¶ Introduction
There's a huge civil war going on on the right right now. And the question is, you know, what what direction is the country gonna go? I certainly think that hiring Candace is probably the biggest mistake of my professional life so far. I've asked Candice on two separate occasions, what do you actually believe? And on both occasions she told me, I believe what the people believe
I am the voice of the people. But she's essentially she's articulating audience capture as a virtue. She's now talking about doing expose documentaries on Charlie Kirk's widow. You know, that's that is evil. I see a huge alignment between, you know, Antifa Thugs tearing down statues of Christopher Columbus and George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, and people on the so-called new right.
Saying that Churchill is the chief villain of the Second World War or that America shouldn't have used uh the atomic bomb to end the Second World War, that's just rhetorically tearing down our statues. In the same way that Antifa is physically tearing down our statutes, I think that Tucker is doing an enormous amount of damage to the Trump coalition. I don't say this lightly. Last summer, Constantine and I spent a week with Ralston College students and professors in Greece.
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dot ac forward slash apply. Jeremy Boring, welcome to Trigonometry. Man, happy to be here. It's great to have you on. We've been meaning to have you on for the first time. In fact, I believe where the first video interview you were doing Since leaving the Daily Wire? Yes. Uh this is my first. I think you believe you call them podcasts. I don't know. Francis and I were talking about this the other day.
Why do people still call these podcasts? It's like a full-on visual show, right? Aaron Powell Well you know it's interesting. When we first started the Daily Wire with the Ben Shapiro show uh and the Andrew Clayton show, we shot the first two episodes on the same day with video. And it was important to us from the very beginning to be video first. And for the first five or six years after that that we would go to the big podcast conferences
they would criticize us for having video and they would say, Well you're not you're not real podcasts if you're real podcasts are audio only. And then the last three or four years of going to podcast conferences every single panel is how to add video to your podcast. Right. No, totally. Uh I I've always thought of we've always thought of trigonometry as a show. Of course. Um
I think podcast is a kind of legacy term, but we've got right into the conversation. We want to talk also about the Pendragon cycle, which is super exciting that you you've just um uh released. And um you've got straight into the conversation we wanted to have first, which is about new media
there's something that you were kind of at the root of from the very beginning. So talk to us about that and how you see the landscape because obviously there's been a lot going on as I'm sure you're aware. Yeah, absolutely. Well You know, when we started the Daily Wire in twenty fifteen, uh all of this was very new. Um obviously there were people um involved in con the right in America in new media long before we were, you know, Andrew Breitbart. Uh obviously a a mentor to both Ben and I. Um
Matt Drudge charging the way. You had the sort of bloggers who were really instrumental in uh fighting off a lot of early left wing narratives online like little green footballs and some guys like that. But I think that what we what we really brought to the table was we were one of the first to really see the opening in social media.
Um and we were the first to see the opportunity in podcasting to see th th these two new areas. One which we thought could be incredibly effective for marketing and distribution, and the other which we thought could be a great medium
uh for actually getting our message out. And we married those two things and and had a huge amount of success in the early days, particularly around Facebook, because it was the Wild West back then. You know, people people particularly on our side weren't uh fast to adopt. Um and Well they were as consumers of course, but not as content creators and marketers.
uh and people on the other side hadn't figured out yet that we would that we would become very good at it. So the sort of cancel culture and all of the tools that later were developed um to try to limit the reach of conservatives in those spaces hadn't happened yet. So we we had the world was sort of our oysters wide open in front of us and and we took it. Uh I
¶ The Civil War On The Right
I think one of my criticisms of conservatives broadly speaking is that we're typically so late to adopt new technologies and new opportunities when they present themselves. And that's interesting because we purport to really believe in free markets. You know, we we purport to believe in um those mechan in the mechanism of profit motive, of incentive of
finding efficiencies in the market and taking them. But then we're also sort of constitutionally afraid of new technologies, afraid of new uh uh of change. And so we sometimes uh allow the conservative part of our conservative DNA to out of the Uh to sort of outvote the part of us that would be sort of economically motivated. And for that reason we wind up not being players in some of the big areas. I think we're seeing it probably right now already in
Uh AI, but we it was certainly true in social media at the very beginning. I think that's one of the things that set Ben and I apart is that we were uh either um had the foresight to realize that there was an opportunity here or had the foolishness not to realize that uh there were dragons and so we just charged right off the map and went into that. That area. Well, but th what's happened since that time when you were early pioneers
is I don't think there's any shortage of right of centre, centre right uh voices now in new media. Oh no, we dominated. And in fact so many now that there is a civil war going on, I think it's fair to say within it Um and I imagine you have some insights on that given that some of the big players are people that you've either worked with directly at the Daily Wire or just know through other ways.
Well obviously the movement is small and and if you're in it for very long at all you know everyone as you guys I'm I'm certain know everyone. Um And yeah, there is of course there's a huge civil war going on on the right right now. And in part it's happening because uh Donald Trump is a one term president. You know, it's a unique thing in our history. There's only been one other example of non consecutive
uh terms for a for a second term president. It essentially means Donald Trump was a lame duck from the day he was elected to this second term. Now he's he's made a lot of moves to make that less true. He had a great particularly around foreign policy, he had a great first year uh of his second term, which you might not always see from a second term president.
But you can tell that like the buzzards are circling. People understand that, you know, a lot of a politician's power is in their ability to win the next election. Donald Trump doesn't have constitutionally the power to win the next election. And everybody wants now to define what's going to happen next.
in the conservative movement and there's an opportunity for people to make a lot of money, an opportunity for people uh to seize a lot of power, an opportunity to advance new visions for what the future of conservatism in America and and globally can be.
And then there's structural issues around social media and and how we're incentivized as creators of content within that framework. You know, I I think those two things And the sort of inherent problems in both are creating this really confluent moment where we see almost open civil war and in some cases very open civil war.
on the right is people are both trying to make money, build their own brands, and compete for actual true political power in a post Trump world, which is rapidly approaching. You know, we're w we'll have our midterms this year, uh, and then you will immediately be in the next presidential cycle. I mean, starting in twenty twenty seven, we'll be trying to figure out who the next president of the United States is going to be. And because we know it can't be Donald Trump.
The question is, you know, what what direction is the country gonna go? It's very difficult, isn't it, Jeremy, to remain pure in inverted commas or to have your intentions remain pure when you've got so many how can I put this Competing
Incentives when you're a podcaster or you have a company like the Daily Wire. How do you ensure that the choices you make are the right Well you can't ensure that your choices are always going to be the right ones and you probably have to accept in life that some of your choices will be the wrong ones.
Um both because you're reacting to incentives, because at times you have limited information, because it and because at time, you know, all sin and falls short of the glory of God. We certainly made our share of mistakes. at the Daily Wire during my tenure. I I think we hit a lot more than we missed. Um but when you're a big company and when you're uh
when you're helping people navigate the complexities of worldview, of politics, of even theology, uh your misses are consequential and some of our misses were uh were quite consequential. I think though that to your question, you one has to have a vision for what it is that they're trying to accomplish uh and w and one has to rightly order their priorities. Of course we all have a lot of competing priorities. You know, the Daily Wire was deliberately set up to be a for profit
organization because m part of our premise in setting up the company was recognizing that conservatives too often rely on nonprofit mechanisms to promulgate their worldview, while the left, which purports to hate market economics, almost exclusively uses for profit institutions to promulgate their worldview. So like by our own definition, we chose the less efficient
and therefore less successful mechanism. We wanted a Daily Wire to be a corrective to that from the very beginning, which necessarily means that making money has to be a high priority. Um but making money can never be the highest priority. When you're ordering the priorities uh of a company like the Daily Wire, when you're ordering the priorities of um a business like the business you have with trigonometry, you you have to keep the mission um
as your number one priority because definitionally all the other priorities will subordinate to it. If you ever find yourself making profit or audience growth. the number one priority, then necessarily the mission will subordinate itself to that priority. And that's when you start making r really cynical decisions. And in my experience, I've made cynical decisions, of course, in my career, every time I make a cynical decision, it's come back to bite me.
Uh I think that that's not true if you are a cynical person. I mean there is a lane for the pure cynic. Uh I I call it the Grift Industrial Complex. Beware. the grift industrial complex. It's real. Uh it it can be incredibly lucrative and it can be incredibly rewarding too in terms of
the feedback that you get from audience. If you tell people what they want to hear, they are always very happy with you. Uh if you tell people always what they want to hear, they reward you financially. They are they reward you um uh you know, by clicking and by liking, uh by giving you that affirmation and that dopamine. And pretty soon that becomes the thing that you serve. You know, pretty soon um you're you don't wield cynicism. Cynicism wields you over time.
Um I I think we see a lot of people falling into that trap right now. Well th we absolutely do. And I mean well let's talk about it. I mean one of the people who is at the forefront of the movement that you've just talked about, let's call it the Grift Industrial Complex, is Candace Owen. When Candace works for you, do you sometimes look back at the decision and think, That wasn't a good one when she was working at the wire? Yeah, well
I certainly think that hiring Candace is probably the biggest mistake of my professional life so far. Um At the time I had misgivings about Candace, but I it wasn't a completely cynical decision. I believed that uh Candace could be a great force for good in the world. Um I still believe that. Candace is the most talented person I've ever met, not just in conservative media, but in in any media. She has it. You know, she has that star quality. You know it the moment that you meet her.
Unbelievable charm, unbelievable charisma. Uh the camera absolutely loves her. She um she has incredibly unique gifts and skills in that area and when she wields those gifts and skills for good. She's incredibly effective. She was during the BLM movement uh in America. Some of the content that we made when we first brought Candace on was focused on that topic and I think she was as good as anybody in the world and made a really positive impact.
I've said before Candace is like nuclear energy. You know, if you if you harness it properly she can power a city. If you lose control, she'll flatten the city. And I think that's what we're seeing now. Ca candidates Uh, all those same gifts that she has at various times used for good, she's now using for ill, and there's no one better. The problem is. if what you're pursuing is bad and you're the best at it.
You're gonna do an incredible amount of damage and Candace is doing an incredible amount of damage. Do you think one of the things that and I've I've talked about this quite a bit in the past. the th you talked about the camera liking people, etcetera. We are in the business where charisma is so overindexed that people very often will consume uh confuse charisma with accuracy. They will say, well, this person is very charismatic, therefore that what they're saying is true. And
a big problem. I don't know if i I don't know how much of a problem it is on the left, but o within the right wing media ecosystem, there just seems to be the sense that if you get someone charismatic saying something batshit crazy. that seems to get millions of views.
Is there something about the conservative mindset or is there something about the way people think about the that they're particularly susceptible or am I being unfair and are people on the left just the same? Well of course people on the left are susceptible to this. This there's a reason that um Yeah, every actor in Hollywood.
They have they are who they are because they have star power. They have gotten the platforms that they have because they're incredibly charismatic and great on screen and great at telling stories. And they're all batshit crazy and they've been uh promulgating a horrible worldview for for decades. So of course that's a problem on the left. It manifests itself differently on the right though.
because the left has almost hegemonic uh representation among, you know, the the instruments of popular culture and has for the lifetime of just about anyone who could be watching this now. Uh and so for that reason a lot of their audience capture happened in places that were less consequential. It happened in narrative fiction. I say less consequential and probably it's actually more consequential over time. Yeah. But less sort of urgent.
Uh than say someone like Candace Owens might uh might be. And so you just don't see it in the same way because your your average interaction with, say, a a radically left wing Hollywood actor isn't them telling you their opinion. It's them performing a role or playing a part. Uh because the right was sort of boxed out of that. the the major apparatus of of culture formation for the last several decades, you know, we found
In part because of the work of Daily Wire and in part because of the work of others, we found these alternative lanes, which are much more direct. It's talking into the camera, saying what you believe. And so that's where we've actually built our audiences. Uh that's the kind of trust that was placed in us from day one. And so I think you see the abuse of it a lot more clearly on the right. And there may be something in the sort of conservative
mindset that makes us more susceptible to, say, conspiracy theory. You know, when you're when you're a hammer everything looks like a nail. When when I I I had a teacher in high school had a poster on the wall that said, Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not out to get you know. I think that's a Nixon quote. It is, yeah. Yeah. It's a great Nixon quote.
a conservative kind of point of view that because we're we are in a sort of bunker mentality, we are hard done by and we are beset, and so you do begin to see um probably threats that aren't there. Patterns that aren't there. I mean I think that's probably part of the the bunker mindset is well put because I think a lot of it is there's a sort of feeling on the right that I certainly see that people feel like the world is moving in a direction they really don't like.
And therefore there must be a small group of people that are in charge of this process. With very tiny hats. Ideally with very tiny hats. But but actually y I I uh you know you could see this happening even before the explosion and anti Semitism that we've seen recently. There was Th th they were looking for a framework to explain everything. The theory of everything is a small number of people have got together and they've decided to ruin our lives.
Which I think is a simplistic explanation of this thing. Why is that so I mean, I guess throughout history that's been a very appealing way of looking at things, right? Yeah, well of course, because most people either don't have a lot of power uh or perceive themselves not to have a lot of power, and I actually think the latter is far is the more dangerous phenomenon that we're dealing with right now. Uh and and so
The assumption is that somebody has to be in charge, somebody has to be running it. It it obviously isn't me, I'm not getting the things that I want. The world isn't working out the way that I think that it should, so it must be working out the way someone else thinks that it should. Uh of course the reality is that
Uh if you've ever met anyone in government. Yeah. Now I it's also funny to me that, you know, the the Billionaire who's been famous literally as long as I've been alive with a gold toilet on his personal 767 is somehow not a part of whatever the ruling elite. uh is even in his second term as president of the United States. So I think all of these sort of all of these sort of uh Illuminati elite, you know, kind of
view conspiratorial views do fall apart upon contact with with the real world. But that's not to say that there aren't actual conspiracies. And actual conspiracies do make it harder to to debunk the concept of the conspiracy theory. And one of the Uh perhaps the biggest reason we're living through what we're living through right now is because of COVID nineteen, because of the reaction of the governments of the world uh to this novel coronavirus. It was
you know, one of the most formative especially for this young generation. Imagine being in high school. uh and being sent home for a year or two years, or in some cases three years, uh, because of a disease that did not affect you. Demographically, You are unaffected. Um, and then learning over time how much of it was overreaction.
and that's generous. How much of it was opportunistic, uh and that's probably the m the most true case, and how much of it was downright cynical in a power grab by governments, and I think that's probably true in some aspects of it. But you take all of that together and and now tell people that conspiracy theories aren't real. And well, it's a losing argument because we just lived through, you know, one of the great conspiracies really in in human history. Um and it
Of course, we're going to be dealing with the damage of that overreach by governments for the rest of our lives. It's a it was a generationally consequential event. I try to be very careful and guarded with my language. I never want to say because of the coronavirus or because of COVID nineteen. Because of course none of these things are because of COVID nineteen. They're all because of the reaction of government.
and media organizations and the apparatus of popular culture, which are almost completely dominated by the left, uh, to Seize power, seize uh seize economic opportunity, and in some cases just panic and overreact. I mean uh yeah, sometimes the sometimes there is no obviously conspiracy except stupidity. But I I don't see how we in the short term easily overcome the psychological damage done to free people across the West by our governments in relation to COVID.
It's such a profound point and because I have this joke as like which is we all treated COVID like a bad one night stand. Well we're just gonna walk away going, No that never happened, I never said this, I never did that and uh We're just all gonna walk away and pretend like it was just one big dream. Yeah. Super normal to lock children in their houses for three years. Couldn't possibly be a consequence for
Taking people in the most socially formative years of their lives and putting them behind a computer uh where their only interaction with other human beings is digital interaction. All gonna work out. Universities are a bad deal. Six figures of debt for a bachelor's degree that signals less every year? Four years spent navigating ideological rules instead of learning how to think. Grades are inflated, standards are lowered, and dissent is punished.
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¶ The Mix Of Charisma And Mental Illness
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I've got this theory and I'd be very interested to hear your view on it, having worked with actors and influencers. To me charisma and mental illness. A kind of almost intrinsically linked. And I'll tell you why. Because when you see someone in real life and you will talk to them, and I've seen this with a lot of actors, I'm like, oh my God, this this guy's crazy.
You put a camera on him, boom, it's charisma. That edge, that I don't know where he which way he or she is gonna go in real life, you're like, that's scary on camera. Yeah, well uh I I think of it as in in aerodynamic terms, there's a concept called uh uh aerodynamic instability, right? That you want your fighter jets to be unstable.
dynamic instability, I think they call it. Because the whole point of a fighter jet is that when it's in a dog fight, it has to very quickly move. And it's it as it turns out, An airplane is designed not to do that. The whole purpose of an airplane is to go straight for a long time. It's not like the movies. You know, I mean, if you were ever on a giant jumbo jet and all the engines went out, do you know what would happen? Almost nothing. You would go.
Because the wings are doing the work, right? Now you will eventually crash because there's not enough thrust to to create lift. But those wings are gonna keep you it's not like you just go into the ground. No, they you'll go straight for a long time. The polyets will have a ton of time to try to find
Some place where they can put down safely because a plane is meant to be very aerodynamically stable. But a fighter jet no, a fighter jet if the engine goes out, it crashes into the ground instantly because it needs all of that thrust of those giant jet engines.
to keep it going straight, because at any moment it could want to go in a different direction. And so what makes a great fighter jet a great fighter jet, what makes a great rock star a great rock star, what makes a great actor or public speaker or or show host Charismatic and great is dynamic and stability. It is that very idea that at any moment, right when you think you've got them in your crosshairs, they're going in a completely different direction.
Yeah. I think there I've never heard anyone kind of frame it up as mental illness, but I'm offended here'cause you're either saying I'm not charismatic or it's mentally or which one is it? Maybe both. Maybe a little bit of both. And that's fine for an actor.
That's fine for a comedian. That's fine for, you know, a lot of a rock star. I kinda want my rock stars to be on age. I don't want my rock star to go home or to go to a hotel and have a, you know, a cup of cocoa in an early night. I want him to be out living my dreams, right?
Yeah. My political influences? I don't want my political influences to be like that. I want my influ political influences to be like someone like Ben. I may disagree with Ben on certain things, but I know that he's consistent, he's logical, the same with Constantine. But when you have political influences like Candy like Candice and Tucker, that's another package entirely, isn't it? Yeah, well I'd be careful about
conflating Candace uh with Tucker. You know, Candace Owens is engaged in a As I as I see it, Candace is engaged in um a project of self-aggrandizement. No I've asked Candace on two separate occasions, what do you actually believe? And on both occasions she told me, I believe what the people believe, I am the voice of the people. Never mind that that's a completely amoral statement. Never mind that uh
I don't know who the people are in this conversation. Uh never mind that the people, whoever they are, can obviously be wrong. Candace is actually saying something somewhat profound. She's she's saying, I will say whatever gets the most reward. She may not even know that that's what she's saying, but she's essentially she's uh articulating audience capture as a virtue.
Tucker Carlson, I don't believe I don't believe Tucker Carlson's engaged in uh in audience capture. I think Tucker Carlson is part of a small cohort of people. Cohort includes Marjorie Taylor Green, cohort includes Steve Bannon, uh cohort includes Nick Fuentes, although I'm not saying that Nick Fuentes and Tucker Carlson uh believe all of the same things, but these are people engaged in an actual political project.
Yep. These are people who are engaged in trying to create a new American majority premised on left wing economic populism and right wing social populism. You can say what you want about that, whether it's good or bad, you can say what you want about it, but it it is a political enterprise. They believe that they can create a majority and that that majority can rule the country. Uh and it's a new vision in terms of the ruling
class in our country. We've uh it's not that there's never been people who put forward that vision, but it's never been as poised to seize eC uh to seize ac actual political power as it is right now in the hands of those uh of that group of people. So I I don't sort of superficial qualities look the same. But I don't think it actually is the same. Candace is not engaged in a political project. Tucker Carlson
is very much engaged in a political project. So flesh it flesh out the political project, left wing economic populism, that is protectionism at home, uh redistribution of wealth. Yes. Uh protection of the the ordinary man against the good corporate powers, etc. That kind of stuff. Uh and on the right it would be a kind of nativist.
¶ Is Being Angry About Things Productive?
uh identitarian worldview or d tell us more. Yeah uh well I think you you summed it up well I would add that on the right it's also uh conservative social policy. I mean you'll hear Tucker when he talks about uh Maduro and he'll say things like Well he may be a communist. I don't know if he is a communist he may be a communist, but he but he outlawed gay marriage in his country and he, you know, outlawed abortion in his country. Uh I think
Tucker has rightly recognized that right wing social policy tends to be very popular among working people. Uh He's also recognized that redistribution of wealth. People like getting checks. People like Um and it's also very easy, especially in the wake of COVID, I think, and in the wake of other sort of failures of what whatever the elite is. I don't think that there is a you know sort of secret cabal of uh of you know Jewish.
billionaires running the world or anything, but obviously there is sort of a ruling class. There are the sort of, you know, people who uh have more power or more agency in the country than others. And I think he realizes that because that group is necessarily small and because envy and resentment are very real parts of of man's nature,
Uh it's always easy to stir people up economically against that group. Mm-hmm. Uh even when that group which in the case of Tucker it's funny because a lot of the sort of tech billionaires agree with Tucker's political project. But nevertheless it's very easy to you know get the the bulk of people angry at that group of people. Angry at unchecked immigration, which you should be angry at unchecked immigration. Angry at the excesses of the left social policy.
uh over the last fifty years, angry about the divorce rates in the country, uh about the illegitimacy rates uh in the country, the f the the fatherhood crisis happening in the country, the collapse of masculinity that's happening in the West, the the Those are all each and every one real problems. If you marry these things together
Perhaps there's a majority uh that will have a politics that's new. You know, when when Tucker says I'll I'll end with this when Tucker says JD Vance and Marjorie Taylor Greene and I can change the foreign policy of this country. Well believe him, he's telling you what his project is. He's trying to change uh the sort of Historic politics of the country. That's it. Candace isn't. Well, uh that that's no, it's a very good distinction you make. And I suppose I mean, if you take it at the level of
um being angry at certain things that have been done. There is a majority of people, not just in America, I think across the Western world actually, who are rightly, I think, uh frustrated with open border immigration policies, uh the the destruction of masculinity as a positive force in the world I think is I think it's atrocious and has been horrific for for our societies.
And on many other things and that's not something that even right wing people or left wing people have to agree. It's it's a kind of a majority opinion. It's a majority opinion. And lots of other things we we could talk about. Uh my issue, I suppose, is is more about whether being angry about stuff becomes a productive force or whether it remains a destructive force. Because if you don't convert anger into solutions that are forward looking.
then all you're doing is stirring people up for and you talk about candles being self aggrandizing. Well as you said, there's the incentive structure in the in the media game. You know, I always tell this story and we joke about this. So when tr when when Francis and I first started trigonometry had a girlfriend, a very smart woman.
And whenever we used to complain about the state of the world or look, this thing happened or that thing happened, she'd always say to us, Look, whatever's bad for the world is good for trigonometry, right? And in the media game, ultimately that is unfortunately true. And so stirring people up to be angry while offering no practical solutions is a perfectly good game plan if what you're trying to do is make money, build a platform, make a bigger audience for yourself, etcetera.
Is there a constructive vision behind all of this, or is it more of a just a destructive force at this point? Again, I just wouldn't conflate the two categories. The the the gripped industrial complex and the people who belong to that category. probably don't care about the political outcome. They y as you say, whatever's bad for the world is good for the bottom line. Whatever's bad for the world is good for the the subscriber count. Whatever's bad for the world is good for my engagement.
The people engaged in the political project that I suggested, you know, they do have a constructive vision. Uh I'm using constructive here in uh definitionally not connotatively. I don't think that it's contrite. I think it's a bad vision. Um but But it is a vision to seize power and remake the world order. Yeah. It is a it is a vision to um end the post war consensus. It is a vision to um have a post liberal West with
At the fringes they talk about this fairly openly, post-liberalism, and sort of a reduction in human freedom, because they blame human freedom for the excesses uh of the West over the last generation or two generations. Um And this is this is why I I see a huge alignment between you know, Antifa thugs tearing down statues of Christopher Columbus and George Washington and Thomas Jefferson. And People on the so called new right.
saying that Churchill is the chief villain of the Second World War, or that America shouldn't have used uh the atomic bomb to end the Second World War, or that man didn't you know, America didn't walk on the moon, or that nine eleven was an inside job. That's just rhetorically tearing down our statues in the same way that Antifa is physically tearing down our statues. It's saying that the narrative structure on which the country is premised, or more broadly, the West is premised.
¶ JD Vance And The MAGA Movement
our sort of our short sort of shared legacy was either a lie, um told by evil men to gain power over you, uh, or in some cases it was uh Well, I I'll state that it essentially they're saying that those structures were a lie and therefore there is nothing to concern.
Mm-hmm. That's why I think it's a fundamentally anti conservative proposition. It's a very radical and reactionary proposition. It's saying everything that has been great about the country was wrong. All of our greatest achievements were actually immoral. Because when you when you have a sort of national identity, that national identity, as it turns out, is an immune system against tyranny. if you want to bring about a tyrannical post liberal, uh, authoritarian
order, you have to get rid of that underlying narrative, that story that people tell themselves that allows them to see themselves as free, to see themselves as being on the side of freedom, to see themselves as being on the side of human advancement and human flourishing. So I It is constructive insofar as they are constructing a a new governing philosophy.
uh and implementing it, I think um it's destructive in the sense that I think everything that's a that actually is good and true about our role in the world uh is the very thing that'll be the first casualty of of this new political project. New Year, new systems, right? This is the time when we all look at the messier parts of our business and think there has to be a better way. And there is. Streamlining your communications is one of the quickest and easiest upgrades you can make.
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Well you say that they're having uh they're having an impact or I don't remember the exact word you used, and you mentioned J. D. Vance. I mean so far the the Trump administration's foreign policy has been uh utter repudiation of that entire world view, I would argue. But do you you see it J D Vines as a champion of that movement? The and and potentially taking over and implementing that vision? Is that what you're saying? I don't know.
Yeah, I think that J.D. Vance is a unique figure in my lifetime in American politics because he is he plays it incredibly close. Uh I don't know, and I think very few people know what JD Vance what his actual political North Star is. you know, Tucker Carlson claims him when he says Marjorie Taylor Green, JD Vance, and I will change the foreign policy or can change the foreign policy uh of this country, you know, that's
That's one side claiming J.D. Vance. Now, do they actually have a claim on J.D. Vance? I I don't know that they do. Um I think one has to look at the fact that J D has a apparently a very close relationship with Tucker, um, that he has not repudiated Tucker. As Tucker's rhetoric has gotten more and more and more outside of uh outside of any sort of traditional American conservatism.
And ask themselves why. Why why does JD remain so close to Tucker? I think it's premature to say it's because he is a part of that new political project. Um I think it's just as likely that it's a sense of loyalty. J D uh owes a lot of his political career to Tucker. Tucker took a bet on J D Vance when uh very few other people would, both in his run for Senate and in helping
um by all accounts helping uh point Donald Trump toward the the idea of selecting JD as his running mate. Uh it may be out uh you know, and listen, I on some I respect that.
Uh friendship is actually a really important concept to me. I think And gratitude and loyalty. Gratitude and loyalty are very important values. Uh I don't think that we should you know there's sort of this other debate on the right and people who I normally align with very much, you know, people who I respect greatly like Dennis Prager, uh Ben, have made the case recently that that um friendship should not trump uh
¶ The Religious Element
people who are in our business actually holding other people to account for the things that they say. And I think that that is I understand why they've taken that view. Uh and I think there's a lot of truth to the view, but I don't think that the view is entirely I think friendship should cause us to give people a lot of latitude, a lot of rope, to try to deal with things privately before we try to deal with them publicly. I mean, friendship is an incredibly important virtue.
Uh and of course friendship can't ultimately prevent us from being publicly critical when we've exhausted all these other mechanisms. So probably a I have a more nuanced perspective on that maybe than some others, but uh But all of that to say, yes, maybe that's why J. D. Vance seems so aligned with Tucker. And and if so, understandable. There's also a political reality. J. D. Vance has to keep together the Trump coalition in order to have a chance to be president in three years.
Uh and that means that he probably politically from his point of view, needs all the people who listen to Tucker just as much as he needs all the people who listen to Ben Shapiro. Donald Trump, particularly in twenty twenty and twenty twenty four, did a great job of building that coalition. I think, and others have uh have said as much. Uh so this is not an original thought.
I think that Tucker is doing an enormous amount of damage to the Trump coalition. And I think that that will become a political liability uh if left unchecked for J.D. Vance. But right now, if I'm J.D. Vance, I can understand politically why you wouldn't want to get into the business of dividing up the coalition, drawing lines, which makes it. Harder, presumably, to become the next president. Or he's actually a part of their political project.
It could be any of those three things. And I think that Uh only time is going to help us understand which of those three things it is. But I think it would be cynical to assume right out of the gate. that just because J.D. Vance is is friends with Tucker Carlson and just because Tucker Carlson claims J.D. Vance, that's politically advantageous for Tucker Carlson to do, right? That doesn't mean that J.D. Vance is a part of Tucker Carlson's political project.
And obviously I certainly hope he's not. I think that, you know Sometimes it's easy to say, Well, Donald Trump, poor Donald Trump, what a buffoon that he chose J. D. Vance and J. D.'s actually part of this project to take apart his coalition. And he only picked J. D. Vance because
uh Tucker Carlson told him to. And that's sort of like saying George W. Bush only invaded Iraq because the Jews told him to. It's like you don't become the president of the United States and not have your own judgment and your own opinions. Uh I like to think that probably uh Donald Trump isn't
Some puppet that can be wielded by uh by other nefarious political actors. He chose J.D. Vance in the end, maybe on Tucker's recommendation, but he chose him. I'd like to think that he believes, therefore, that J.D. Vance can be a good um Steward of the coalition that Trump built.
We've been talking about this movement and I'm loving the conversation. We've talked about the intellectual side of it, the political side of it, but there's I think there's one element that we haven't spoken about, which is the spiritual religious side of it. A lot of these people in this movement are Christians. They're very, very devout Christians, or hard line, however you want to describe it.
And when they talk about America, it's almost to me like they're talking about a modern day Sodom and Gomorrah. And the only way that to deal with the Sodom and Gomorrah is what God did, which was to burn it to the ground. Fire. Yeah. Yeah, well listen there There is a religious component to a lot of what's happening, you know. people like Nick Fuentes like to lead with Christ as King as a as a sort of tribal rally cry, right? Rallying cry. Uh I think that that's anathema to
I think what they're actually the the term Christ as King is not an anathema to Christianity or the gospel message. Um But what they are admittedly doing by invoking the term Christ as king is, Nick Fuentes is very clear about what he's doing when he uses Christ as king. He chose a rallying cry that would exclude Jews. That's why he chose it. So therefore Christ as King is a way of excluding
uh Jews from the political project that that he's engaged in creating. I think that is anathema to the gospel. I think it's using the the name of the Lord in vain. I've said as much Publicly before. I think one should be very careful about wielding the name of God for personal or tribal gain.
Does that mean that there so that is a religious component to what's happening? Uh and where there is religion, there is a spiritual component as well. But I say that as a believer. I'm a Christian. I therefore believe that when one invokes Christ uh they're invoking something real. Now whether they have the power to actually make such an invocation, uh y your mileage may vary. Um but they're certainly playing with forces, you know.
As Hamlet might say, you know, uh there are more things in heaven and earth uh than are present in our philosophy, right? Like he they're they're they're playing with something that's real, whether they think it's real or not. Um But I don't think that it is hmm. Yeah, sometimes you just talk because it's your turn to talk and what you should really do is think for a second.
the language of religion is being used right now to the benefit of people who, as far as I can see, do not have uh are not engaged in a project that's consistent with the gospel of Christ. Um but it is very powerful tribal language. They're they're wielding
sort of elemental forces that have existed uh in all cultures throughout time and in the case of Christianity I believe forces that are quite true. And they're wielding them for personal gain and to great effect because they are greatly effective tools. Um I don't. I don't think that what's being expressed is any sort of true Christian religion.
And I don't think that uh the fruit that's being that will be born out of this political project is fruit that's consistent with any sort of uh Christian fruit, as might be described in scripture. But they They're giving God quite a bad name at the moment by by using him in the way that they are.
Because to me, as somebody who was raised Catholic, I went to Catholic school from the age of four right through to the age of eighteen, Jesuit school, so I know a little bit about cr Christianity and Catholicism in particular. Mm-hmm. It seems to me an incredibly vengeful movement. Oh yeah. And that is not corresponding with the teachings of Jesus Christ as I was very old Testament. Well I would say that A big part of what's happening. is a a sort of s I don't mean this in the in the
church sense of schism, because of course Protestants and Catholics are in schism. But I mean in a political sense, there's an effort to create schism between Catholics and Protestants, particularly in America. Because
Protestants in America are supportive of the state of Israel, broadly speaking. And this sort of trad Catholic movement uh that that's very popular in the country right now among this group of people in particular, young, male, you know, gin Z. men, white men, are being really drawn to uh Catholicism, uh in part because of the failures of Amer American evangelicalism over the last twenty, twenty-five years.
Uh and in part because of the excesses of of well, what they would say are the excesses of liberalism, right, over the last forty years. Uh they're they're being drawn to something that's more liturgical, that's older. that's more structured. that's more uh that emphasizes works more than it emphasizes vagaries like faith, what they might perceive as vagaries like faith.
They want something that they can do, something they can belong to. They want to be part of a tribe. Not not everything about tribalism is bad. You know, we do belong to tribes. But they want that sense of feeling, a purpose.
Uh they've been ostracized from the country in which they are the historic majority. They've been told every day that everything uh that's wrong with the world is because of them, when of course that can't possibly be true. They were they've been children for most of the time they've been on the planet. And so they're they're drawn to things that feel to them uh substantive. And you know, of course Catholicism is not anti-Semitic. But Catholicism has had uh
struggles with anti-Semitism throughout history. Uh struggles that have been addressed even in even in the twentieth century by the church, you know, that they've that they've acknowledged and that they've taken enormous, I think, steps to try to mitigate against. A lot of these cat young Catholics in the country right now are sort of evoking a Catholicism uh before those changes were made. Uh
I think that it's a confluence as we were discussing earlier. It's kind of this this moment where Um the appeal of Trad Catholicism is connected to um the fear of these conspiracies is connected to the the blaming of a smaller and smaller group, which eventually ends up with the smallest group, which is Jews. you know uh a a s a skepticism and and um sort of aversion to the idea that there are powerful elites who run things, you know.
I think that all that has sort of conflated in this moment where there there is this tribal spiritual and very Catholic move. I say very Catholic because not because it's Broadly cat uh not because Catholicism is broadly this, but because this is broadly Catholic. Uh and it's a it's an open effort to separate off um Protestants from political power on the right. you know, when Tucker Carlson says that he hates Christian Zionists more than he hates anyone.
He walked that back. But but what he is talking about is Protestants in the country. He's saying the people who have historically voted Republican in the country aren't the Republicans that we want as part of this new conservative right wing uh coalition. And so there is this very religious
component to it all. Um I don't think that it's being motivated by religion. I don't think that what's happening is an expression of religion in the country. But I think religion is being used as a tool. This kind of goes to a broader thing that I think about, which is Both for audience capture, both for overthrowing
liberal democracy and and ushering in a more authoritarian form of government in the country. Um both for getting clicks and getting views, both cynicism both anti Semitism, which is being wielded by so many people, uh, left and right right now. In all of these instances, people are I think trying to wield evil tools, wield evil as a tool to advance their agendas. And what they're missing is that you cannot wield evil. You are the tool that's wielded by evil.
Everybody thinks that they can kind of ironically or well, I'm smart, I can use these tools, but they won't impact me. But you can't, you know. You grew up Catholic, like evil is a active force, not a passive force. Evil can be personified, it has opinions, it has agenda. Uh and it and it gets the final vote when you start trying to wield it for your own personal gain. I I think we see that so clearly with what Candace
has become. I mean she's now, you know, talking about doing expose documentaries on Charlie Kurt's widow. That is evil. Is Candace evil? Uh that I I'm not I'm not the judge of Candace's soul, but Candace is doing evil. Mm-hmm. Uh and she's doing evil I think because she cynically believed that she and maybe still believes that she can wield these evil tools to her own gain.
And that works in the short term sometimes. It doesn't ever work in the long term. No, because what you're talking about fundamentally is your soul. Yeah, that's right. I spend a stupid amount of time at a deck. Writing, researching, and prepping for trigonometry episodes. After a while I realized the setup I had just wasn't good enough. The wobble, the wrong height, the back pain.
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Is taxes. Intuit TurboTax. Visit TurboTax.com to learn more. Only available with TurboTax Experts. Real time updates only in iOS mobile app. Every day as a human being you have a choice. whether to do the right thing or to do the thing that will serve you in the short term. But ultimately, the thing that will serve you in the short term will ultimately lead to somewhere you really don't want to be.
And the problem is, and we've touched on this before, is we have now got a media ecosystem that incentivizes the short term. It incentivizes the clicks so that you can make those short-term choices.
¶ Is Liberalism In Trouble?
Ond yn ymwneud â'r hyn sy'n rhywbeth sy'n rhywbeth sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n. And it seems to me we need to have this conversation, which is when we look at our influences, do we go, is this politics? Or is this entertainment? Because I talk to a lot of people who go, you know what? I listen to Candace Science and I watch her and I love her. And I'm like, why? And they go, I look, I know she's mad, but it's fun and it's entertaining. And you go
So what is she? Is it politics? Is it entertainment? Nick Fuentes, is it politics or entertainment? Tucker is far more to the political side, that's clear. But there's this whole raft of other people. And you can't actually understand or pigeonhole what they are. And you get this with other people as well, people who go,
Oh Basimusa, former guest on the show, talks about Gaza. When he's exposed, he goes, I'm just a clown. Clown knows on. Yeah, clown o'zone. Politics or entertainment? What is it? What are you? Well, again, I on the specifics I think that Quintes is engaged in p in a great political project. I think he's a formidable uh opponent for anyone who believes in human freedom. Um but yes, for many on the sort of grift industrial complex side of things.
Uh it is primarily entertainment. And, you know, I had a y you say people tell you that they listen to Candace. I had a guy tell me recently, he said, you know, what what should I say to my wife? You know, she keeps She keeps telling me about things that she hears Candace say and I I don't even know how to respond to them.
I said, well I I would just respond by say telling her fun things that you saw in some porno video that you watched. He said, Well, what are you talking about? I said, Well the same level of shame should accompany both statements. Like uh One should be ashamed to say publicly that they're watching Candace Owens now. And Candace Owens who is at war with the widow of her purported best friend Charlie Kirk. Uh this is
This is so far beyond the pale, you know, the fact that people can say with a straight face, Oh yeah, well what do you make w of what Candace said? W what I make of it is that it is a kind of pornography. It is it is rhetorical pornography. It does the same thing that regular pornography does. It titillates, it stimulates, it's slightly naughty. Uh it's great for getting clicks and it makes tons of money on the internet. And you shouldn't be able to look at it if you're under eighteen or
Um well it's interesting. I I I'm curious about the political project side of things because I think it's fair to say actually that, you know, what you call the grift uh industrial complex There's always been people, and the more attention they can get, the more crazy stuff they'll say. And that that that is a and that is something actually, you know, we can talk about the influences.
I honestly think it comes ban down to personal responsibility. You as an individual have a choice about whether you consume this or not. And pornography is the same. I don't want to ban pornography. Does it mean I think people should consume as much of it as possible? No. Right. And those are those are there's a lot of room for personal responsibility within this. This is one of the things that people like us get accused of is like we wanna censor the I don't wanna censor anyone. I'm just
saying that this is n it's not I don't want to prevent McDonald's from being sold. I'm just saying McDonald's is probably not good for You know, at or as good for you as other food, at least. I'm gonna get sued by fucking McDonald's. Anyway, you get my point. But the political side of it is interesting because I think. Whatever we may say about the direction that these people want to take the West in.
I think many of the critiques of the status quo as we've discussed before actually are quite legitimate. And James Orr, who we've had on the show, who's now a big influence within reform, but he's very good friends with J.D. Vance as as I'm sure you know.
He's one of the smartest people I've ever met, one of the best people I've ever met, too. When he was on the show, he talked about the fact that in his view, or at least the view he was putting forward, woke is the inevitable consequence of liberalism. And so if you hate woke, as I think we all do.
His argument will be well, you have to look at where it came from and therefore this calling for a post liberal worldview and post liberal order is a natural reaction, I think, to that. So why are they wrong? Well they're not they're not wrong in diagnosing that that we have a problem. I think that they're wrong in that they remove human agency. All these sort of isms are looking for an original sin. You know, communism says the original sin is class.
And libertarianism says the original sin is m uh government coercion. Um and you know, this new right says the original sin is liberalism. But of course the original sin is original sin. Original sin is pride and the fall in the garden and the thing that leads to all of the other problems that these people are trying to diagnose as the uh problem.
Where I find fault with that is that it removes any agency after the problem. You know, people will say, I supported the Iraq war in in my early twenties. Now people will say, Well obviously the Iraq war went very poorly. Uh and so people will say, Well was it a mistake to invade Iraq? And their evidence that it was a mistake will be a bunch of things that happened
that they basically imply were inevitable once the decision to go to Iraq was made. But it wasn't inevitable that we would send too few troops. It wasn't inevitable that we would uh disband the Bath uh Bathist army and therefore there'd be nobody to hold uh the country. It wasn't inevitable that Barack Obama would win the presidency. two presidential elections later, uh, running on a promise to pull all the troops out of Iraq no matter what, and then did so, which gave rise to ISIS and
uh uh required us to send troops back in and retake cities that we'd already taken. None of those things were inevitable. Those were other decisions that also got made. To actually get to the heart of was it a mistake to go to Iraq? Um, you almost have to ask that question After working your way backward through all the other mistakes. And I would say the same with liberalism. We live in a world of problem.
Uh many of those problems you can trace back to you know the Enlightenment and and the beginning of the sort of liberal Movement in the web. But at each one of those points along the way, humans were Humans. fallen from the actual original fan, we're making any number of decisions uh
that all compiled to bring us to this moment that we're in. And it was not necessar I I just can't say that there was only one thing that there was only one moment of true human agency that ever existed and it was the moment that your political uh philosophy got inspired by. Oh yeah, man, yeah, just if Caveman Joe had never had, you know, two rocks when Caveman Tom only had one rock, uh then we wouldn't have all these problems today. I just I don't buy that kind of an argument.
Uh there are we we have the excesses of the liberal order today that we're rightly trying to figure out how to deal with. I don't think that one has to go all the way back and say liberalism itself has failed. Human liberalism just means human freedom. Uh human freedom has not failed.
Human freedom is consistent with the gospel. It's for freedom that Christ has made you free. The idea uh of man's relationship to God being governed by law, as it turns out, was never God's actual design uh to be fulfilled in man. Uh, and so he brought about human freedom in Christ. And that's a picture of what's also true in government, you know. The liberal order also gave us everything, like the entire modern world.
to say, well, we have to get rid of the thing that has allowed us to lift billions of people out of poverty, that's allowed us to uh create these unbelievable technological advancements and increase human flourishing in so many ways, to say that it is the fundamental problem. I just think that's a mistake. I think we could look I think we could look back at all the w what is inevitable.
because of actual original sin is that whatever system is put in place is going to degrade over time and bear uh and collapse under its own weight over time. The the illiberal order that that some of these people want to put in place. And listen, I think some of them probably want an ill liberal order that's virtuous.
And I think some of them want an illiberal order that is not virtuous. But even if I grant that the illiberal order will be a virtuous illiberal order, that'll be a strong man for good. That is still going to break down. I think it'll break down much faster than liberalism broke down. Um the the the um Again, because there is an actual thing called actual original sin and and it isn't class and it isn't government coercion and it isn't uh democratic politics and it isn't uh human freedom. It's
It's sin and sin just corrupts everything as it goes. So you know, I I think people are looking for a simple solution. to what is actually an unsolvable problem, which is the problem of man. And one of the beautiful things about particularly America's uh form of liberalism as as sort of created by our two founding documents, the Declaration and then the Constitution, is it it's sort of built into its understanding of the world, the problem of original sin, actual original sin.
and it sought to constrain or mitigate some of the worst excesses of actual original sin by Strong protection from minority rights, not just populists. by not allowing one branch of government uh to hold in in itself too much of the power, too much authority, to actually require government to be small, to require government to be slow.
So that people can't react out of impulse in every moment. And I would say It's it seems just as uh likely to me that most of the problems we face now are because of the er the erosion of those systems which were meant to positively channel liberalism breaking down. Uh as they are to uh I I would blame blame that long before I would blame the concept of liberalism itself.
Well and that really I think is the question now of uh before we move on to other things is How do you articulate a positive vision of how to deal with the excesses of liberalism that have become woke a and embedded themselves in institutions, et cetera, without going to the simple solution, the scapegoat, this group's to blame, etcetera. What is the positive vision?
uh to address all this without going tyrannical, without going into this into this type of uh worldview. Well I think that we can look back at moments when Western civilization was functioning much more uh in a much more healthy way and you don't have to look back all that far, you know. We we were discussing a little bit before the show in in the brief time that we got together. Uh
How different the world was before just before COVID nineteen. How if we could get in a time machine and go back to twenty nineteen.
we probably would be shocked by the reality. Ev even though it was only s you know, six years ago and we all lived through it and were adults and fully formed and had laid down with ladies and, you know, gone to war. What I I And we can't even remember what the regular world was like before they stopped it spinning on its axis and then tried to hit control alt elite and reboot the whole damn thing.
History I say this all the time. History for people will ask me I'm particularly bad at this. People say, Oh do you remember when this person did this and I'll say yeah. And do you remember when this person did this? Yeah. Which came first? I don't know, because history becomes very two dimensional to me. History flattens. It does it does for all of us.
¶ The Creation Of Culture And The Pendragon Cycle
You'd probably get a little longer than I get out of it, but history becomes very flat. But history wasn't flat. History was just as complex and robust uh as the present, obviously. And if you could go back just a little ways. The West was doing great. You know, the Reagan Thatcher moment in the nineteen eighties was an unbelievable moment of economic growth, economic prosperity, uh strength, the defeat of the Soviet Union, the the uh victory of liberalism and democracy over tyranny. Um
You don't have to look back you don't have to even look back at all. You only have to look across land masses or across oceans to see the results of tyranny, to see the results of strongman government and how it actually fails in practice. It of course it's true that in the kingdom of God it won't be a democracy. There'll be one guy in charge. But he'll have the advantage of being perfect and also being God. He'll know everything, uh he won't make mistakes, he will be truly virtuous. Uh
Until you get to that system, I think a far better system is a channeled liberalism. Channeled by what? Channeled by rule of law. Channeled by uh cultural institutions. We've destroyed all of our cultural institutions. Um Channeled by the family. We've destroyed the family. Did liberalism destroy the family? No, we destroyed the family. And when we destroyed the family, liberalism became unchanneled. So you know, I think I think the real problem that we face as a people is that the work
The work is us. We're actually the thing that's gone wrong. Liberalism is not, uh by the way, uh some sort of I think we derive our sense of liberalism from Christian religion. Um and so I do think that there's a spiritual component uh a spiritual example of liberalism being good, seeing what what virtuous liberalism can look like in but liberalism itself is not uh some innate virtue. It's like capitalism is not an innate virtue.
But channeled by virtue, capitalism and liberalism, are the two most successful and most virtuous. sort of philosophies that we can have for governing society, we've got to put those We've we've got to bring back the virtue part that constrains them and channels them.
Uh I would much rather do that than try to just form a government where uh or or some governing order wherein uh the unvirtuous rule over the also unvirtuous. That's not gonna that's not gonna This episode of Trigonometry is brought to you by Next Insurance.
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Well, one of the things that uh causes us to be where we are as I think as a culture and and across the Atlantic actually is Um, we've become very split and one of the reasons is that particularly people on the on the right have have really got into a thing which is we you know, there's a It's very easy to criticize culture. It's very hard to make culture. And one of the things that you guys were really ambitious with when you were at the Daily Wire and I I s I ho I hope still um
now is creating new things, is creating culture. The Pend Dragon Cycle is a massive project that you've been working on. The trailer looks incredible. Uh it was absolutely fantastic to see. Um Tell us about that and and what you know, how th I I I have heard it was a pain in the ass to make. Every everything went wrong, you know, actors falling off things, breaking things, you know, having to be replaced by people who've never acted in the et cetera.
Uh tell us about that. Yeah, well I often think when people are critical of of movies that I make that while I know that the movie I actually made is nowhere near as good as the movie that they would have made if they had ever made a movie. Making movies is impossible. Yeah, my friend Phelan McAlliar told me uh
years ago, he said, directing a movie is a job that is so difficult it's actually impossible and therefore it mentally breaks every person foolish enough to endeavor to do it. And he's right. You just go mad. Um because it's so complex and you're just in a a war against reality the entire time. You you you say you heard about these horrors that happened on our set. It's true. We had a guy
A a good friend of mine, Jeff Don, had a massive heart attack on set. We had a horse roll over one of our actors and break his legs. Amazingly he had an identical twin, also living in Budapest at the time, um, who wasn't an actor, but uh who was very kind and stepped up and and made sure we were able to continue.
Um, we one of our producers fell on the ice and broke her arm uh horribly, like, you know, r required surgery. Uh and those were the good days. Those are the days where the production itself mostly kept working. And yeah. You know, there's nothing more rewarding than c creation. I I I'm one who believes that
You know, i in the New Testament, in the book of John, it says, In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God, and through him all things were made that were made, and apart from him was nothing made. Uh, and to me that says that i if you take the Christian view that Genesis one says God created the heavens and the earth, and John one says that all things were made through Christ.
uh in the Christian perspective is that Christ is the part of God most associated with man. He's the part of God that walked the earth as man. Then what that what you can draw from all of that is that man is that that God associates creation with man. That the part of God that is creative is the part of God that identifies and walks as man. You take Adam naming the animals in the garden. Um
You know, a thing without a name may not even exist. If you if you read Spencer Clavin's terrific book, Light of the Mind, Light of the World, you know, this entire quantum concept that exists now in science. human observation is an active participant in God's creation. We're literally
¶ What's The One Thing We're Not Talking About That We Really Should Be?
creating the world as we observe it. God creates through man. And so I think that we have a responsibility uh to be active participants in creation, not just passive, not just through looking around are we creating, but through getting our hands dirty.
Um, and that might you know, I think creating business is a beautiful thing to do. People when I first started the Daily Wire, my Hollywood friends would say, Oh, how's it feel? You used to be a creative, now you're a suit. I said, No, I am a creative. I'm creating something different than what I used to try to create, you know.
Creating a family uh is part of the act of creation, maybe the most important part of the act of creation. But we we're not here um to consume and die. Uh we're here to create and for me there's a artistic component to that. I've been fortunate in my life to get to make movies, to make music, to make businesses. Um But I think for whoever you are, wherever you are, you should be a part of that. And as as conservatives
And all of these words have become very tricky in modern time. Right. The word conservative has about eighteen different definitions and we are part of the conservative civil war is for the definition of the word. Bye. I don't want to conserve I want to conserve the best things about the past while building a better future because of the wisdom that we've inherited. I don't want to throw out the wisdom of the past and try to build a whole new world based on my impulses or my instincts.
um divorced from all the great hard won creation of the people who went before us. But I don't also don't want to keep the stuff that sucked. Uh And and I think that that is what we're called upon to do as people, as as people who are part of this uh right of center movement in the country, the left understands creating the future. They just reject the past. And the right tends to understand holding on to the past But fails when it comes time to build the future. I've always said
at the Daily Wire I would say our job is to uh fight the left and build the future. I've I think my kind of m updated Jeremy two point oh view of it is fight for freedom and build the future. We have to continually be building. And Pendragon's the biggest artistic project I've ever gotten to be a part of building. A thousand people worked on it, a thousand artists. Wow. Uh worked on it. Unbelievable cast. I I think truly
there may have never been a better cast of relatively unknown actors that ever came together to make a project. I think when people see the show, uh they'll think I'm exaggerating here or that I'm uh that I'm sort of Bragging, I take no credit for it. The way the cast came together was miraculous. And I think when people see the show, they'll be like, damn, these guys are terrific.
And we told a story. The most told story in the Western canon, outside of stories directly from the Bible, is the Arthurian uh myth. And we told it in a way that I think is sort of true to its actual Christian origins. And you know, to the extent that maybe Game of Thrones was subversive in its time because of its nihilism, I think the Pin Dragon cycle is subversive in its time because of its rejection of nihilism. It's a very hopeful
Project. And it's sort of about this moment that we live in. It's a about a moment of great political upheaval, of great spiritual and religious. Upheaval. Uh and about how we prioritize our values. And so to to that extent, even though we made something that's about the deep past, I think we made something that's really urgently relevant to the world in which we live. I'm I couldn't be more proud of it.
Jeremy, what a pleasure it's been to have you on. An incredible conversation. Thank you. Uh final question is always the same. What's the one thing that we're not talking about as a society that we really should be? Before Jeremy answers the final question at the end of the interview, make sure you head over to triggerpod.co.uk where you get to see him answer your questions.
How did the death of Charlie Kirk affect you and other senior people at the Delhi Wire and what do you think his lasting impact will be? You know, I I should have fired Candace much earlier than I did. Why? What for? Wha why w was why was she actually fired? There are so many of course one who's gonna go on trigonometry thinks about the answer to this question. And I came up with like a whole list of things that we should be talking about that we aren't. One of them is just the left.
You know, this right wing civil war seems to be all consuming right now. Meanwhile the left is reassembling after the political defeats, th their recent political defeats. And they've gone completely mad and they're poised to grab great political power in the coming years. And I'm very concerned about that. I'm concerned that uh we're we've been too triumphalist.
Uh and we're about to have real challenges again on our hands. But but I think the biggest thing that people should be talking about that we're not talking about right now is um the negative impacts of social media. It's it's like we've skipped it completely and we've moved on to worrying about AI. And AI is still an abstraction, largely. Uh unbelievable advancements. Uh it's an unbelievable tool at the moment, although an imperfect one.
Um and it may be as disruptive and horrible as everybody fears, but but it's not the moment we actually live in. The moment that we live in is is the moment created by a cell phone in every pocket and social media on every cell phone and what it's doing to us as a people. you know, all the things we've discussed today have been empowered by
this moment, this moment of social media. Some of them are good. Mm-hmm. There'd be no Daily Wire, as I said at the very beginning. What we what we realized was the opportunity in social media. That was our that was our sort of founding uh observation. Um Pendragon wouldn't exist without social media. It's an alternative to the way Hollywood does things. That's an opportunity that we were afforded because of social media.
Obviously we have access to information, uh access to friends who in previous generations we might have lost touch with, access to family who we might not have been uh as close to a access to data and information and you know, I got sick recently and was able to so quickly understand things that would have taken so much longer in any system that went before. And yet All the audience cap.
All of the political disruption. Much of the things that have happened in the last twenty years that are blamed on liberalism are actually because of the excesses created by this new technology. And when new technology emerges,
It's always the same. Yes, it brings about the opportunity for huge good, and in fact the reality of huge good, and it brings about the opportunity and the reality of huge ill. It's incredibly disruptive. You know, the printing press led to thirty years of sectarian violence across the entire continent of Europe. Uh
Because suddenly people could read the Bible. And so what'd they do? Like everybody who first reads that God so loved the world that he sent his only son that whoever believed in him would have eternal life, they start killing each other. It's the first thing. Um, it takes a long time.
to adapt to these kinds of disruptions, to socially evolve. Uh and I think you could make an argument that we've we haven't fully em evolved to embrace the printing press yet. The printing press. And in our lifetime How many of them are? Printing press level advancements technologically have happened. Nothing no one's ever lived through more disruptions than the people on the planet right now. And
You see what's happening. There's been great reporting even done this in the last week about the political gap between male and female. Um, the Uh huge changes in attention span. Um th the changes in the nature of tribalism that now we have more in common with strangers who have no geographical connection to us than we do with our neighbors. You know, if your kids on their bike and they get hit by a car, your Facebook friends aren't going to do shit.
You need your neighbor to come out of their house when they hear the noise and call emergency services and provide CPR. Like, it's the people who are der who are around us that are the people who should be the most important in our lives and and social media for the first time in all of history has disrupted that and what it's doing to children. Again, great reporting this week on what's happened just since computers became ubiquitous in classrooms.
And we've gone so far past computers being ubiquitous in classrooms. There's a computer in every child's pocket. Uh you know, we talked briefly about pornography and you said you don't you don't believe it should be banned, uh, but that um obviously people use too much pornography. Uh w we could have an argument as to whether or not pornography should be banned uh obviously, but I I will say that There are some things that people can't self-regulate about.
And there are some things that some people can't self-regulate about. And we have always, as a culture, even in the freest societies in the West, We have always provided some guardrails around those things. Mm-hmm. Uh maybe not
yes or no guardrails. But certainly some guardrails have existed and we live in a time where most of the most destructive things are online and aren't there are no guardrails at all. You know I've I've noticed uh some conversation since being here that may maybe Britain recently put a age gate in front of pornography.
Some states in America are doing that. Obviously there's challenges with it. Are you giving the government access to information about who views pornography or who doesn't? Um are you making it so you know, I I think there's some real concerns about the way that that's gone going about. But obviously you can't live in a society where the average twelve year old is seeing more breasts than King Solomon.
And we do. And that's just a fact. Uh just like shutting down the world and then hitting restart is going to have an impact that we have not even begun to really reckon with yet. the ubiquity of pornography, for for men in particular and for children especially, Of course that's gonna have unbelievable consequences, and we've not even begun to grapple with those consequences. And
I would just say, as I said earlier about Candace Owens, so much of what we engage with online now is just rhetorical pornography. It's just the same dopamine inducing narcotic. And we have not we have not solved it. It it seems so obvious to me, uh, that children should not have access to technology that adults have not yet figured out how to condition themselves to use. And listen, I'm one of the great beneficiaries of
uh social media. You guys are among the great beneficiaries of the social media age. I do not cavalierly say oh we should outlaw social of course we shouldn't outlaw social media. But I I I think the true negative impacts of social media, we're only beginning to understand them. And I think that if we want to preserve all of the good created by the ubiquity of the computer in your pocket and social media on the computer, um we
We have to get serious about understanding the negative consequences and figuring out how to mitigate against them. I I suspect that there's a world. probably not too far in our future, uh, where everyone having the Bible and being able to read the gospel is only good and all of the But first we killed each other. Is behind us.
But we're just not there. And I don't think I don't think that there's enough emphasis on trying to get us there. I think that we we all like the dopamine and so we basically don't want to talk about these n and there's some guys, Jonathan Hyde and others who do, of course. Grazie a tutti. I think the impacts are so terrible right now for the culture that it's shocking that it isn't the biggest thing that we can do.
Hm. Well, we have Jonathan on t Jonathan High, our interview has done really good numbers because I think a lot of people recognise this, particularly when it comes to children, as you as you point out.
Uh and again, I I also think again it's an area it comes down to personal responsibility. Are you gonna let your children have a smartphone? And at what age? And all of these conversations I think parents should think really carefully about. Well I agree about personal responsibility, but I also think that it's good that we say uh kids under eighteen can't have cigarettes. And uh And I think that we will look back.
You know, you see pictures sometimes from the turn of the century where there's like a twelve year old boy on a street corner with a Sell selling newspapers with a cigarette in his mouth and you think it's a better time. Maybe we need to bring back smoking for twelve year olds. Well I will say I would rather my daughter smoke than have social media. Agreed. I think that we will look back at kids having smartphones and social media today.
with an even worse pit in our stomach than looking back at those kids smoking and the Yeah. I actually think the movement is in that direction in terms of schools banning phones, countries banning certain things for under eighteens, etcetera. So I I I think Um I'm grateful you bring that issue up because I think it's really important. Hopefully We are moving in the right direction. But there's a long way to go. I totally agree with you. Please follow me at Jeremy G. Morgan on Twitter.
Uh Jeremy, great to have you on. Uh before we head on over to Substack where our supporters get to ask you their questions, just tell everybody how they can watch the Pendragon cycle if they wanna know. The Pendragon Cycle premiered uh on January twenty second at Daily Wire Plus. You can head over there and buy a subscription and Uh it's a seven episode series. And I can say with all honesty, every single episode is better than the last. By the time you get to episode five and six,
Uh it it's really unbelievable what the cast accomplished. Um so hope everybody will give it a shot. All right. Well before you head over to Daily Wire Plus, head over to triggerpod.co.uk where Jeremy's gonna answer your questions. Like many right-wing commentators, I think the Daily Word does a great job of offering legitimate criticism of the woke left and casting stones, but almost nothing in the offering solutions. Does Jeremy agree? Taxes was feeling so stuck.
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