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Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
3 years ago

About Portland: the police are simply not putting a stop to it.
And why is that? This scene is being played out in similar fashion in one blue city after another – the mob runs rampant, the mayor defends the mob and deflects blame onto people who aren’t there, and the cycle repeats but a bit worse than the previous time.

Lesley van Reenen
Lesley van Reenen
3 years ago

What a relief to watch someone liberal in the old sense of the word, discuss issues and politics with (huge) intelligence and common sense. And what a case he makes for the ‘vast exhausted middle’ who are the majority and don’t easily find a home or a platform to influence a rational response to the madness we see around us.

Simon Denis
Simon Denis
3 years ago

What an agreeable, intelligent man! On the right as I am, I’m happy to find a self-declared radical willing to discuss the issues of the day without rancour and condemnation. However, I must add something. The side of the debate which he accuses of no longer letting its opponents get a hearing is not properly described as “liberal”. The word has become a euphemism. It is clearly motivated by an updated version of Marxism, substituting a new form of “group” politics for the old “class” politics. This is why it has no truck with listening to the other side, for unlike “liberals” of any stripe, Marxists are Utopian, chiliastic and Manichean; there is no room for debate on anything other than their premises and under their correction, with reference to a body of dogmas and agreed starting points infinitely more prescriptive and complex than those of Liberalism, properly understood.

Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
3 years ago
Reply to  Simon Denis

Exactly. Liberals are very few. By the dictionary definition, I qualify. Leftists, however, are in ample supply and they have no interest in other viewpoints.

Simon Denis
Simon Denis
3 years ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

Quite so. For many years I described myself as a “right wing Liberal” and found few allies, but a good deal of half grudging tolerance. Now, however – nettled and alarmed by the sudden surge from the left, the diminishing freedoms of the public square and the transformation visibly changing the face and the nature of my beloved Europe, I am moving to Conservative and Nationalist positions in a personal surge of my own. This response is so visceral that nothing can prevent it, even though it will cost me several friendships when I finally make my now wholly rightist position plain. It is as though the ice flow of the post war consensus is breaking up and you just have to opt for one berg or another. So for example where I once put personal freedom and the economy centre stage, I now believe that tradition and identity are the foremost concerns of mankind and that these are inextricably linked to origins. But I still salute proper Liberals with a wave from the fortress of Iron Conservatism and know that you differ from the many who have borrowed and besmirched your banners.

Frederik van Beek
Frederik van Beek
3 years ago

Great guy this Bret, extremely intelligent, after listening to his analysis I tend to believe that dark and confusing times lie ahead of us, the left and the right seem unable to join forces in a compromise, which is necessary for an upgrade of the existing institutions. The alternative is destruction.

Fraser Bailey
Fraser Bailey
3 years ago

I have been following Bret and Heather’s weekly Dark Horse podcasts for some time now and I would encourage everyone else to do the same. I would also encourage everyone to seek out the various films on the Evergreen College scandal in which he was the main victim.

I am very much in sympathy will almost all his views and prognoses, which are invariably articulated in the most measured of words. The views he expresses in this video are merely a précis of the many themes explored in the podcasts. I will address the issue of the economic inequality that exists within what he describes as remarkably productive societies, and how that has led to BLM/Antifa etc.

It seems to me that Obama was expected to do something about economic inequality, but did nothing. Almost his first act as president was to appoint Goldman Sachs alumni Timothy Geithner as his Treasury Secretary. I knew there and then that there would be no hope and no change for normal, decent people. He then crushed Occupy with extreme prejudice while allowing the banks to throw 5.1 million families out of their homes in his first term. The recovery under Obama was the slowest since WWII and although Trump created an economy in which everyone had work, the issue of economic unfairness was not addressed.

My suggestion here is that because the system blocked any solution to a real problem, namely systemic economic unfairness, a lot of people went looking for solutions to imaginary problems, namely systemic racial/gender unfairness. The results played out in cities across America this summer.

Dave Tagge
Dave Tagge
3 years ago
Reply to  Fraser Bailey

Geithner was not a Goldman alum. He’d previously been President of the New York Fed, worked at the IMF, and worked at U.S. Treasury.

It is certainly fair and correct to state that the was part of the financial establishment, but that specific employment claim isn’t accurate.

Andrew Baldwin
Andrew Baldwin
3 years ago

The very sympatico Professor Weinstein still claims to be a liberal, but he seems to conform to one wit’s definition of a conservative: a liberal who has been mugged by reality.

Kiran Grimm
Kiran Grimm
3 years ago
Reply to  Andrew Baldwin

The wit in question is the famous neo-con, the late Irving Kristol. I read somewhere that his experience of army life in WW2 led him to doubt the socialist egalitarian view of society.

A Spetzari
A Spetzari
3 years ago
Reply to  Kiran Grimm

Interesting. Similar experience here. The military is a very commune/socialist type institution in detail – everything is steered towards the collective and common goal.

Mostly that makes sense and works, sometimes it goes very wrong.

Just as a general point about day to day military life however, the reality is that the many are often carried by the relative few who do the bulk of the work. Whenever things need to be done, trivial or significant, it’s always the same people at the coalface and numbers of individuals absent when it matters.

Kiran Grimm
Kiran Grimm
3 years ago
Reply to  A Spetzari

It is unfortunate that I can’t place the actual source of that story about Irving Kristol but I do remember that it was the behaviour and attitudes of many of the soldiers themselves that dented his faith in the working class rather than the structures of military life.

Revisionist histories such as William I Hitchcock’s “Liberation” and Keith Lowe’s “Savage Continent” give a broader picture (less flattering that we are used to) of the Allied victors following the liberation of Europe.

Your point about slackers carried by the hard working few is well made and can be seen in all areas of working life. In my experience those with a chronically good opinion of themselves are the most likely to overestimate the value of their contribution ““ with an inevitable sense of entitlement.

Martin Rossol
Martin Rossol
3 years ago

Agree. Very helpful discussion. A number of issues were correctly identified as “important”; how to go about prioritizing would be another interesting discussion, and one the right and left could have if there were more folks willing to be open to listening and giving the benefit of the doubt as it relates to motive. Not sure I would call it the elephant in the room, but can China and its political and economic aspirations be set aside? They certainly reject our existing “system”. And they won’t politely go away and let us solve our own political disagreements. In fact, China is a significant variable in any discussion on the current equitable or inequitable distribution of wealth production, which subject I think Mr Weinstein described succinctly.

Fraser Bailey
Fraser Bailey
3 years ago

Hey Bret! Thanks for the great Dark Horse podcasts and the follow-up Q&As. I make sure to watch them both every weekend.

Alex Mitchell
Alex Mitchell
3 years ago

The disaffected voter is interesting. I have often thought an additional option to abstain due to no real representation options would be useful on voting papers. I suspect it would win.