviously kind of appropriate to dedicated. >> something of never set out loud is my favorite part of watching c-span's during the senate vote you get to see all of the interaction on the senate floor. that is a lot of fun to watch. i could spend hours watching them. in the great american political
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trivia challenge, you have a whole section on political insults. >> yes. >> why did you include that? speech i find it absolutely fascinating politician are very good to sometimes be very creative way to insult people. i find that exciting. i have an overlap between that and a presidential campaign. remember for example watching the house one time a congressman from arkansas with a southern accent deep as molasses go up there and talk about adam putnam a congressman from florida. he said he had mischaracterized the budget. i called them a nimrod wow that was that of the house floor he didn't go after his name but he went after him because he compared him and i thought that is extremely creative. i go back to some like jean
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taylor mississippi overrated for his rhetorical flourishes americans for tax reform said they supported the affordable care act. he comes back and gives a statement. he calls them lying sacks of scum. while a politician said this. what's interesting they can be also be very underhanded. for example jesse jackson was running a 1984 pre-did not specifically go after walter mondale from minnesota, who was a front runner. he was segment uber humphrey ran for president in 1960, 68. something to the effect that hubert humphrey was the only real aggressive leader who ever came out of minnesota part of ziti put two and two together and think is trying to go after walter mondale. trying to do it underhandedly. that that was a great line praising the insole -- no matter what side you're on something you can appreciate the way politicians consult. sometimes it could be an insult
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other times it could be something really creative and you say wow. spewing rich is the author of this book, the great american political trivia challenge. available online. thank you for spending a few minutes with us on about books. >> thanks it was great to be on the station i dedicated the book too. >> listen to full episodes of about books on the c-span now cap. or wherever you get your podcast or watch it online at booktv.org. x good evening everyone. what do the midtown scholar bookstore. my name is alex a welcome you to this evening's author program in which dan pfeiffer. before we get iva heat few house keeping notes as always. the speakers will get their masks off during the talk we ask you continue to keep your mask on throughout the evening. to comment this event is being recorded by c-span, so a couple of notes. we please ask that you t o

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