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The author Naomi Klein is probably best known for escaping critiques of corporate power.
“In books like No Logo, The Shock Talk Trin, and This Changes Everything.”
But in 2023 she published a pretty different kind of book. During the pandemic, Klein noticed how much she was being confused online with a different Naomi. Naomi Wolf, who the 90s was known as a feminist author and journalist and a gore advisor, but who had in the COVID era become one of the most prominent right-wing conspiracists. That experience and the interest in wolf that it created for Klein became the foundation
of doppelganger, a trip into the mirror world. This is a hard to summarize book and a way books I really like often are. It could only have been written by one person at one moment in their life. But Klein was interested in ways of the pandemic with scrambling traditional political coordinates, creating a political coalition that didn't seem,
at least by the logic that most people understood of politics, like it could continue to exist.
“How could somebody like Naomi Wolf, a protrus feminist, become political allies with Steve Bannon?”
How could RFK Jr become a core part of the MAGA coalition? So Klein began following Wolf, her doppelganger, into this mirror world of the new MAGA right. She began to sense its rules and its concerns and its power and the way it was seducing people. It's a lure. She saw a lot more clearly than most liberals I'm left to state, because at least in 2023, if you weren't choosing to follow it, very easy to miss it.
And even easier if you're an institutionally minded liberal artist to convince yourself that it didn't matter. They didn't have power. But now that world, the mirror world, it's our world. Now it's leaders, our leaders. So I want to have Klein to talk about her book, and about what she's observed over the first year of the Trump administration, as is that new coalition is tried to hold together while governing.
Klein of course is a calmness for the Guardian and a professor of geography at the University of British Columbia, and she's a forthcoming book, co-authored with Astral Taylor, called End Times Fascism, and the fight for the living world. And I want to note we recorded this before the war with Iran.
As always, my email as recline show at endmytimes.com.
[Music] Now we're Klein, welcome to the show. Thank you. So, your book revolves around two concepts, doppelgangers and mirror worlds. And I thought maybe good to start by just defining them.
Sure. So a doppelganger is a German word that literally translated means a double gore or a double walker, and it's the idea that out there somewhere you could bump into somebody who looks just like you, and isn't you? And it's that sort of uncanny vertigo that addresses the strangeness of that, which is most familiar, which is yourself. The mirror world is a term I use to describe the relationship between the sort of liberal-left world,
and the kind of far right world, and the ways in which when people are ejected from our world, they end up in a world that is sort of the exact mirror of where we live in sort of like replica, social media platforms, the same, but different kind of doppelgangers, doppelganger publishing worlds, doppelganger narratives of the narratives that we tell ourselves. And I was trying to find language for a discomfort I had in myself in noticing the ways in which we'd become incredibly reactive
in the communities in which I live, where we were sort of defining ourselves against what was happening, what they were doing over there, as opposed to being guided by legible values and beliefs. How did you get interested in the idea of the doppelganger?
A few different routes took me there.
and I was feeling kind of speechless, like I just didn't want to write the same kind of thing that I have written over and over again. I think I was politically sad.
“And I realized that for the first time in my life, I had time to kind of experiment with writing in a way that I haven't had time in my adult life.”
So I started working with a writing teacher and it was just sort of playing with form. And in the background I was having this strange experience where in this time when we were all being represented exclusively by our avatars in the digital sphere. I started being confused on a massive scale with another nonfiction writer named Naomi Wolf. And it sort of became one of left Twitter's favorite jokes at the time. And so every time I would go online to get some simulation of the friendship and community that I missed years,
you know, this was like sort of well into the second year of the pandemic.
What I would be confronted with was all these people sort of screaming at me about something that's another Naomi had done. And at first I was very frustrated by this and I didn't think it was related to this writing work that I was doing. But then I realized that this destabilization of the self was really interesting and fruitful mechanism to explore a bunch of ideas that I've been obsessed with, including the ways in which the idea of having a personal brand is basically destroying everything in our culture.
And I've been wanting to return to that theme, which is actually the subject of my first book that I wrote in the late 1990s and came out in 2000, no logo. I've been wanting to come back to it, but I couldn't find a way to write about it that didn't feel sort of hectering and lecturing. And I wanted to write about it from inside. Like I wanted to write about it from like being implicated. Because I don't think people can hear the critique if they just feel like you're just lecturing them as if you are not in the same polluted waters of self-performance.
And self-protection that we're all swimming in. So I thought, wow, I have a branding crisis here on my hands. This is really funny and also maybe interesting. So it started as an essay and then it just grew. Let's do a minute on no logo because I think a lot of people listening haven't read that book because that book was a big deal.
“I mean, I remember that book and it being kind of left canon as I was growing up and becoming a writer.”
So what was the argument of no logo? What were you sensing then and what were you trying to pull up? Pull up into visibility about the world.
It was I think first and foremost an attempt to understand the rise of these multinational corporations that were more powerful than governments.
And a shift that was going on in politics that was sort of doing an end-run around governments and it was going directly for the multinationals. You know, whether Nike because of sweatshops in Indonesia or Shell because of oil spills in Nigeria and it was it was. So as a young reporter, I was following these stories that I was interested in that. But I was also looking at another element which was the way that these multinationals were divesting themselves from the world of things where they were all just declaring that they were no longer in the business of making products.
They were selling a brand and idea. They were sort of transcending. And what that meant in practice was that they didn't need to own their factories, their factories were all outsourced, they were contracts. And the real work of production was the production of image. And that was affecting youth culture that, you know, is a young person thinking about this. We were all being told that we should be our own brands, which didn't really make any sense in the 1990s because this was pre social media was pre iPhone.
In no longer, what about the first celebrities who wore themselves lifestyle brands like Michael Jordan and Oprah. And this was like a new concept that an individual could be a brand.
But the idea that a non-famous person could be a brand made no sense to us because we didn't have marketing firms. It also feels to me like it's of a politics that has really weakened. I mean, I think of that era and addbusters. And you go back earlier in the 20th century. And fear about what advertising is going to do to our minds is very present in the 60s and the 70s. So this sort of anti-advertising, anti-branding, anti-consumer politics that was very, very strong. I feel like in the 90s. It feels pretty absent today.
“Yeah, because we really could be our own brands, right? So I think it's important to understand that there's a kind of a desperation in the fact that we have all embraced this.”
And this is why, you know, saying that I wanted to find a way to write about it that was from inside of it because I think we all feel really attacked if we point out that, you know, it's why online everyone's constantly accusing each other being performative, which I think is today's version of selling out.
Everybody knows that everybody else is being performative as well.
So I want to bring in the back in the other character here, which is Naomi Wolf.
And to actually politically, who is she? And we're being forced to add a third shift. There's already like the shift at work and then the shift at home, but on top of that there's a beauty shift. And so she was about how women were being held back from advancing in the workplace because they were having to put so much work and being beautiful. She has the conflict on the sexual battlefield, certainly come out into the open and can the long fraud fears about date rape and harassment ever resolved themselves.
Joining me now best selling off a Naomi Wolf.
“I think that men are in crisis because women are not sitting passively as the evil backlash hits us over the head, where it's hard for us to understand the nature of our immense power.”
But I believe that since the Hill Thomas hearings, we've seen a kind of spontaneous uprising among women in this country that is shifting the balance of the power between the sexes.
She was the face of what was called at the time third wave feminism. It was a controversial term, you know, whether it actually was a wave or not.
And yes, she wrote a bunch of best selling books called Fire with Fire. One of her high-slash low points was advising Al Gore's presidential campaign on how to reach women voters because she was very prominent feminist at the time. And yeah, so that's who she was. And now she is someone quite different. Hi, everyone. It's Naomi Wolf here at Daily Cloud and I'm doing something that I have been promising for a while after she's one of these people. I mean, this is one of the reasons why I wanted to write about her because I think there's so many people.
“It really accelerated during the pandemic where we would sort of say what happened to that person, like they used to be this and now they're something else or what happened to my uncle like he's falling down the rabbit hole.”
There he has all these extreme views. So at a certain point, Naomi Wolf just started posting a whole lot about different kinds of conspiracy claims, everything from like taking pictures of clouds and claiming they were cloud seated. I began to notice a very distinct pattern that these emissions, these trails would. I'm not going to say be laying down because I don't know for sure what the motivation is. I've got some hypotheses, but they would clearly stay there, not dissipate spread and create cloud cover.
And lock the sun to claiming ISIS beheadings, where crisis actors think they're not yet independently verified. The only source for them early on at least was this very questionable site called site SIT which gets half a million dollars from the United States government year and is run by these Islam establishment types who are connected to the sort of US anti terrorism establishment.
“So they kind of Alex Jones type of stuff and then during COVID she went all in on a range of COVID related conspiracies from the virus itself as a bio weapon to the vaccine as a bio weapon.”
The market for the COVID injections has come come and gone because people are aware now that it's a deadly and sterilizing injection, but the site affects live on to the vaccine verification apps are a Chinese communist plot to subdue the West.
The vaccine passport platform is the same platform as a social credit system like in China that enslaves a billion people.
A certain point during the pandemic, she was on Steve Bannon's show every day for a couple of weeks. She has become a really big star on the on the right. You described when you were defining mirror worlds that it exists partially for when you're ejected from one world into the other. And you find many of the same concerns just somewhat perverted distorted warped and I thought that word ejected was interesting because one of your thesis about wolf is that there was a moment of ejection and disruption and who she was before that required her to reinvent herself.
Is this for psychological recovery? What was that moment? Yes, so the year you're before the pandemic in 2019, she published a book called Outrages and she very famously made a foundational factual error in that book where she misinterpreted a phrase in the historical record. The book dealt with a persecution of gay men in England and she misunderstood the term death recorded where she thought that it meant that they had been killed by the state and this was exposed live on the BBC.
I was really surprised by this and I looked at a death recorded is what's in ...
Well, that's really important thing to investigate. What is your understanding of what death recorded means death recorded?
“It became one of these moments of mass online ridicule, just public shaming. I hate telling the story because it's like every writer's worst nightmare.”
Every time something like this would happen to Wolf people would say thoughts and prayers to Naomi Klein or like they would be sort of part of the jokes that I would get blamed for it. So I had a sort of front row seat on it and it was really ugly and I do think that that happens a lot with the people who we asked that question of like why did they change in that way will often find some kind of public shaming. You know, or something really wrong that they did, right? Like it's not just that we were mean to them. It's that they did something maybe unforgivable and then got really shamed for it and then they were embraced in this other world where facts matter a lot less.
Well, this is where I want to follow you into the the other world as you follow her into the other world and and you've a line in the book. I thought was a really sharp description of something.
This is about what is going on after Wolf is banned from Twitter for conspiracies. You write this is the irony of a liberal Twitter celebrating will seeming disappear and so at least until musk welcome to back.
“Since most liberals and leftists don't watch or listen to Bannon or the other shows where she wolf has become a regular.”
They thought she had evaporated as a cause for concern. RIP death recorded. This is a bit like kids who think the world disappears when they close their eyes. Tell me about that. Other world you walk into.
Well, first of all, I should say that world runs our world now, right? So that is a little bit, you know, I don't think that that we have the same questions about it.
Now as we did then because we can't ignore it now, right? I remember when the book first came out, I was interviewed and the interviewer asked me why I was giving these people attention and it was such an arrogant question like as if like we control all the attention and we were just blessing them with our attention by looking at them and writing about them. And I really felt as I was listening to Bannon that I was watching a new political coalition cohere. He was calling it maga plus at the time. This is, you know, 2021, 2022.
And I had seen Bannon in 2016, peel off part of the Democratic coalition, particularly white unionized men who were angry at the Democratic party over free trade deals and bring them over to Trump. Watching him do this with, you know, suburban white women who traditionally voted Democrat and he understood that wolf, you know, you would wind up the introduction. Okay, I guess is Naomi Wolf Naomi, you came, you started as a top feminist, a huge writer, bestselling author, public intellectual lionized by the left and the established order and them, you know, the conventional thinking.
And now you're, you're kind of a renegade and every day a rubble. She used to consult for outgoers, she consulted for Bill Clinton and that was central to her appeal is that she could potentially deliver this constituency that Trump really was weak with. And I think Bannon understood that these sort of angry COVID moms were a new part of his coalition that the plus one for maga.
“And she was very important during the pandemic. There was a study that I think NPR commissioned to try to understand one particular piece of medical information that spread early on, which had to do with this idea that vaccinated people shed.”
And so I think I was able to articulate onto unvaccinated people and endangered their health and possibly made them infertile and there was this whole thing about how, you know, women were bleeding between periods from being around vaccinated people and women were making videos on Instagram say that they'd kick their husbands out of their beds because they weren't going to sleep with vaccinated people anymore. And so there was this sort of data study that was done to try to find the kind of grounds you're owe for this particular piece of medical misinformation and they traced it back to a lot of it back to Neil and we will.
She was a real vector for this piece of misinformation because she is associated with women's health and women's bodies. And then I started listening to all her talking to Tucker Carlson and talking to Steve Bannon and when I would mention to a friend like I heard this on Bannon like you know I was. There were things that were happening that were making me very worried about elections you know I was watching the whole show. Instead of saying like what like asking like what did you hear they would say like why like why are you listening to that like why would you do that like almost like I had transgressed.
One thing I found so interesting about this book that I didn't expect when I ...
And something I felt came up again and again was in different ways liberals in the left became very powerful institutions over the past 20 years and you know this is before the mirror world basically took over our world.
“But powerful media powerful and academia powerful in government and so this idea that you could just shun people out right that that would be an effective way of creating social change in politics to cold and it wasn't a crazy idea.”
And there are ways it has worked in the past and ways it it worked even then but it missed. How much is happening outside the institutions and how they had become their own institutions and networks and media structures. And that kicking somebody out of your institutions meant you couldn't see them anymore but it didn't mean they were gone. I feel like so much of this is just about social media and I know that sort of slightly hackneed but all of this is playing out on platforms right and even think that something like.
The mute button or the block button has a huge amount to answer for just in terms of it being almost habit forming like we get used to this idea like this person's annoying me I'm going to just press a button and make them to severe right and I think that that idea that this is how we relate to people spills offline as well.
“So we created a tremendous space in which power could be built sort of in private with different rules and then I feel like it exploded into dominance.”
After the election and you see how much has become a legible network that is now arguably the default network in American life.
I mean this is the thing about in doppelgangers doppelganger literature and film the storyline usually what happens is like you've got a protagonist and then somebody comes along who's a double of them and they're so good at performing you like so much better at performing. But they eventually overtake you. So at the end of Dusty F skis the double is protagonist is getting Cartered away and sent to an asylum while the double just takes over. So I think that's kind of happened in our culture is that the doppelgangers doppelgangers at the wheel.
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The one thing that I have kept thinking about and that I feel like your book gets out really well is the underving relationships between things that are really happening. If things that we sort of pushed away or wanted to ignore as ridiculous, I think the one happening right now is Jeffrey Epstein, which I have found it disorienting how much it tracks the vibe of QAnon. Not every claim of QAnon, it's not, you know, John of Cadity Junior is still alive somewhere, but you are dealing with a very powerful person with a incredibly powerful and broad elite network.
And child sucks trafficking at the center of it. And again, I don't believe in QAnon, but it is eerie. How there was this thing that was like a mirror world or QAnon is a mirror world version of Jeffrey Epstein or something. How have you thought about that? I'm really interested in the work that conspiracy culture is playing, like in how it distracts from conspiracies that are real. And I never doubted that there was a conspiracy that Epstein was involved. And that's been clear for a long time.
The reason why people are being drawn to conspiracy culture is that we all fe...
And the impunity that follows from that is so extreme. I think it's really important not to dismiss it as a conspiracy theory just because it has the structure of QAnon. I think QAnon has the structure of it's why anti-Semitism was called the still called the socialism of fools.
“It's sort of like kind of explains how capitalism works except for a twisted and it's just a cabal of which Jews.”
But we need stories to explain our reality and we need them and so do the super elites need them. And one of the things that the files do is provide a window into the stories that elites are telling themselves to justify how much wealth they have, how much power they have.
And that brings us to their obsession with eugenics and this idea that they are better stock than everybody else. That's a story that can explain what you have so much wealth and power.
And you see Epstein talking about that quite a lot in the emails. Yeah, yeah. I think it's inextricable from the fact that we live in a time where if you're rich enough, you think the rules don't apply to you. Whether that's Elon Musk, just sort of laughing when journalists asked him for any accountability and he's descended poop emoji and now he sends an auto reply that says mainstream media lies. Because just this defiant, I don't have to answer any more. I don't have to be accountable to any rules. Trump embodies that. And I think Epstein really embodied that for a lot of very powerful people, including people like Bill Gates who presented himself as, you know, one of the more progressive caring billionaires, right? I think it seems to me that like Epstein was like the after after party for Davos, right?
Well, it's just like he was the guy who could make it all happen. It is clear to me that his impunity was an object of envy. The way he lived, that maybe they didn't all know that there was child sex trafficking of the center of his world. But the way in which he didn't play by the rules, he had this huge house, he had this island, he had this wealth, he had all these connections, he seemed to be completely living in this unabashed way.
“Was what made him an object of envy to other rich and powerful people?”
And part of the attraction of Trump. I mean, Trump is that he's the 80s guy who always had the beautiful women around him and never took part in any of that woke capitalism, quote, unquote, you know.
I mean, he never pretended to care about any of the things that these guys were publicly claiming that they cared about, and now don't even bother claiming to care about whether, you know, climate change or equity diversity and inclusion. But I see these things is really interrelated because, you know, I say the past 50 years because this is the sort of counter revolution against the new deal era.
“This is sort of what I've wrote about in the shock doctrine. This is the revolution against regulation and the era of privatization and unmaking of the state and it really produces the oligarch class, right?”
So it's important for the people who are the big winners in this to present themselves as a kind of a replacement for the state, right? And that's where it's really interesting that Maxwell was central in launching the Clinton Global Initiative, for instance, because I think the Clinton Global Initiative was a place for many years when the Davos class got together and said we're going to fix it. All fixed schools, you fix poverty, you know, you fix malaria and we've got this. You don't really need governments anymore because we are so socially responsible and we're going to use our wealth to fix the world.
But I think that what was actually happening is that power is for using the whole point of becoming this rich is to not have to play by these types of rules and I think what Trump has unlocked and what Epstein always was, was you don't really have to play by the rules.
Like here come to the island and we'll actually do whatever we want. We're rich and we're keeping it and we're not going to pretend anymore and our workers can suck it and welcome to the new world.
What have you made of Steve Bannon's closeness to Jeffrey Epstein? So here you have somebody who certainly presents himself as the populace of person trying to break and destroy the elite conspiracies, but Bannon was very close to Epstein after functionally everything was known. There's this text message for Bannon sends Epstein a link to a daily story about Epstein's put alleged sex ring and the information coming out about that.
It sends this to Epstein and Epstein doesn't answer and a couple hours later ...
Think about that. Yeah, so I guess I should have made this clear earlier, like I think Bannon is a terrible fraud and I think he performs being the voice of the little guy and even the sort of way in which he took on Musk early in this Trump administration and claims to be taking on like the tech oligarchs who are supposedly kind of polluting maga.
You know, he has been in with his own tech oligarchs from the beginning like with the mercers.
“What I think about Bannon is that he is a strategist, like all the things that we were talking about before, I think this is just about power, this is just about winning and he understands how to build a coalition and he's strategic about that.”
I think he platforms conspiracy theorists because he understands that it is very useful for people to believe outlanders things in part because it distracts them in very large part from the conspiracies that can be proved. And so I think that the Bannon world is really in crisis right now because of the Epstein files and it's really interesting, kind of checking in on his show in this whole period because he seems to be largely ignoring it and flooding the zone with other conspiracies like the muslim brotherhood is trying to hijack the elections and the state and that state.
I mean, he's talking about everything but the biggest conspiracy in the world that he is himself centrally implicated in and implicated in ways that are really about rearranging the political map. I mean, he's interested in Epstein because he thinks Epstein can help fund the populist international, which is weaving together these far right often fascist openly fascist parties in Europe and Latin America with the United States and you know, he needs a funder for this. So yeah, it's and so what we're seeing these files is part of how the world that we're in right now is built and I don't know how you feel about the like is this fascism is this not where are you falling on that.
I think it's pretty fascist. Yeah, it's up with the word doesn't have any meaning. If we can't apply it to things in the modern world, I think sometimes you end up with words that people have decided are so beyond the pale racist fascist et cetera that they become people stopping willing to use them because it feels like you've moved outside of ordinary discourse. But these words describe things and I don't think you can understand the aesthetic of Trumpism. I don't think you can understand some of its impulses without at least some connection to fascist movements of the 20th century, which were, you know, everyone is different in his own way.
Exactly, yeah. But there's a reason they're all very interested in Schmidt.
“Yeah, yeah, and I think part of the hesitancy has to do is like really exceptionalizing Hitler and it sounds like you're saying if he is fascist, he is Hitler and that's not what the term means.”
And there've been plenty of fascists who weren't Hitler and history doesn't repeat on a loop, it changes it iterates a compound. But the reason I ask if you think it's fascist is that fascism is a pathology of injured power. It emerges in Italy and in Germany in the injuries of the first World War, right?
It's soldiers and generals and industrialists who are hurt, right, by the sanctions, but it's powerful people who are hurt, right?
Whereas like left revolutions are powerless people who are hurt and it's these vertical coalitions that get built with people who had sort of relative power and are losing power. But one of the things that we see in the Epstein files are these concerns about me too, about a counterbilt. Like a lot of talk about me too, people going to Epstein because he is a sex criminal and they know that and they're asking him for advice about what to do about the fact that, you know, the movement is coming for them and they might be held accountable.
So if we are in a fascist moment, then it is a counter-revolution.
“Like we have to understand, like what are elites revolting against, like what hurt them, what hurt them?”
And I think part of what they are revolting against is that there was starting to be some accountability.
Like their impunity was there were a few tanks in the armor, and some of that was women who were beginning to hold powerful men accountable.
So there's unleashing of the far right, is partly them protecting themselves. Well, and nothing was more radicalizing, I think, to the tech-right CEO and venture class than the feeling that their corporations were being taken over by the staff.
Mark Andreessen has talked about this directly that the sense that on any giv...
You know, the employee base is going feral.
“You know, there were cases in the Trump era, there were companies, multiple companies I know that felt like there were hours away from full blown violent riots on their own campuses by their own employees.”
He's a bit of an exaggerator, I've noticed, like he does. He's describing the way he thinks felt to him and at the very least. He also said he was being terrorized by the Biden administration because they tried to regulate crypto.
They just came after crypto, absolutely tried to kill us. I mean, they just ran this like incredible basically terror campaign to try to kill crypto.
And then they were ramping into a similar campaign to try to kill AI. And that's really when we knew that we had to really get involved in politics. It's related, like the fact that Mark Andreessen sees the most mild accountability as an existential attack. I mean, the way he talks about basic regulation for crypto or AI as terror, terror. I think speaks to the fact that these are men who came up in the 1990s, you know, when I was writing no logo, Mark Andreessen was on a throne on the cover of time magazine, a golden throne, I believe.
You know, and he was, I think, 23. I think that may have gone to that. You know, I think that the kinds of depravity that we see in the files is related to that it's dangerous to lift people up and and treat them as gods and kings.
And I think we did that as a culture just because people were rich.
You know, the other place where we see pedophile rings is in the Catholic Church and survivors talk about the kind of unique horror of being abused by somebody who has gone on their side, right? And we did treat wealthy people as if they were gods for a while.
“And I think they're angry that they no longer get treated like gods. And that feels like being terrorized, Mark Andreessen is all relative, right?”
But this is why I think the heart of this is impunity, is a feeling of impunity. And we have to start holding people accountable, we're starting to see that, but not in the United States. And these, you know, these women who have come forward, I mean, they are heroes, they're absolute heroes. And this solidarity that they show one another, the support that they give to one another, up against Congress, up against the most powerful men in the world. Like it's so moving to me, and the, you know, women journalists who believe them when nobody else did. And this is a beautiful story.
I mean, it's a horrible story, but there's also, there's beauty in it. Try a thought on you because I know you're working with us to tell on a book about fascism. And I was thinking is you are talking about what kinds of injuries create fascism movements. There's often an injury that unites in a certain way, the kind of fascist elites you're talking about. And at least portions of the masses, because fascism is also a mass movement in many places at many times. And it's often a loss of story. It's an injury to your story. So you're describing the way we told, we told the tech titans a story about them.
But what is the bottom upside of Trumpism? And it's often the bottom upside of fascism is the feeling that many people have ordinary people at times of rapid change. And they are losing the story there a part of the story of their own history and how that they are the good guys in history, not the certainly not a checkered history. The story of their nation and how great their nation is and what its destiny is. I mean, this is also a pandemic book and to some degree 2024 era, Trumpism is a pandemic era phenomena. People are very, very angry about all of a sudden being told that they're the bad guys for not getting vaccinated or not wearing a mask or this is a big part of what you're describing in there.
And that that was very, very effectively weaponized inside this movement. Because I know you're working on some of these issues. I'm curious how you think about that. I mean, just to stay with the pandemic thing for, you know, one more moment. This relates to the work that astronauts are doing and what we're calling end times fascism, which is really about how.
“There is a consciousness that we are in what the Pentagon wants called the age of consequences, right? Like that the forecasted existential global crises are now hitting, right?”
It's like this may happen. It's, this is happening. And COVID, the fact that we experienced a global pandemic that shut down the world simultaneously, it's an extraordinary event, right? I think there was a period where we didn't want to look back at it and now we're less like, whoa, like that really did happen, like New York shut down, like you could walk through Times Square and I was in it.
I think that that shifted something in our brains, a lot of us, including very powerful people who realize that actually the stuff's going to happen. We're now in the in the age where it happens.
And so I think what we saw during COVID was that that presents us with a pretty stark choice about what kind of society we're going to have.
We will either have a much stronger state that takes care of people and we sa...
We had governments pay people to stay home. We had periods where there was eviction moratorium. We had free masks and testing like kind of a taste of universal healthcare in the United States.
There is another option. And that option is screw them. This is data taking its course. This is calling. This is survival of the fittest.
“And I think a lot of that diagonalism that came together of people on the kind of new age, well in this world, we're saying, I have a powerful immune system. I don't need your vaccines coming together with like the Steve Bannon world.”
Underneath it all was this like, I'm comfortable if this is a cleansing. If this is like the world correcting. Maybe we'll have fewer people and that will be better for the environment. That was one story.
But it really is a stark choice. And so I think you know when it comes to Silicon Valley and these sort of tech elites in the moment that they're in.
I think even though they COVID was really good for them in just in terms of their bottom lines, I actually think that would freak them out more than anything. Was the quiet quitting? Was people actually not needing the jobs as much? And losing that sort of boss worker power for a while.
“And workers saying during a pandemic, you better pay me more if you want me to risk my life, right?”
So I think that that choice of like either we're going to have a much more active estate and it's going to be regulating a lot more or we're going to embrace a world where we're okay with mass death.
And the genocide in Gaza happens and a lot of people showed that they could live with it. I think that those two events I think was COVID in Gaza that produces the Trump moment. And it really was about a fear of this fork in the road moment, either it's we're just going to harden our hearts and it's going to get a lot uglier or it's going to get a lot more activist in terms of an activist state and more of a kind of a new deal sort of state. And they don't want that because that will regulate them.
“You used a term in there that I want to pick up on, but just diagonalism. What is diagonalism?”
Diagnalism is a term quince Libidian and William Caleson, who are both scholars of European history. They use that term in an essay about the German anti lockdown movement early in the pandemic, which is sort of a rough translation of a German word. It seems to be coming up called Kirdunken, which means like outside of the box thinking, which is how these sort of wellness influencers and entrepreneurial kind of not traditional right wingers made alliance with right wing parties. And so it just speaks to these kind of unlikely bedfellows like by doppelganger and Steve Bannon, like people meeting it's kind of an alternative to the horseshoe theory.
I suppose because the horseshoe series sort of assumes that it's like far left and far right, but a more significant shift or sort of liberal wellness California types who very focused on kind of bunkering their own bodies, making alliance with people who are bunkering their national borders. What's interesting to me about this theory of diagonalism, and this goes back to pick up on our fascism conversation to fascism movements that there does seem to me to be assorting. Not just around religion, we used religious sorting in politics, but around a certain kind of spiritualism back to the landism, which both I think subsequently and aesthetically used to be at least associated with the left.
But RFK Jr. I think emerges as a central figure in a realignment. And it's something you're attentive to that you see happening around you in the book is I guess the role of spirituality and mysticism and a kind of sense of bodily integrity and wholeness playing into this. I think that's underplayed in its power, so I'm curious how you thought about it then in sense. It's true that the sort of organic green world is more associated with the left these days, but it's also true that there's a fascist lineage to it.
And European fascists in the 1920s and '30s were very interested in all kinds of new age health fads. But I think it are a version of it. It's really related to the kind of optimized self and the way in which we can just protect ourselves in a world in which we don't have very much control by purifying our bodies and optimizing ourselves in every way. And yeah, I mean, I don't think it is very left. I think it's highly individual. I think leftists generally survived the pandemic without becoming conspiracy theorists, the most part it.
Where you really saw it was like yoga studios and so I think that they kind o...
I agree with this. I'm not trying to say that it's about hardcore communist becoming Q&A members. I guess maybe the place I don't really agree is that I think this is more than optimized self. I think you get optimized self types across the political spectrum.
I do think there's something here about ways of knowing and trust in institutions.
And the left, which I'm describing here very broadly, kind of Democrats, leftists, liberals, etc. It becomes more institutionalized, technocratic, it believes science, it believes experts. And what it ends up ejecting is people who have profound distrust. You talk a lot in the book about Arvke Jr. who goes from a kind of fringe presidential candidate as a Democrat.
“But I don't want to play clip from his presidential campaign announcement because I think it's interesting from this perspective.”
I'm here to join you in making a new declaration of independence for our entire nation. We declare independence from the corporations that have hijacked our government. And we declare independence from the Wall Street from Big Tech, from Big Pharma, from Big Ag, from the military contractors and their lobbyists.
And we declare independence from the mercenary media that is here to fortify all of the corporate orthodoxies from their advertisers and to urge us to hate our neighbors and to fear our friends.
And we declare independence from the cynical elites of a betrayer hope and who amplify our divisions. What do you think when you hear that? I think it's quite similar to Bannon in that he is really good at identifying these sort of vacuums, these political vacuums that need to be filled and sort of speaking into them.
“One of the things I think is just that a lot of the people in these coalitions can be pulled out of them because the world that they're in now is just nonstop grifting.”
That goes for Bannon as well. In addition to his Epstein problems at the moment and people realizing that the guy who is supposed to protect them from the oligarchs has been trading emails with Epstein and his part of this whole world that they've supposedly been taking on. He also is being sued for a meme coin, F. JB meme coin, which was the scam, so they're getting scammed all the time. And the same is true of a lot of these wellness people including everyone selling supplements, everybody selling these seminars.
And you know, the people that Arfke Jr. has amassed around him, all of them are trying to sell you something and people are getting ripped off, like they're getting ripped off all the time. And I think he's really good at speaking to this very deep longing for a deeper connection with nature. You know, he speaks really poetically about the natural world. When I was a little boy, I used to visit the White House and that we're a pair of yeast and an Adam Perigrant and Falcons and passing on the roof. And I was a little boy at his fast and edit with Hawks.
But I used to watch those birds. It was a beautiful, predatory bird in our country. And it was salmon pancakes at a white sear on its own. It fly 240 miles an hour. And I can watch them come off the couple of the post office and come down Pennsylvania Avenue at those speeds. And pick pigeons out of the air, 40 feet above the heads of the pedestrians on the sidewalk on Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White House. For me, seeing that site was much more exciting than visiting my uncle at the White House or my father at the Justice Department.
But that bird went extinct in 1963 from DDT poisoning. When people feel alienated from the natural world and, you know, all the jokes about the bear carcasses and all of that.
“I mean, it's funny, but the reason why it has traction is I think people like the idea of somebody who has connections with wildness, right?”
I mean, that has a powerful appeal.
And so I think this speaks to what you were talking about before about people losing stories, right? And it's hard to lose a story, you know, I don't feel too sorry for Marc and Jason losing his story, but the, um, not the, did you have a crown? What a question, tough to ask. I don't think he had a crown, but he lost the throne. But when, when you lose a story of what your nation was, I think we have to interrogate these stories.
But the oneness is also on us to come up with new stories, right? And if you just gank the story away and say like, you're an idiot for having ever believed it. And now you're on your own, people are going to get angry. And I, you know, that can be a painful thing to hear, but I think we really have that responsibility. And I'm really moved by the fact that I see that happening on the left.
Like, you know, there's a pretty harsh critiques in doppelganger of the left, like, um, harsh or anything I've ever written.
Maybe you know, harsh enough for some people, but, you know, a lot of it is t...
I mean, this is the thing about doppelgangers is like, in literature,
“they're always a message to you at warning, like, you have to look at yourself.”
There's something about yourself that you're not seeing if if reality starts doubling. You talk about your critiques of of the left in the box. So I'll offer critique of liberalism, which is it. Liberals must become very arrogant. It has become in its ways of knowing and ways of relating very, very technocratic.
And I say, this is a bit of a technocrat. And I think it has really lost something in being over time more severed from religion.
“But the desire for, I think, politics to be able to speak to how alienating and often feels to be alive right now.”
Yeah. When you're looking at your screens and you're often very separate from nature.
And it's hard because it's not always an easy political answer to any of this.
And I think that liberals in particular doesn't really know what to do with issues that it can't offer a policy on. If something is can simply be, if we could just give you a tax credit, well, we know what to say. But if what you're talking about is a kind of spiritual unease, a sense that something is lost in modernity, then it struggles much more.
I think it's a reason you see people like James Tallarico taking off so much. I think there's a real hunger for religious language again. But one thing you're very attentive to throughout this book is a way that movements will often abandon issues at the other side picks up. It's like they treat the other side's embrace or something as it makes that whole issue area toxic. As opposed to seeing like there's energy, there's some yearning here.
How do I connect to that yearning? How do I answer what might be beneath that? Because often people aren't coming to the issue because they know what the policy solution is. They're coming because they feel something and they're looking for somebody who helps them articulate that feeling. Yeah, it's interesting where you're saying about liberalism and these policy solutions. I mean, when it comes to the environment, the policy solutions often obscure the nature beneath what is being addressed.
So you can think about how much of the climate discourse focused on carbon trading and carbon markets. I mean, it's the most bloodless way to talk about the natural world. It's like taking something that is alive and animate and that we're all connected to and just being like, how can we make totally disembodied. So you know, I have a whole critique of carbon markets, but just beyond the policy critique, there's also an emotional critique. Like, it makes sense when we're trying to motivate people to act in the face of the climate crisis, to start with our connections to the natural world.
Like start with the fact that maybe you love trees or oceans or just like, and that's one of the things that I always thought people needed to take.
Our kids junior more seriously than they were because you know, I knew him from before like when he was a riverkeeper and that ability to speak for the wild, right? It's very powerful. We don't have many people in public life who are able to do it anymore. It's one of the reasons why FDR was such a great politician is just that he had that sort of love of nature and the speeches he would make about the civilian conservation core and how. Good it is for the spirit to be out in nature and for the right of people in cities to like experience the forest and national parks like that is really powerful stuff and it's really healing and re accessing.
“The politics is incredibly important. It's one of the things I think we did wrong during COVID, you know, why didn't we have a resurgence of outdoor education as opposed to just zoom learning. That's also pretty COVID safe.”
Where I see what you're talking about most clearly isn't the uprising against data centers actually is one of those issues that was being discussed more to a degree on the right than the left. It's one of the things that worried me most when I became a regular Steve Bannon listener was that he was always talking about transhumanism and he was talking about AI and the sort of war on the human. He was talking about it more from a kind of a religious perspective, but I think this is very fruitful because I think there is a war on the human going on a war on the animal world. I think it's absolutely untenable.
The amount of electricity that is being consumed by this really wasteful way that US tech companies are engaging in the AI arms race where everybody is building duplicative data centers that they know they don't have a market for and they're consuming. Well, they think they have a market for it.
Well, if they think someone's going to win at the end, they don't actually th...
In the race stage, right? And so they kind of believe they'll be one or two companies left standing, but they all sort of seem to admit from what I'm seeing is that there isn't like a 13 trillion dollar market that's going to win.
So open AI is worried Google is going to be the last one standing, so they all have to at the same time build out these massive data centers.
And so in the communities that are facing this industrialization. This kind of spirit, like I've interviewed people who describe it as a spiritual war, you know that they, you know, best of us wanted to build this huge data center in Tucson called Project Blue of all things. And people started organizing across partisan lines because you know when you live in a desert, you know about water and you know how scarce it is and so hard to get information out of these companies. And the fact that this has been, you know, pushed by the Trump administration so aggressively and
“the way people are organizing the face of this is it goes beyond the data center. It's like, what is economic development for?”
Well, I think there's the great question that AI is going to pose across functionally every level society is what is the human for.
So we have trained people to act in ways that are useful to the economy, then we create, then we trained AI models on the output of those people. Yeah. And now we're like, hey, we got these AI models that can act like people acting in economically useful ways. And to me, they're too very, very profound and dueling questions here.
One is what are humans for? What do we value an education? What do we value in people? And what happens if we have under capitalism, the structure of a society,
“like spend a long time valuing something that we're now about to take a lot of value away from?”
And then I was just talking to Jack Clark from Anthropica about this. There is this very unanswered question of what AI itself is for. I mean, if all it's for is replacing white collar workers, then that's not a profoundly inspiring vision. There's been like no public agenda for AI. It's been no sense of how do we orient all this investment towards things we actually want as a society, as opposed to how to automate a call center. And both of those questions, like what are humans for? What is AI for? I think are going to be definitional politics in coming 510 maybe beyond that years.
And right now, we're very, very ill answered. Yeah, and I just don't know, like who is asking those questions and who has power to answer them? Because they're so fundamental, but it assumes that there's any role for the public in this discussion. Like, these data center battles, right? And partly what they're doing is trying to have the debate that you're describing, and they're being told, you have no role in this, that Washington has decreed that, you know, everyone's going to take their data centers and you don't have a right to regulate it.
But the fact that they have as much energy as they have, I think, is a reflection of the fact that this is being rolled out with absolutely no public input. And, you know, company like OpenAI, such a bait and switch, right? I mean, they said trust us, we're like Wikipedia, like we're a public interest company. No, you can't let the profit motive determine such an important technology. Oh, we change our mind, you know. So, we know what Bernie Sanders has been saying, it's like, why would we trust these companies who, you know, don't even let their workers have a bathroom break to think about, not like, what does it mean to be human?
But how are you going to eat when your job is replaced, right? Like, the base of question of caring for people. Like, I don't think people have the capacity to think about what their lives are for if AI is replacing their jobs because they're worried about how they're going to eat and pay their rent. And they have absolutely no indication that they live in a society that cares at all about that question. So, until that question is answered, I don't think we can have the other questions. Although I think we're going to need to have them all at the same time because I'm not sure it's going to be answered first. Well, I think that this is a broader question about whether this belongs in a private sector.
“And I think that that's why I don't think it does. And this is much too fundamental. And these are technologies that exist because they fed off of the accumulation of all of human knowledge and output.”
I believe we own them already. I used to talk to some of the people who are now in charge of the AI labs and I would talk them out. Well, what happens if we're living in the world you're describing to me and you're building the thing you are telling me and it becomes that powerful and all the things you tell me come true. Well, at some point, they would say to me, at some point, we'll have to be nationalized. And I would scoff at them and say, if you get to that point, there is no way you will allow yourself to be nationalized. And I think that that is proving pretty true right now. As you watch people from open AI, don't money into super PACs to fight AI regulation.
I mean, it was people from these companies who would say to me, like, oh, if ...
I look, I think there is a way of understanding the Trump administration as like a tech revolt against AI regulation, like that that was a major driver of the decision to make role him. You know, it wasn't just mask, it was, you know, the-- Yeah, the two. This opens up a question to think about the Trump administration and the mega movement. One of the reasons I think this book is so interesting for thinking about the world brand is as you say, it's a book about how this movement was built. And one of the things you're very attentive to is the way Trump and the people around him were sensitive to issues that had a lot of power in them, but maybe we're not already well represented politically.
“It goes for everyone from the maha moms to the reactionary tech right, oligarchs. And so it's this movement that is highly internally contradictory.”
It absorbs RFK junior with that aggressively anti-corporate speech and Elon Musk at the same time. And now we're here and it's actually an administration. And so it is making choices. It can't be in the same way all things to all people. And since our choice on AI has been let it rip, right, try to unwind even the ability of states to regulate it. We show unpopular with a base, which is in many ways. And they did not run on it. And there are a lot of things like that. It's having to make these decisions. And so I guess one question about Trumpism and MAGA.
I mean, banning gets to say what he wants because he's on the outside, but is whether or not it can sustain support given that it is now truly be set by contradictions.
And so Trump isn't, it was amazing to me how many things he was to how many people by October of 2024.
But now it's like his sort of quantum superposition has like cohere to a lot. Yeah, and he's also starting a lot of wars. And he was starting a lot of wars. Yeah, the other thing he was to a lot of people was somebody who wasn't going to do that.
“Yeah, I think with the booktracks is how they cobbled together in electoral coalition that they have since detonated in lots of ways, right?”
I mean, including the Latino parts of the coalition who are really angry, not everyone, but a lot of people are disgusted by what ISIS is doing.
And the fact that it's just straight up racial profiling, so they may have thought that it was going to just go after certain people, but it's going after everybody. So I think it's a huge opportunity for the left. You know, I say the left, not the Democratic Party, because I think it's possible to blow the opportunity. And I think the Democratic Party's really good at that. But the other reason why it's worrying is it's worrying when an autocrat who wants to be a dictator doesn't seem to care about re-election.
And so it's, you know, you can't just, well, hopefully he can't care re-elect it.
Oh, I know, despite his mucusings. His own party, right? I mean, it's worrying going into the midterms because he's being reckless with his coalition. And I think that should worry us. One of the things that seems like an opportunity in that is diagonalism on the left.
It opens up questions about what is out there that has been abandoned, that at least some of its energy can be pulled in. You're mentioning that a center of some minute ago.
“I think that there's no doubt that there's a tremendous energy in AI populism right now.”
And that some amount of that is going to have to be actually spoken to and people are going to have to get much more thoughtful and sophisticated in speaking to it. But what else is there that, you know, as you've sort of thought about this critique and thought about what you wish had been done differently and what you wish had been paid attention to. Okay, this is the opportunity. But it may be requires going into some uncomfortable places or building new coalitions. I think that we know, I'm not going to speak on behalf of the entire left,
but I believe that a lot of people on the left understand and understood particularly after Trump won, that we must have been doing something wrong if this many working class people went to Trumpism. And it's this many people felt alienated enough by what they were calling woke culture to turn to this nihilistic politics.
So, in my friend Kangit, you know, on a tailor, you know, as a presser, Princ...
historian, one of the things she said immediately after the election is we have to build a more welcoming left.
“And I think about that phrase a lot like welcoming.”
What does it mean to be welcoming, you know? And I look at what's happening in Minneapolis and the sort of, you know, what Adam Cerro called neighborism, describing that movement. I mean, neighborism is such a welcoming idea. Like, and it's just this, it's not jargon filled. You're not throwing a whole bunch of isms at people
and like creating a sort of huge litmus test for how you can join the movement. You're just saying, we're all neighbors here, wherever you're from. If you're here, we've got your back. And we're going to express that in all these different ways, whether it's like doing laundry for people who can't leave their homes, or dropping kids off at school, you know, or the, you know, images we've all seen of people trailing ice
and filming them. I mean, these are just acts of like, neighborliness and welcomingness and just sort of, there's a simplicity to it. And then when I look at the campaign that I'm Donny Rand here in New York, I think that it had the best of what we saw in ourselves during COVID. I've just like, I want to see the people who make this city run.
And I want to valorize them, like, you know, he did made this wonderful video about the night shift. Do you remember that one? I was like, he just went out in the middle of the night and just went to LaGuardia and to the Taxi line and just interviewed cab drivers. For South Asians growing up in New York City, Taxis were one of the ways we would see ourselves as part of the fabric city. Thank you, Madam.
Thank you. Much as Taxis have been celebrated as much as they've been woven into the most prominent examples of what it means to be in New Yorker or the films and the books that we all love about the city. I watched as did many New Yorkers as driver after driver was trapped. Thank you. And their struggles were simply overlooked by politicians.
You know, it's time to also speak to New Yorkers for whom the work they started like. It was just like, it's not just during a pandemic that the working class holds a New York city. No, everyone is so cynical about those early COVID days where people clapped for healthcare workers. But I actually think there was something really beautiful about what was being expressed. And like insisting on seeing the people who make the world work, hold the world up.
Now clapping is not enough. They also deserve wage increases and sick days and all kinds of things that you didn't get. But this is what I mean by that fork in the road that COVID represented. There could have been a breakthrough for labor rights.
You know, and all of the discussion about who essential workers were and all of that.
And I think that was very threatening to a lot of people.
“And that's why we're in this fascist alternate timeline.”
But what you see with them, I'm Donnie campaign is that didn't go away. You know, 100,000 volunteers. That is incredible. And it was all just people talking to their neighbors. It was another expression of neighborism.
And that kind of work that kind of just talking to your neighbors. It's not the work of jargon. It's like, what can we find to bond over? What's our quickest, fastest bond? And this is the other kind of doppelganger that I try to get at at the book.
It's like, we all contained doppelgangers in ourselves. Like, we are both this and that. The thing about politics is that it can light up different parts of ourselves. You know, you can have a politics that encourages the worst parts of yourself. And you can have a politics that says, hey, let's be that other part of you.
But I do think that what Mom Donnie showed was one way of doing that. I think you got 10% of people who voted for Trump. 10% a lot in a federal election.
“But you have to do it with economic populism.”
Trump promised to bring the jobs back. He promised to address cost of living. And if Democrats aren't credible in making that promise themselves. Then I don't think that they will be able or they'll be able to harvest it in one election cycle. And then it'll backlash again.
And also, I think climate action has to come back. It's nowhere in the political discussion. And that's not tangible because we are in a climate crisis. So we have to find a way of talking about climate. You know, I've used the phrase eco populism to think about.
Even something like free public transit that that's a municipal issue. Points to the fact that the climate movement made so many mistakes. Like, why didn't we make free public transit a climate policy? You know, it is a climate policy. It gets people out of cars.
We can have an electrified transit. And it addresses cost of living. And it makes life easier. And so I think that we need to focus on those types of policies. But the other thing I see happening is we are becoming afraid of our phones.
And it's really scary that the merger, like the Silicon Valley merger with the Trump administration, means that these devices and these platforms that sold themselves as our liberation.
You know, first we found out that they were tracking us to advertise to us.
But now we find out that they are integrated with the Trump administration.
All kinds of ways that we don't fully understand in terms of what data was ta...
What talent here is doing.
But what is emerging in real time is that there are profiles of us. And AI is super powering this. I guess what I'm saying is that people are deciding to touch grass both because they like grass. And also because they're becoming afraid of these devices that have flipped into very dangerous surveillance devices.
“I think we always knew the technology could do that.”
But now we're seeing it actually happen.
Yeah, I agree that that's going to be a tremendous generator of our politics going forward.
I think that's sense of, oh, we actually do need to be afraid now. It's very real. And I think that when either Democrats have enough power or there's a subsequent administration and you begin to have investigation on this era. Sapena power for the opposition in Congress, people going to court. What we are going to learn was happening. And certainly what was being attempted when whistleblowers did not as afraid as they probably are right now is going to really chill people.
It's sort of like with the abstinence.
There's a lot we don't currently know.
You can see hints of it. You can worry about it. But I think when the, you know, there's currently svipe between the Department of Fencing and Thropic because the Department of Fencing wants to make sure that in the AI it uses. It is extremely unconstrained in that use. What is being done in this sort of intersection of the government and Palantir, the government and trying to integrate gralk into our warfighting.
Yeah. I think it's going to give very scary. And what you were saying before about the sort of anger at tech workers who are sort of taking over these companies.
“I mean, I think it was exaggerated, but what wasn't exaggerated is that tech workers were saying we want to have a say in what we built, right?”
And they were, you know, there were contracts that were canceled because of tech worker organizing because they didn't want to be doing contracts with ISER or with US military. I think that that's fair. I think people should have a say in whether or not their labor and their creativity and their brilliance is going into a war machine that they don't support or into their own surveillance or into the deportation of their neighbors. So maybe that's another productive, you know, area of real worker empowerment.
I was thinking about as we were talking about AI and what it means to be human and what it means to have dignity in the economy that something that we're sort of dancing around there is the way economic logic has taken a lot over. And the way I think as that has kind of accelerated down a very disembodied technological path, now sort of culminating at some level AI. And I think there's something here about how many zones of life you can have a corporate and economic logic in crotch on.
“Yeah. And I think that some of what is going to emerge in all of this and it reflects what we're talking about by Arcade Junior in nature is just a sense of people want.”
They want alternatives to how things feel. I mean, that is partially policy. It's partially universal healthcare and expanded shell tax credits and, you know, free transit. But it's also partially just a recognition of values and aspirations and that it that it doesn't need to feel like this. Yeah, did you see that exchange between Joyce Carol Oates and novelist and Elon Musk? No.
It was this fascinating exchange, I wish I had the quote in front of me, but she just trolled him on his own site, you know, and said, isn't it interesting that you can have all the money in the world, but you don't never seem to post about the things that normal people like pets or a film they saw. Or a book they read or just like any of these sort of things like just basic enjoyment and really got on to Musk's skin and he started posting about movies for a while. But I do think that there is this divide where we like not only do we see it's just this incredibly bad behavior from the wealthiest people in the world who clearly don't deserve the reverence that they were given.
But we also see that they seem kind of miserable like incapable of enjoying everything that they have and there was this moment when Bezos is talking to William Shattner and William Shattner had just came down from one of Bezos's rockets. And he wanted to talk about what he had seen, like he was like, whoa, like it's mind blown, like you know, overview effect of like fragile blue marble and that's also like just wanted to like spray champagne.
It was like something is missing, like there's a sort of a fundamental failur...
Why are we not pausing to just be like, hey, like I know universities are perfect, but it was this idea that people could have a time in their life where they could just like read and think and shouldn't we have a conversation about whether or not we want to get rid of that whole concept.
“And so I think there is something in your, you know what you were saying before about the opportunities.”
I think there's a huge political opportunities to speak into that which is irreplaceable that which you can't put a price on.
I'm not a nationalist, but I referred to these tech oligarchs as traders because I think their traders to creation, I think that there's something broken where they're not actually appreciating the beauty of this world. And, you know, in the Epstein files, there's an exchange between I think it's ban and he really did not like Pope Francis. You know, Pope Francis really spoke into this with his encyclical, on ecology, like I think that he was such a remarkable leader and really identifying the need to connect the reverence for the natural world and its vulnerability as a spiritual duty.
And it's a profound betrayal, not to cherish the natural world. And what I see running through all of the emergent movements in this era, like whether it's the Madonna campaign or whether it's the anti-Is protest and Minneapolis or the data center movements is like this. We cherish where we live, we cherish our water, we cherish our land, our soil. The values of our city. Yeah, it's a rootedness and it's not a whitewash either.
Like people are rooting down where they are and learning their histories, including the really difficult history is right? Like there was a lot that's come out in Minneapolis, like birthplace of the American Indian movement. Minnesota was the site of the largest mass hanging in U.S. history of Dakota men. And sort of connecting that history with ICE, it's a live action history lesson, right? And it's looking backwards and forwards, I think, at the same time.
“And that's, I think, the moves that we need to be able to do is like, okay, where are we, where do we want to go?”
I think it's a good place to end. Always our final question. What are three books you'd recommend to the audience?
All right, so this is a little bit obvious, but Empire of AI. By Karen Howe, it's just such an incredible combination of just on the ground, globe, trotting investigative reporting, making the material inputs and human inputs of AI visible, but then it has this big idea thesis around Empire building, which I think is really true. I guess we've been talking around this, but my friend Molly Crabapple has an absolutely brilliant book coming out,
called Here where we live is our country, the story of the Jewish boomed, and it's available for preorder,
“comes out in April, and I think it gets at what an alternative story of hereness could be,”
of really committing to here, which is what the Jewish labor boom was doing before, between the wars.
And the third book is called Fire alarm, reading Walter Benjamin's on the concept of history by Michael Lowey.
And Walter Benjamin is the text that he wrote right before he took his own life, fleeing the Gestapo in 1940, and it gets at this idea of the way history doesn't repeat but compounds in Benjamin's term, piling wreckage upon wreckage. Naomi Klein, thank you very much. Thank you so much, Ezra.
[music] This episode of Ezra Clonches produced by Jack McCordek, factually my Michelle Harris. Our senior audio engineer is Jeff Gellbe, with additional mixing by Alman Sauta. Our executive producer is Claire Gordon. The show's production team also includes Annie Galvin, Marie Casione, Marina King, Roland Who,
Kristen Lynn, Emma Kelback, and Yon Kobel, original music by Pat McCusher, audience strategy by Christina Simulusky and Shannon Busta. The director of New York Times opinion audio is Annie Rose Strasser. [music]

