Summary & Insights
The killing of a civilian by an ICE agent in Minneapolis wasn’t just a tragic error in judgment; it became a case study in how a government and its media allies can construct an alternate reality, doubling down on blatant lies even when the video evidence is clear and undeniable. This incident anchors a wide-ranging conversation between host Prof G and neuroscientist-philosopher Sam Harris, who dissects the alarming state of American discourse. Harris argues that the hyper-partisan response to such events—where commentary is dictated by political affiliation rather than facts—signals a deep fracture in society, one that is exploited by the current administration’s “us vs. them” ideology. The discussion extends beyond domestic politics to examine a parallel failure of moral clarity on the left regarding the threats posed by Islamist ideology, contrasting it with the right’s more clear-eyed but often bigotry-tainted approach to the same issue.
Harris places significant blame on the left and the Democratic Party for ceding ground to Trumpism through its own failures. He criticizes the pandering to the loudest activist fringes, which has led to a stifling identity politics that alienates potential allies and avoids necessary debates. This is particularly evident, he argues, in the left’s moral confusion around Islamism, where a legitimate fear of being labeled Islamophobic has paralyzed honest criticism of theocratic doctrines and organizations that actively subvert open societies. He points to the muted Western response to uprisings in Iran as a symptom of this paralysis, suggesting that the political valence of an oppressor’s identity often outweighs the severity of the oppression in determining media coverage and public outrage.
The conversation then delves into the specific threat of jihadist ideology and how open societies can defend themselves without betraying their values. Harris advocates for a nuanced, clear-headed approach: empowering ex-Muslim and secular Muslim voices who can critique dangerous doctrines from within the tradition, carefully examining immigration policies to avoid importing ideologies hostile to liberal democracy, and provoking a long-overdue reformation within Islam itself. He stresses that this is not a call for bigotry but for intellectual honesty, distinguishing between criticism of a set of ideas and hatred of a people. Ultimately, Harris paints a picture of a political and media landscape where tribal allegiance has superseded shared reality, and where the left’s unwillingness to address certain ideological threats head-on has created a vacuum filled by the right’s demagoguery.
Surprising Insights
- The left’s own failings are a significant engine for Trumpism: Harris argues provocatively that the Democratic Party’s capture by activist factions and its embrace of a stifling identity politics are major culprits in fueling the rise of Trump and MAGA politics, calling it a “spectacular own goal.”
- Gulf nations are more alarmed by Islamist radicalization in the West than Western governments are: Harris cites the example of the UAE cutting support for students in the UK over fears of Muslim Brotherhood radicalization, highlighting a stark contrast in threat perception.
- Parental influence is vastly overrated by parents: Citing behavioral genetics research, Harris notes that a child’s personality and interests are shaped about 50% by genetics and 50% by environment—but that “environment” largely means peers and culture, not deliberate parenting.
- The incentive structure for large-scale conspiracies makes them almost impossible: Harris dismantles conspiracy thinking by pointing out that it requires perfect, sustained alignment of sinister incentives across hundreds or thousands of people, which is psychologically and practically implausible.
Practical Takeaways
- Critique ideologies, not identities: To address threats like Islamism, consciously separate criticism of religious or political doctrines (like blasphemy laws or theocratic governance) from bigotry against racial or ethnic groups. This intellectual framing is essential for honest debate.
- Seek out and amplify the most credible voices: On culturally charged topics, prioritize the perspectives of those who cannot be easily dismissed on identity grounds, such as ex-Muslims or dissidents from within the ideology, to make arguments more persuasive across political divides.
- Audit your media consumption for tribal signaling: When consuming news, especially about polarized events, consciously notice how different outlets frame the same facts. Ask yourself if the commentary is seeking truth or reinforcing a pre-existing tribal narrative.
- Apply Popper’s “paradox of tolerance” as a guiding principle: Recognize that to maintain an open society, you cannot extend unlimited tolerance to ideologies that explicitly seek to destroy the foundations of that openness. This is a difficult but necessary line to consider in policy and discourse.
If the past week — and past four years — have proven anything, it’s that we are not as different as we believed. No longer is the question, “Can it happen here?” It’s happening already. As this podcast goes to air, the current president of the United States is attempting what — if it occurred in any other country — we would call an anti-democratic coup.
This coup attempt will probably not work. But the fact that it is being carried out farcically, erratically, ineffectively does not mean it is not happening, or that it will not have consequences.
The most alarming aspect of all this is not Donald Trump’s anti-democratic antics; it’s the speed at which Republican elites have consolidated support around him. Some politicians, like Lindsey Graham, have wholeheartedly endorsed Trump’s claims. On Monday, Graham said that Trump should not concede the election and that “Republicans win because of our ideas and we lose elections because [Democrats] cheat.” Others — including Mike Pence, Marco Rubio, and Josh Hawley — have signaled solidarity with the president, while not quite endorsing his conspiracies. The message is clear: When faced with the choice of loyalty to Trump and the legitimacy of the democratic process, Republicans are more than willing to throw democracy under the bus.
Anne Applebaum is a staff writer for the Atlantic, a senior fellow of international affairs at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, and most recently the author of Twilight of Democracy: The Seductive Lure of Authoritarianism. In it, Applebaum, once comfortable in center-right elite circles, grapples with why so many of her contemporaries across the globe — including right here in America — have abandoned liberal democracy in favor of strongman cults and autocratic regimes. We discuss:
- How the media would be covering Trump’s actions — and the GOP’s enabling of him — if this were taking place in a foreign country
- How the last four years have shattered the belief in the idea that America is uniquely resistant to the lure of authoritarianism
- Why most politicians under increasingly autocratic regimes choose to collaborate with the regime, and why a select few choose to dissent
- The “apocalyptic pessimism” and “cultural despair” that undergirds the worldview of Trump’s most enthusiastic supporters
- How Lindsey Graham went from outspoken Trump critic to one of Trump’s most vocal supporters in the US Senate
- Why the Republican Party ultimately took the path of Sarah Palin and Donald Trump, not John McCain and Mitt Romney
- Why what ultimately separates Never Trumpers from Trump enablers is a steadfast commitment to American democracy
- What we can expect to happen if and when a much more competent, capable demagogue emerges in Trump’s place
- Whether the Biden administration can lower the temperature of American politics from its fever pitch
- The one thing that gives me a glimmer of hope about the Biden presidency
References:
“Trump is attempting a coup in plain sight” by Ezra Klein, Vox
“History Will Judge the Complicit” by Anne Applebaum, The Atlantic
“Laura Ingraham’s Descent Into Despair” by Anne Applebaum, The Atlantic
My EK Show conversation with Marilynne Robinson
Book recommendations:
Absalom, Absalom! by William Faulkner
All the King’s Men by Robert Penn Warren
Gilead by Marilynne Robinson
Credits:
Producer/Audio engineer – Jeff Geld
Researcher – Roge Karma
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