Selects: What are think tanks all about? - podcast episode cover

Selects: What are think tanks all about?

Jun 01, 202446 min
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Episode description

Think tanks? More like stink tanks! We're kidding. Think tanks do valuable work, when they operate in a non-partisan way of course. Learn all about the history of these heady institutions in this classic episode.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Hey, everybody. Josh here and for this week's Select I've chosen our episode on think tanks from September twenty eighteen. It's a common misconception that our elected officials in Washington and the state capitals and everywhere else make the laws and the policy that they introduce. In most cases, they do not do that. That's up to special interest groups. And once upon a time, think tanks were one of those groups. And even accounting for political bent, the policy

they suggested lawmakers was sound and unbiased. It was good stuff, in other words. But that's not the case any longer. As we learned in this episode, think tanks are open for business and the US is far the worse off for it. Hope you enjoy this episode. Hope it opens your eyes.

Speaker 2

Welcome to Stuff you Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio.

Speaker 1

Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark, Charles w Chuck Bryant, and Jerry's over there actually sitting in today, and this is stuff you should know about think tanks, the thinking this kind of tanks. There are fish tanks. They don't think at all, well, they barely think. They think. This water feels a little warm for me, and then they think what's water, what's being wet? And then that's about it.

Speaker 2

And then they're like, how about some of those tasty flakes?

Speaker 1

Yeah, give me some, and that's its. Think tanks. There's a lot more thinking going on in these.

Speaker 2

Kind of tanks, more like stink tanks.

Speaker 1

It depends on your opinion, and that's everybody's opinion. So yes, I guess they are more like stink tanks these days.

Speaker 2

This is one of those weird ones where I for forty seven years, I've just sort of had this. I never dug in on what a think tank was. I hear it, and now I kind of assumed I knew what it was.

Speaker 1

I was kind of right, yeah, yeah, yeah, it's good. It's a good term for something.

Speaker 2

Yeah. I was like with this, is this like a bunch of smart people sitting around thinking about smart stuff?

Speaker 1

Exactly? That's kind of right, That's exactly what it is. It's ideally, it's like a place where people sit around and think about things that eventually hopefully affects public policy in a positive way, is what you're ultimately hoping for.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and by think we don't mean if you went by a think tank, they would all just be sitting around going hmmm.

Speaker 1

I think it depends on the day of the week or if it's right after lunch.

Speaker 2

Like, there's a ton of research and study. Oh, I see it, stuff like that.

Speaker 1

They're not just pulling stuff out of thin air.

Speaker 2

No.

Speaker 1

No, that's the point of think tanks is they are groups of people, nonprofit organizations. In the US we should say.

Speaker 2

Yeah, which we'll get to the finer points of that.

Speaker 1

Who say, you know what, we see this problem in America and or the world or wherever. Great Britain has plenty of China has a bunch, and they say, how can we solve this problem? Let's get too. We're going to take this problem on and figure it out through pragmatic science and evidence based research. We're going to come up with a solution to this problem. And then the next step is to get it out there to the public,

to policymakers, to get people talking about it. And then once enough people talk about it and there's a public debate over it, ideally, if it's a good idea, it will be adopted as public policy and that problem will be solved in a good way.

Speaker 2

Yeah, And that's the ideal function of an ideal think tank, which is to say, it is nonpartisan, it is fact based, and it doesn't have an agenda necessarily. But things have changed over the years, as we will see.

Speaker 1

Fairly recently, Chuck seems like.

Speaker 2

And think tanks can be very much slanted. But we'll get into all that. That's just sort of a long winded setup.

Speaker 1

Okay, that was a good man.

Speaker 2

Should we go back and check on our buddy Plato?

Speaker 1

So great?

Speaker 2

Yeah, so Plato his academy. The Academy was some people say it was sort of the world's first think tank, which makes sense. Yeah. He would get dudes and they would sit around in the garden and I would imagine drink wine and talk smarts and philosophy and kind of you know, like it was high minded stuff for the day, to sit around and think about sort of what was going on around them and how they could impact change.

Speaker 1

Yeah, or thinking about the nature of reality or existence. They once decided that knowledge was uncertain and life is essentially a craps game based on probability rather than absolute truth. If you step back and think about it, that is the basis of quantum mechanics.

Speaker 2

Could you imagine if they had access to LSD back then.

Speaker 1

I know, I don't think it would have been too terribly different.

Speaker 2

Well, yeah, they were sort of traveling down that road anyway.

Speaker 1

But that was I mean, that's pretty impressive some of the stuff they came up with. This is again, you know, we did a skeptics episode, skepticism episode or no, I'm sorry, not skepticism, stoicism and remember this is oh yeah, this is where this stuff was. All these different philosophies were all like kind of grew from this academy. So yeah, you can make a pretty good case that it was

the world's first think tank. Yeah, it's a little it's not the first modern think tank, but it qualifies in a lot of ways.

Speaker 2

No, there was one. In eighteen thirty one in Great Britain, the Duke of Wellington established what was called the Royal United Services Institution.

Speaker 1

Which studied like military science.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and then here in the US in nineteen ten the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Speaker 1

Which studied the results of military science.

Speaker 2

Right, and that's still around Carnegie, man, I mean, they still have endowed many things.

Speaker 1

They're well in doubt, they are very well doubt.

Speaker 2

And then of course the Brookings Institution which may be the most famous modern American think tank to this day. This is one you probably hear about the most. It was founded by Robert Brookings in nineteen sixteen, and they had a lot of I mean, they still have a lot of influence, but they had a great deal of influence kind of post depression with FDR's New Deal, helped construct the New Deal, helped construct the Marshall Plan after World War Two.

Speaker 1

That was huge.

Speaker 2

Yoh, very huge. So like both were for sure.

Speaker 1

The New Deal definitely was. But the Marshall Plan is there was a survey done of I think like four hundred and fifty historians and the number one most important thing that any government has done since World War Two, between World War Two and the twenty first century was the Marshall Plan. Like it not only like brought Europe back from World War Two, it set Europe on a path away from communism. Yeah, where if you're not into communism,

that was a great positive benefit, right Yeah. And the way it did that was in two years, based on this economic plan. In two years, it got Europe war ravaged World War two ravaged Europe back to production levels twenty five percent higher than the production levels it was at before World War Two in two years, so it just went back to normal plus twenty five percent better, and Europe said, I kind of like this capitalism thing, and Western Europe went that way.

Speaker 2

I was kind of curious because Brookings, the Brookings Institution gets a lot of like left leaning criticism today, so

I kind of wonder where that all came from. And the article I read said that is a victory of the conservative side to have Brookings labeled liberal just from kind of pounding it the press, even though it's history and its member board throughout the history has not been liberal at all, and it has been filled from the top down over the years with rank and file Republicans and conservatives from like the Reagan era on through Bush one and two.

Speaker 1

Oh okay, so they've gotten it across as liberal so that liberals will swallow the stuff that Brookings is putting out there. No, I know what they undermine their own think tank.

Speaker 2

Well, I don't think it's not their own think tank. It's not a conservative think tank.

Speaker 1

Well, it's centric. It's like almost right down the middle for.

Speaker 2

Me, right, But I think they want to advance their own with their conservative thing tanks. They want to advance them, so they label Brookings as super liberal.

Speaker 1

I got you, So anything centrist is liberal.

Speaker 2

I think I got the way it's going down.

Speaker 1

That's what it is.

Speaker 2

Yeah.

Speaker 1

I can't remember who scored it, but somebody has a liberal score between zero and one hundred for think tanks, and Brookings scored like a fifty three, right down the middle. Like, apparently, as far as think tanks go, it's about as centrist as you possibly can get.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and they've been around for a long time. Yeah, makes a lot of sense.

Speaker 1

Yep, So not just Brookings. Brookings is definitely one of the most famous around the world and has done quite a bit of stuff, but there's plenty of others. There's the Rand Corporation is a very famous think tank, which did you know. Rand is actually a I don't know what you'd call it, but it's supposed to. It started out as R and D Research and Development RAND Corporation, and from what I understand, they've come up with the ideas for computers, the Internet, spy satellites, the Space program,

all that stuff that America did in the mid twentieth century. Technologically, yes, yeah, the RAND Corporation, like thinkers, were the ones who came up with this stuff.

Speaker 2

Yeah, I think I knew some of that, and I don't think it fully hit home that they were a think tank. Yeah, with the name like the Rancore Right sounds like just a corporation.

Speaker 1

But they're they're like a think tank that's really specifically or was specifically zoned into America's technology progression. I guess.

Speaker 2

Yeah. I mean a lot of think tanks can be specialized like that, Like some are very very much just concentrate on economics, some concentrate on social issues in that case technology, and then I think some like Brookings are sort of a little more broad. Yeah, they'll they'll take.

Speaker 1

Any case, right, they'll take all comer.

Speaker 2

Yeah.

Speaker 1

So after World War Two, like there were think tanks before, like you said, Brookings, Carnegie, the Royal United Services Institute in the UK, there were, like there were think tanks prior to World War Two, but after World War Two they really proliferated. And the reason they started was government was just kind of government it was in the in the early twentieth century. It was just just this. It

was It wasn't anything like you see it now. It wasn't this monolithic behemoth that has its tendrils in every aspect of people's lives or anything. It was a little too far the other way where it didn't quite know what it was doing. So some of those early philanthropists like Carnegie and Brookings, they endowed these think tanks to kind of help government out, to basically be like the research arm for government to help direct the best way for America to go. And that's how it started out.

And then after World War Two, when America had like all this cash and all this forward momentum, think tanks really popped up and there were all these kind of competing and then sometimes harmonious voices from these think tanks to say go this way, go this way, let's go

this way. But they all had something in common, and that was that they were staffed by very smart people who did very deliberate, very good research, who produced policy pusicians that lawmakers could then take themselves and go out to the people and say, see, this is what I'm talking about, here's the data, here's a SoundBite for you to make you all understand it. That's what things tanks did, and in a way they very much were along the same track as lobby lobbyists which we did an episode

on that that was pretty good too. But think tanks stopped short of lobbying allegedly.

Speaker 2

Yeah, because they kind of had to. Starting in nineteen thirteen, they were granted tax exempt status, which is a very big deal because there's a lot of money involved in many of these.

Speaker 1

I've been trying to get that for myself for years, Sax, and you're right, it is a very big deal.

Speaker 2

The Church of Josh just get it going.

Speaker 1

That's so I'm wearing this robe right now.

Speaker 2

In the nineteen fifties, though, is when Congress really kind of because they were tax exempt, had to get involved and say, hey, listen, you got to walk a line here. You politically, you can't if you want to keep this tax exemption. Now, yeah, we for sure do. They said, you can't be partisan, it's got to be good information. You can't slant things a certain way or support officially support or endorsed candidates. You are here to educate with

your objective work. And that went along for a while, and then we started getting think tanks that set out to do just that, which they are called advocacy think tanks now, which I'm not sure how they managed to skirt unless they change the rules, skirt those rules and say hey, we're going to be a conservative think tank or liberal think tank and still be tax exempt.

Speaker 1

The do you know, The only thing that I can tell is that they're still technically producing a public good, or if they believe that they're producing a public good, even if they have conservative alignment or a liberal alignment. They're trying to move society along in a way that they think is good or for the betterment of society.

Speaker 2

That's what stuff you should know is, dude, That's what I've been telling I mean, could we be a think tank?

Speaker 3

No?

Speaker 1

Absolutely not. I mean think about it, like I mean, I guess we could. I think that there's a I don't. Okay, let me take that back. No, we absolutely couldn't because we.

Speaker 2

Can't be brought to you by.

Speaker 1

We don't have we don't have time. I don't know, that's a good question, but we don't have. Yeah, you couldn't advertise and have like you couldn't get advertiser money and be tax exempt.

Speaker 2

That's just yeah. Like I doubt if the Brookings institutions papers have like Burger King coupons on them.

Speaker 1

You never know they should So we'll get to why we can't be later on. Okay, But one of the things about about think tanks is they're they're the reason they have a tax exempt status is what they're doing is producing work that furthers the public good. Yeah, that's why they're supposed to have tax exempt status. What you're pointing out is a really good thing to point out. Wait a minute, there's a lot of stuff here that

they could lose their tax exempt status for. And if we fast forward to three or five years from now, I think we're going to start seeing them lose tax exempt status. They just haven't yet, I think, is what it is.

Speaker 2

Yeah, because some of them flat out like it's so obvious when they come around, Like when the Democrats were beaten in two thousand, they got together and they started left leaning thinkers got together and started the Center for American Progress, which is an economic organization. It says this nonpartisan, but it literally says as a quote, their goal is to develop new policy ideas, critique the policy that stems from conservative values, challenges the media to cover the issues

that truly matter and shape the national debate. So it's they're kind of flat out saying like we're out to prove not just have an opinion about maybe that's a distinction, out to prove that conservative economic values are bad for the country. Basically, Yeah, is that the difference. Maybe here's our data.

Speaker 1

I honestly don't know, dude.

Speaker 2

It's not a bunch of op eds thrown together.

Speaker 1

It's so No, it's not supposed to just be op eds. It's supposed to be backed by data. Yeah, but I mean like Center for American Progress or like the Heritage Foundation, or like ALEC, the American Legislative Exchange Council, like these are like and we're going to do a whole episode just on ALEC one day. Okay, seriously, Yeah, but they're like little They're like Kareem abdul Jabbar, like karate training islands for liberals or for conservatives or for rich billionaire followers,

like it doesn't matter, Like that's what they are. They come up with new ideas to push their agenda, and then they train activists to go out and get that message out, to change people's minds, to get themselves on CNN or Fox News or whatever, right, and to shape the public discussion on something. It has a lot of the contours of what think tanks used to have.

Speaker 2

Yeah, but there's this whole.

Speaker 1

Other layer of like like seeing you and gristle there that think tanks aren't supposed to have.

Speaker 2

Should we take a break? Sure, all right, we'll take a break and we'll talk a little bit more about the Heritage Foundation right after this. All right, nineteen eighties, the Heritage Foundation, which you briefly mentored, mentored.

Speaker 1

Sure, that's the new mentioned before.

Speaker 2

Before we broke. They came about and we broke a long time ago. They said, all right, teen eighties, we got Ronald Reagan in there. He is watching movies or asleep most of the time, so we have a good opportunity. That's how they want you to think he has a good Did you see the numbers about his movie watching?

Speaker 1

No?

Speaker 2

Oh man, it's great. What like a movie fan? It's great?

Speaker 1

How many movies did he watch? Your day?

Speaker 2

He watched a lot of movies.

Speaker 1

And this is like back when they just had like reels, right, films, trips.

Speaker 2

I guess they probably just you know, cued the projector when he and Nancy wanted to watch a good old fashioned western. Oh that was a good starring me.

Speaker 1

Can you do the rest of the episode as.

Speaker 2

No, So they came along and they said, all right, Reagan's in office, here are our recommendations. What UPI would call a blueprint for grabbing the government by its frayed New Deal lapels and shaking out forty eight years of liberal policy. And it came by way of two thousand, more than two thousand recommendations.

Speaker 1

Yeah, and they tried to institute about two thirds of them.

Speaker 2

Yeah, was like, great, here's my thanks for the outline for what I should do.

Speaker 1

Right my plans.

Speaker 2

Yeah, so two thirds, like he said during his two terms, is what he tried to implement. And then, of course when Bill Clinton gets in there, the Progressive Policy Institute, I don't know if it was two thousand plus, but they offered similar recommendations. And that's how it goes with think tanks right now.

Speaker 1

Yeah, because if you're a lawmaker, and again we said this in the Lobbying episode two, you're not necessarily like some smart whip crack sharp person.

Speaker 2

No, I think we've seen that played out.

Speaker 1

You can just like get people to vote for you, Yeah, on both sides of the aisle. Just a crack at like you know Trump or anything.

Speaker 2

Oh no, no, no, I mean all up and down the House and Senate.

Speaker 3

Right.

Speaker 2

You don't like to think they're all geniuses, but they're not.

Speaker 1

They're not. No, And you don't have to be smart to hold office. You just have to get people to vote for you. Again, which is why think tanks have flourished for so long while lobbyists have flourished for so long, because they're the ones who do the research and write the policy and say, yeah, here you go, you want to go look smart, here you go, buddy. We even like highlighted some sound bites for you to go say to people and get the get into the twenty four hour news cycle.

Speaker 2

Yeah.

Speaker 1

And that's one of the big roles that think tanks play today is by and have you know, especially since World War Two, is by going to policymakers and being like, here's your agenda, take your leave as much as you want. But all of this is back by data, like it dovetails with what you want to do with the country, and it is just gangbusters stuff. Yeah, high quality, well researched stuff.

Speaker 2

Yeah. It's really interesting because I think there are still think tanks that only craft, only do research and present it and say do what you will with it, but those seem to be more and more gone by the wayside.

Speaker 1

Yeah, twenty ten was a real watershed year. It feels like for think tanks.

Speaker 2

Yeah, like you mentioned ALEX, which are going to cover in full, but I mean they are a bill writing organization. They call them model bills. But I mean when when you hear a senator or something said, you know, we crafted this legislation, well, that probably means is an organization like ALEC handed them the legislation and said here, you know, here it is if you want to use it, right, and you probably should want to use it.

Speaker 1

That's so. That is so ALEC, I think does in many ways qualify as a think tank. They're not one hundred percent standard think tank, but actually writing the law. Yeah, and for the lawmaker to go and go into Congress and introduce it as their own bill, right, that's a little beyond what think tanks to think tanks more like write a paper that says, here's this problem in America, here are some ideas to solve it. Here's this research to back up those ideas, go write a law based

on it. What things like ALEC does is take it a step further. But ALEX still qualifies as a think tank, and ALEC is part of something called the State Policy Network, Yeah, which apparently there's one in every state and Puerto Rico. And they're like a confederation of think tanks that basically sit around and figure out ways to sue local, state and federal lawmakers over laws, to try to get laws overturned.

Like they use the courts rather than the legislation, but it's still the stated goal is to affect public policy and turn it in one direction or another.

Speaker 2

Yeah, what was what was the website that you sent that watch? Yeah? Sourcewatch called them called ALEC a corporate to Bill mill, right, So they are just churning out hundreds of bills a year. Not all of them get used, but many of them do. And it's just I don't know, I don't think a lot of Americans realize that a lot of actual legislative policy is being written by McDonald's. Yeah, exactly. It's crazy.

Speaker 1

I can't wait to do the ALQ one. We're both going to be well, our cars are going to blow up right after, but by god, we're going to get that episode.

Speaker 2

Maybe we should make that our like last episode in the year. Whatever. What's twenty years.

Speaker 1

From now two thousand.

Speaker 2

No, that was eighteen years ago. Okay, I used to love that bit though. Yeah, all right, so we got to talk about money here, got because this they are not the independent most times these days they are not the independent organizations that you think they are. Uh. They used to be funded by these endowments, and more and more it's it's corporations, large businesses. Sometimes private individuals of course will give. And sometimes it's a great workaround for

campaign finance laws. Instead of directing you know, you know, tens of millions of dollars like you can't do to a campaign, you can throw it in a think tank that will probably get a better result anyway.

Speaker 1

That's new the time was. It used to be like in my day, right, a rich philanthropist would say, I hate poverty and the effects it has on Americans. Go figure this out. I'm going to fund a think tank, and that's what you're dedicated to. I like, just go make that happen. And that's what think tanks were originally born from. And that's largely the only kind of oversight they worked under is they were trying to end poverty or they were trying to work against communism, like these

huge haughty goals. Yeah, now they're being micromanaged. That's one thing that's happening to them.

Speaker 2

Yeah, And the idea that these think tanks are not swayed or influence or affected by their donors is not true. And the sort of the biggest problem going is that now you have legislation being drawn up by think tanks because corporations are paying money to get research that looks like it's in their favor.

Speaker 1

Yeah. So one of the problems is the like, there's not as many philanthropists who are just endowing think tanks with no strings attached anymore. There are plenty of philanthropists out there still that are funding think tanks, but their donations are directed, their results oriented. They're very technocratic, right, they want to see bang for their buck. Whereas before it was just like to make America a better place and that was it. There wasn't a lot.

Speaker 2

Of like.

Speaker 1

Nobody's feet were being held to the fire, you know. Now it's like, we want you to further this specific agenda, which is we want to make sure that Saint Louis's children there's not a single one malnourished any longer, which

is great. It's a great goal. There's nothing wrong with that goal, but it's just so very narrowed and tay and there's ways that you can hold the think tank accountable, which is good in one hand, but it's also basically the introduction of like a corporate management to think tanks, which that's not really how they were originally formed, and it's having a weird effect on them. So think tanks are starting to say, all right, thank you for this money,

We'll go save the children of Saint Louis. And by the way, shout out to Saint Louis. That was a great show.

Speaker 2

That what a cool down.

Speaker 1

So again, saving the children of Saint Louis good stuff, But we've got all this other stuff we want to do too, So to keep that going, we're going to have to also go find sources elsewhere, right, and again you can find them from other people, but one of the places they're finding them from his corporations, and that is having a big negative impact on think tanks right now.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and it goes both ways. In the past, you know, eight or ten years, conservative billionaires of says that here they funneled one hundred and twenty million dollars to about one hundred grew and think tanks to do things like discredit climate change science, which I mean, dude, I know.

Speaker 1

The Koch Brothers and Exon Mobile specifically funded a couple of think tanks called Atlas Economic Research Foundation and the International Policy Network to basically to basically question the science behind climate change to further fossil fuel interests, which is, see you guys in hell for that one. Like that, What a crummy legacy to leave on Earth just to make a few extra bucks. Forget future generations they can

all burn. Forget all the endangered species that are on the brink of extinction that are oh wait no, they're now extinct. It doesn't matter because we made a few extra billion dollars. Yeah, that's that's despicable.

Speaker 2

Well, what it's funny. I just watched the movie Chinatown for a movie crush episode and there's that. You ever seen that?

Speaker 1

Yeah?

Speaker 2

You know a lot of that movie is about It was originally titled Water and Power, you know, because it's about, you know, this weird political situation in Los Angeles in nineteen thirties where they were diverting water to the valley which was a desert and all these rich fat cats that were getting the water diverted. There were buying up land in the valley like hundreds of thousands of acres because they knew it was going to be a lush green valley soon. So all that really happened in La

Chinatown was based on that. But there's that great scene when Jack Nicholson is Jake Gettis, confronts John Houston about you know, he's the big bad guy Noah Cross and he says, you know, how much money do you need? How much how many more things can you buy? Or this or that? And he says, what are you trying to secure? And he looked at him and he said,

the future, mister Gettis, And that's what it is. They're not after more billions to buy more plain in a bigger house, right, They're trying to leave that they that's what they want out of their legacy. Is they're trying to affect the future and in their own specific way, right.

Speaker 1

But they're affecting the future in the worst way.

Speaker 2

Possible according to us. And the problem is not according to them, sure, you know, but if.

Speaker 1

You if you pull enough people and just ask them plainly, if you took money and billionaires in power and sure and all that out of it. Do you want a better future for humanity and for earth? Yeah, one hundred years from now, I would guess the majority of people would say yes. And if you can say, well, these guys are actually doing the opposite of ensuring that right right now, how do you feel about that? Most people would say I don't feel so great about that.

Speaker 2

Yeah.

Speaker 1

The problem is is most people would also follow up with, but what can we do?

Speaker 2

Right?

Speaker 1

They're rich, and that's a great point. Let me what can you do?

Speaker 2

Let me hop back on Facebook and find a goat video.

Speaker 1

Right. That's when the hopelessness sets in. And that's what's causing the paralysis in our world right now, is hopelessness. That's not grim at all of it. By the way, everybody, be sure to listen to my new podcast, The End of the World with Josh Clark.

Speaker 2

Yeah.

Speaker 1

It's a really.

Speaker 2

Uplifting coming very soon.

Speaker 1

Yeah, coming this fall sometime eventually.

Speaker 2

Just stuck up on your happy bills. So. In twenty thirteen, however, on the other side, left leaning weekly magazine The Nation revealed the positions of the left leaning Center for American Progress and other thing tanks in DC are shaped by interest of their donors. So it happens on both sides of the aisle for sure.

Speaker 1

Yeah oh yeah, yeah, No, it's an equal opportunity screwing that the world is getting from lobbying from think tanks from wealthy interests. Like, it's it's both both sides.

Speaker 2

Yeah. So they're effectively unregistered lobbyist organizations now to a large degree, because they're tax exempt, they're not obligated to release financial statements or reveal their donors. So I'm surprised it took that long for people to be like, wait a minute, we can really take advantage here.

Speaker 1

So let's take another break and then we'll get well, it will spell out what the advantages are of hiring a think tank. All right, Chuck, we're back. I'm a little warm under the collar.

Speaker 2

I feel like we should mention this thing with the Walton Family Foundation quickly, because that's interesting.

Speaker 1

I think this is a great example of what a think tank can do these days.

Speaker 2

Yeah, it's obviously the Sam Walton family of walm aren't fame. They fund a lot of conservative think tanks. I think most people know that. But then they also fund funded one and think tanks backed by Barack Obama when it came to the Affordable health Care Act, and you're like, wait a minute, why would they do something like that

if they're a conservative family supporting conservative causes. Then you do a little poking around and it turns out that critics would say that the healthcare bill that forced employers to pay for their employees healthcare tax. Walmart was like, this is great because we can afford to do this, but our mom and pop competitors can't. So we're actually

going to try and get this push through. Even though at its face it doesn't quite make a lot of sense, it makes sense to them, like why would Walmart take on the cost of their employees' healthcare because they know that they.

Speaker 3

Can go back to sleep. Everybody, Yeah, stop asking quests. Really interesting, it is, it's fascinating. But that's one thing you can do is donate to a think tank that's furthering your agenda. And because think tanks are now largely agenda driven, there's a lot of think tanks out there that can help you out. And there's a new thing that's happening with think tanks these days is they're starting

to solicit corporate donations. And one of the saddest stories is the story of the Brookings Institution, the most centrist think tank that has put out the Marshall Plan that helped figure out the New Deal and how it addressed

the depression, like has done all this amazing stuff. Is now they hired a lobbyist for their strategic development chief and they're now soliciting corporate donations left and right, and they're basically this is what you can get, Like if you hire a think tanker, I'm sorry, you're not supposed to say higher. If you enter into a part ownership or donate to a think tank and your corporation, we're a very wealthy person. What the think tank will do is they will basically get your ideas out there.

Speaker 1

They will deploy. So first of all, let's say there's this really great New York Times article about the what was the name of that company, the Lenar Corporation. Okay, they wanted to build in San Francisco. They wanted to redevelop the site in San Francisco, which whatever, apparently there was pushback on it or they were getting some sort of pushback from the residents of San Francisco. So I guess the Brookings Institution went to them and said, hey,

we've got some ideas for you. We can support this as basically like a great idea for cities of the future, and we're going to lend the credibility of our experts in our think tank to your project. Yeah, and make it like a champion kind of thing, like a blue type and archetype for how to further cities in America your development problem.

Speaker 2

It's it.

Speaker 1

They're home builders, but with Brookings Institution behind it, there was a veneer of something bigger than building homes, bigger than redeveloping, something about the future and progress, and Brookings like went to them and in exchange for four hundred grand Brookings added this credibility to it, got talking heads out there on the news to talk up this development

and like what it meant for the future. And one of the other things they did and can do is they can set up summits conferences on cities of the future and get the home builders and lawmakers into the same room to hang out together. And so that's lobbying. Sure, there's no other way to put it. That is lobbying. And they were doing it on behalf of a specific corporation, there should be no tax exemption whatsoever any longer. It

doesn't matter what side of the aisle you're on. If you're a taxpayer, you are funding that by by through these tax exemptions, because we put the bill for tax deduction. Sure, so if a single corporation's interests are being served, even if society in general is benefiting in some way, that's too much of a slippery slope that breaks the tax exemption status. And then that that should go away. And that,

sadly is apparently where Brookings the direction Brookings is going. Yeah, and others too, I should.

Speaker 2

Say, oh sure, sure, even the ones that aren't maybe as outright are aren't as bald faced about this stuff. Like a lot of scholars say that you know, bought and paid for research is sort of the exception. Still, But even even so, there's still places where you know, you may not you may not push out certain research if you think you're might piss off your boss.

Speaker 1

Yeah, which is the same thing.

Speaker 2

Or sort of self censor yourself if you think, like, oh man, I don't know, like we're getting donations now, like this might not ease them.

Speaker 1

It might make them look bad. So I probably should just avoid this conclusion.

Speaker 2

Yeah, so maybe not of like completely inventing a study or something, but being very selective in what you choose to research or how you research it or what you release. Sure is, you know, it's another version of the same thing.

Speaker 1

It totally is. And one of the other things that they've been found to do a lot of think tanks, or one of the new things that think tanks do, is they will circulate drafts before there's a final draft two donors like what do you think about this? And sometimes their opinions will be incorporated into the final draft. That is the antithesis of the spirit of think tanks and what they were originally meant to do. They were supposed to be like, here's the facts, here's the research

to back it up. It is what it is. We think you can apply it to make the world better in this way, not what you know, What do you guys think does this jibe with the kind of sinks you've selected for this redevelopment, because we can change this part to jibe with the sinks you you know, that's

just not what it's supposed to be. And the reason that think tanks are doing this is they are in existential danger through the death of expertise that I remember I talked about in the Elimination Diet episode.

Speaker 2

Yeah.

Speaker 1

The problem is, it's not like America just said, we're sick of expertise. We're tired of you experts, like you're always right, and we're tired of hearing you're always right. People got tired of being lied to and misled and misinformed and manipulated, and they finally said, you know what, experts, that's enough. Enough of you are full of it. Enough of you have let your credibility be co opted. We're just not going to listen to any of you anymore

because we don't know who to trust. And the experts brought about the death of expertise themselves in large parts.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and there's another Uh. There was this article from the Washington Post called or think tanks Obsolete, which sort of argues along those lines about and also incorporates the Internet and the length of like a research cycle, like with the Internet and Twitter and Facebook and things like

ted Talks. There's a guy, Donald Abelson, a professor at University of Western Ontario, wrote a book called The Thing Tanks Matter, where his conclusion basically is that the marketplace of ideas he says has become congested and you don't have time anymore to do a twelve month research proposal to come to the following conclusions when one hundred ted talks over that twelve months will be published. Not picking on ted talks are great.

Speaker 1

No, it's a good example though.

Speaker 2

But you can push out of ted talk. You can push out a Facebook live video as an economist and have a lot of sway. They mentioned in here in the article about vaccines, for instance, as far as it goes with the vaccines, the Rank Corporation, one of the largest thing tanks that we already mentioned, they did like a very thorough deep dive in research debunking the notion that vaccines cause autism, and it took a long time.

But you can get on Facebook and go to a group called Educate before you vaccinate and watch videos by non experts, and people are swayed these days by this stuff. Yeah, like why wait, you know, the news cycle is so shortened you can't wait for a long, deep dive research paper to come out with some abstract summary that no one reads anyway, And apparently now they're you know, they're written in such a way where they will just say, abstract summary, this stinks, we shouldn't do it. You know,

they've become so opinionated. I don't know, man, It's just it's depressing to think that Facebook and Twitter have outsized a think tank as far as they definitely have influence.

Speaker 1

Yeah, and YouTube and basically anything that gives a voice to the average person, which on the one hand is really cool and great.

Speaker 2

Sort of democratizes it in a way, but in the worst way at times.

Speaker 1

But it's tied into this death of expertise in a really toxic manner, you know what I'm saying, Like the two that democratization of like giving everybody like a mouthpiece, is not in and of itself like a bad thing, but when since it coincided with a loss and trust and experts and expertise, that's where the problem came from. And that was the reason why we couldn't be a

think tank. Sadly, we could be a think tank now, but we couldn't be a bonafide think tank because, Chuck, we don't have enough time in any given week to do so much thorough primary source research into stuff. If we release one of these every couple of months. Sure we could be like a real think tank, but it wouldn't be nearly fun.

Speaker 2

Six episodes a year. People would love.

Speaker 1

That, Yeah, they'd love it. You got anything else?

Speaker 2

Nope, I guess either.

Speaker 1

Sorry for going off everybody, Thanks for listening. I'm sure I'll get some email, but what evs It is worth it. If you want to know more about think tanks, well, I don't know, go on the internet and look up some think tanks and see if there's any that you agree with. A lot of them have like daily interpretations of news that kind of go through their lens. Yeah,

it's a way to keep up with things. Sure, and you can also read this article on how stuff works, just not a think tank called how think tanks work. And since I said that it's time for listener mail.

Speaker 2

I'm going to call this a Ballpoint pen addiction or just pin addiction. Hey guys, been listening for a couple of months or so, New listener, You were my first foray into podcasts. I just really enjoy listening to you too.

Speaker 1

Welcome.

Speaker 2

I saw the Ballpoint Pin podcast and I could not pass it up. I have a bit of a pin problem, you see. I own many mini pins, especially the gel type inc roller ballpins. Way to Go, you got taken a task a few people who were just like Josh Clark, heresy gel pins. Yeah, there are a lot of I guess traditionalists to boo poo.

Speaker 1

That I think they're great. I got a lot of support for that one.

Speaker 2

Too, agreed, We got a lot of pin recommendations. It was good to see. Yeah, and here's another one. I own many many pins, especially the gel ink rollerball pins. I also own a collection of sharpiees and various tip withs and colors. I probably have a couple of gallon sized ziploc Bagsworth. You mentioned the way certain pins ride on certain types of paper. I think it's probably the rollerball gel pins that were best on the thermal paper that they use in most restaurants. Remember I was talking

about signing the check. I think it's what she's talking.

Speaker 1

We still never found out what that thing's called.

Speaker 2

Thermal paper.

Speaker 1

No, No, the thing that the check comes out in the little portfolio.

Speaker 2

The clamshell. Someone actually said, did you see that? Yeah, this great couple send in a picture of a clamshell check delivery system. What are they called?

Speaker 1

I don't know.

Speaker 2

Check cat.

Speaker 1

We're gonna we're gonna name them clamshells now all right, that's the new name for him.

Speaker 2

So I have a favorite pin, though, guys. I buy them by the box. It's the Pilot V ball B green pin, the point five millimeter. Okay. I love the way they feel when they write. I can't go back to ballpoint pins. I use them at work. I carry at least three in my bag and I draw on doodle with them. Using them on a newsprint pad is my favorite thing when doing word art.

Speaker 3

Nice.

Speaker 2

Sorry for the ramble, guys, have a great day. That is from Davini M. Barry, Davini Berry, Davini M Berry, M Berry. I wasn't going okay.

Speaker 1

Well, I didn't know if Davini's middle initial was M, or if I was miss hearing you in Davini and Barry.

Speaker 2

It's actually Divina, excuse me, Divina M Berry. If I would have said Divina M Berry, that would have been much more clear. Or Mberry, it might be Divina Mbury. Was it say Divina or Davina?

Speaker 1

Oh God? How about d E? Thanks d E.

Speaker 2

It's d I.

Speaker 1

At any rate, we're glad that you started listening to us. We appreciate it. Thanks for taking the time to let us know about your pen addiction. Totally fine with us. If you want to let us know about something you're super into, you can hang out with us on social meds. You can go to stuff youshould Know dot com and find all of our social media links. You can also send us an email to stuff podcast at HowStuffWorks dot com. Stuff you Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio.

Speaker 2

For more podcasts my heart Radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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