The Bulwark Podcast XX
[0] Welcome, everybody, to the Bullwark podcast.
[1] I am Ben Parker, senior editor at the Bullwark, sitting in for Charlie Sykes.
[2] And I know at this time of year, people like to talk about hope and happiness and goodwill toward men and the best that we can be.
[3] And I'm sure we will have some of that coming up for you all later in the week, but that's not what we're doing today.
[4] Instead, we're going to talk about a fascinating topic that has to do with, you know, people being dark and evil and terrible.
[5] We're going to talk about anti -Semitism, and we have the best possible guests.
[6] talk about this subject.
[7] Joining me is Ye 'er Rosenberg, staff writer at the Atlantic, and author of the Deep Stettel newsletter.
[8] Yeah, year, thanks so much for joining me. Well, thank you for having me. As you noted, if I show up in your studio, you know something terrible has happened, but hopefully we'll make a little sense of it.
[9] Yeah, that's basically our mission statement, isn't it?
[10] I've got to say, I've been reading almost everything you write.
[11] I may have missed one or so here or there since before you were at the Atlantic.
[12] I've been wanting to have this conversation with you for so long, so I'm glad we finally get to do it.
[13] But before we dive into it, How did you get on the anti -Semitism beat?
[14] Is that something you always wanted to write about?
[15] Did you choose it or did it choose you?
[16] Well, you know, I was covering American politics and then I said, this is too depressing, so I'm going to need to pick up some new material.
[17] And so then I went to Israel -Palestine, and then I was like, no, that doesn't worry either.
[18] So then I went to anti -Semitism.
[19] The real answer is that most things I write about as a journalist come from the things that motivated me to get into journalism in the first place, which is I think this subject is really important, but I feel that there's a lacuna in the coverage or it's not covered in the way or in the depth that I would have liked.
[20] And a good thing about the journalism profession at its best is that if you can explain something that other people can't explain, editors will often say, well, you write about that more for us.
[21] And so I didn't even intend to be a journalist as my profession, but I just started writing about the things that I thought were important but undercover.
[22] And I kept getting opportunities, and then here I am, and I'm very fortunate to have the job that I have.
[23] And one of those topics was anti -Semitism.
[24] I was very curious also about, I wanted to write about religion, particularly minority -religious groups.
[25] So I've written about Muslims and Mormons in the American context, not just Jews.
[26] But of course, that also gets to prejudice towards minority -eligious groups, and that includes things like anti -Semitism.
[27] Did I expect it to be this big of the story?
[28] I didn't, and I wouldn't have liked it to be.
[29] I think that, like many American Jews, I thought of it more as a, it's a global story, for sure.
[30] It's a story that tells you something about.
[31] Europe and the Middle East, and there's an element dividend to the American story, but it isn't the same, and it still isn't.
[32] But it's a bigger story than I would have hoped that I think a lot of people would have hoped.
[33] Yeah, I think that's right.
[34] But what is it about anti -Semitism or other forms of religious prejudice that keeps it interesting?
[35] How do you avoid writing about the same thing over and over and over and over this group hates that group and that group hates this group?
[36] And what keeps it fresh?
[37] So I would say that you learn about each of these stories from each other.
[38] There are certain interesting commonalities you discover, the more you look into prejudices towards different groups, and it helps you to understand those communities and their experiences better.
[39] And you also learn about the unique characteristics of different prejudices better, the more you do it.
[40] And you realize that it's not sort of like a buy one, get one free situation where I understand this form of racism, so now I understand this other one, or I understand prejudice towards Jews, so I understand prejudice towards Muslims.
[41] And a good reporter who's covered this stuff in some depth, can actually do a really good job showing you where those things intersect and help people make analogies and also show you where they're different so that they'll see things that they otherwise would have missed.
[42] And, you know, at my best, that's what I'm trying to do.
[43] It's a challenge.
[44] I try to write about this stuff in non -jogany, plain spoken terms that the average person can understand.
[45] And also write about them in a way that doesn't assume you're a bad person because you might have accepted some stereotypes about this or that community, because everybody has blind spots and everybody grows up filling those in.
[46] And too often, I think sometimes the media discourse about these subjects sort of assumes all good people already think this and you're a terrible person for not already understanding it.
[47] And it actually scares people away from the conversation.
[48] And it scares people from just learning and growing, which is what really all we should be doing.
[49] I don't assume you already understand why something is bigoted when I write about it.
[50] I try to explain it.
[51] I try to show you in careful detail.
[52] Maybe it requires some history.
[53] Maybe it requires some analogies.
[54] But the sort of thing that can make this less scary conversation.
[55] It's a weird thing, right?
[56] I write about anti -Semitism in a way that's designed to make it a little bit less scary and more approachable, and also sometimes a little funnier.
[57] And I think you need to have a sense of humor when talking about darker things, because it also helps people to engage with the subject rather than stay far away from it.
[58] What I wonder is, you sort of mentioned that some of it is just sort of, you know, everyday bigotry, born of ignorance that we all have in some measure in another.
[59] And how much anti -Semitism, I guess, in the world or in the country would you say is of that type?
[60] Are there multiple kinds of anti -Semitism?
[61] I guess is my question.
[62] Is it really sort of a bunch of different related phenomena that are from different people and times and places?
[63] Or is there sort of one core that defines what we mean when we talk about it?
[64] What's your perspective on that?
[65] Yeah.
[66] So if you brought in some good historians and academics, they could debate this for you for hours, right?
[67] Is there some overarching core to anti -Semitism?
[68] Or is it a bunch of discrete eras that connect in certain ways but are otherwise distinct.
[69] In my writing, I tend to distinguish between two different kinds of anti -Semitism that we see today.
[70] One, as you mentioned, is the personal, right?
[71] This is the kind of prejudice that we see in many communities towards communities that are not like them.
[72] Those people are too black, too Jewish, two Muslim, too different from me, and I don't like them.
[73] And a lot of times people think that is basically what anti -Semitism is.
[74] So I spend a lot of time saying that is a real thing, but there's another form of anti -Semitism that is actually quite pervasive and also historically more deadly, which is this conspiratorial nature of anti -Semitism, the conspiratorial narrative surrounding Jews, which doesn't just say, I don't like Jews because they're different.
[75] It says, I don't like Jews because I think they're the secret string -pulling puppet masters behind all of the world's social, political, and economic problems.
[76] And that kind of anti -Semitism, where you get things like, you know, the great replacement theory that you see motivating various attacks around the United States, that sort of stuff where people are in the Middle East talking about how the Jews control the media, right, or the Zionists control the government or the economy, all that sort of stuff.
[77] That kind is, you could actually have no problems with any Jews in your life.
[78] You could have lots of Jewish friends and say, you know, I like Jews on an interpersonal level, but as a collective that I imagine, right, they're this malign force on the world.
[79] And that has motivated a lot of people to just, like, lash out at Jews.
[80] When you look, if you scratch me at the surface is some of the worst anti -Semitic acts in the United States in recent years, whether it's that Texas synagogue that got held hostage by a Muslim extremist or the massacre of Jews at Pittsburgh's Tree of Life Synagogue, and numerous others.
[81] There was a shooting at a Jersey City kosher supermarket by some black extremists of the Hebrew -Israelite sect.
[82] All these people, demographically, ideologically, they look very different from each other, but they all bought into conspiracy theories about Jewish control and malign Jewish influence.
[83] And so I try to spend some time explaining that conspiracy theory and all the different types of people believe in and why people fall for it, because I think a lot of people have a handle on the idea that there's a personal prejudice that looks like anti -Semitism.
[84] But they don't always have a handle on this, which we might call one of the unique characteristics of anti -Semitism, which is different than some of these other prejudices.
[85] Yeah, one of the other things that I think is unique, well, maybe it's not unique.
[86] Maybe you should tell me is that you have people who legitimately believe in the conspiracy theories that are basically legitimately nuts.
[87] you also have, in the history of anti -Semitism, people and often governments who use these conspiracy theories in a sort of instrumental purpose.
[88] You know, the greatest example is the protocols of the elders of Zion, which is a forgery by the Russian imperial government to basically blame the Jews for everything.
[89] So is that unique to anti -Semitism that it's used instrumentally in that way?
[90] Does anti -Semitism have a purpose to some people?
[91] So I don't know if that use is unique, because you always have demagogues who find the various prejudices that appeal to the masses to be politically useful to them.
[92] Often when you play with fire, you end up getting burned, and it turns out you can't control it.
[93] And I think we've seen plenty of that in the United States and many other places.
[94] But anti -sautism certainly gets instrumentalized.
[95] People use it because they recognize a lot of people, for example, want to find someone to blame for something going wrong in the country.
[96] And you could either look within and say, what did we do wrong that led to this economic collapse, or you could look without and say, who did this to us?
[97] And a really good scapegoat throughout history has been the Jews.
[98] Why?
[99] Because Jews have been around a real long time, and they've been a minority pretty much everywhere they've lived, other than the modern state of Israel and a few other short periods of time.
[100] Jews are tiny, tiny people.
[101] And then when you spread us around in different places, we're even smaller.
[102] And so people find it very easy to scapegoat minorities that are different from the majority.
[103] And Jews have for, you know, hundreds, thousands of years, been that minority.
[104] And so they end up getting on the receiving end of that human tendency, that instinct.
[105] And that's how anti -Semitism can be useful, right?
[106] Because if you've had some sort of social political or economic collapse.
[107] You have a stab in the back, right?
[108] Germany isn't doing well after, you know, perhaps not ill -advisably having a big role in World War I. But isn't it easier to say that the Jews did this to us.
[109] And these sorts of things are very, very convenient.
[110] But of course, in the Middle East, you very often have, when things are going wrong in various autocracies, it's much easier to start talking about what the malign, you know, Israeli Zionist conspiracy is doing.
[111] And to let people come out and protest against that, than to protest against the government and the authoritarian regime that is actually responsible for people's lives and responsible for those problems.
[112] Okay, but let's focus on one particular example in the Middle East, you know, scanning this headline.
[113] The Denmark, Netherlands, and Germany, authorities arrested people, this was a few days ago, some of them with links to Hamas for planning to attack Jewish targets.
[114] I assume we'll find out more as the cases develop, but assuming that reporting is true for the time being, what does Hamas gain by apparently having people go attack Jewish targets in Europe?
[115] I mean, if you were Hamas and you were subject to an existential threat in Gaza, why would you waste any of your time or resources attacking Jews in Europe rather than, you know, the IDF, which is actually coming after you in the tunnels?
[116] One thing to understand about Hamas is that it is a constitutionally anti -Semitic organization that is committed to eliminating Jews.
[117] And it believes in all of the a lot of these conspiracy theories said, the protocols of the elders of Zion, right?
[118] The Jews are behind all the world wars.
[119] Jews are behind social, political, economic problems.
[120] It's right there in their official charter, which they never disavowed.
[121] And their spokespeople repeat things along these lines with some regularity.
[122] And so the rank and file people who are affiliated with Hamas, they believe these things.
[123] And so to them, you know, Jews are targets of opportunity, but especially if you're at war with the Jews right now, which is how they perceive it.
[124] They don't just perceive themselves as war with Israel.
[125] It's to them.
[126] It's basically interchangeable.
[127] They interchange Jews and Zionists in their rhetoric.
[128] While there are Jews elsewhere, too, that can be attacked.
[129] That's not the only sort of terrorist attack that's been foiled against Jews.
[130] We don't really hear about these in the media because thankfully they get foiled.
[131] And it's sort of the paradox of this stuff, which is that it gets foiled before it happens.
[132] So it's not as big a deal.
[133] But the authorities in Brazil earlier in the war also foiled a terrorist attack.
[134] And I'm sure there are others that we're not hearing about.
[135] And there are, I'm sure, various stages of seriousness and so forth.
[136] But this is a thing that happens.
[137] But to them, all the Jews are just this maligned, So you're not just at war with the Israeli army.
[138] You're war with Jews in general.
[139] Again, they represent a very extremist movement.
[140] This is not obviously how most people who are critics of Israel or most people who are, you know, most people are Muslims or Arabs.
[141] This is not how they're thinking about it.
[142] But it's certainly how Hamas is thinking about it.
[143] Right, right.
[144] And you talked earlier about the sort of two different kinds of anti -Semitism that you see.
[145] I will get this a little later, but I think there might actually be three.
[146] But you wrote in October that Hamas is less committed to national liberation than to Jewish elimination.
[147] And they are obviously a violent, organized, painstaking, thoroughly ideological and religious group.
[148] And that is very different from what's also been in the news lately, which is the sort of campus left kind of anti -Semitism, which is ideologically incoherent compared to Hamas, which has like an actual charter and is more spontaneous and is less organized.
[149] Is there a relationship between these people?
[150] do things, or are they completely separate phenomena that happen to overlap a little bit by coincidence?
[151] You often have this phenomenon in general of American college students over the decades, sort of romanticizing various militant groups abroad, often anti -Western ones, and they have this completely different notion of what they are and what they represent and what they're doing than what the real group actually believes and does.
[152] And to me, as someone who I spend a lot of time covering the actual Middle East and what's going on there, and then you go in the college campus discourse, there's very little resemblance very often to how it's discussed, setting aside questions of who's right and who's wrong and prejudice or not.
[153] I wouldn't say that a bunch of people who are, you know, chanting from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free on a college campus, are necessarily tranting it in the way that it's understood by Hamas, which means we're going to cleanse all of the Jews.
[154] Either we're going to expel them, we're going to kill them.
[155] That is not often.
[156] If you actually press people on it, they might not even understand what the chant means.
[157] There has been some polling done on this and studies done on this by actual academics, which you might have seen in the Wall Street Journal by a UCLA professor, I believe, where he found that most people don't know on college campus who chant this, like, what the river is and what the sea is.
[158] And when they find out, they're like, oh, yeah, I'm not so down with that slogan.
[159] Right.
[160] And others, when they chant it, they might think, oh, we could have just one state with all the Israelis and Palestinians living together in peace and harmony.
[161] This is a political arrangement that Paul Scho is rejected by overwhelmingly by Israelis and Palestinians on the ground, which is like the one of like two things that they can agree upon.
[162] But being wrong about what a realistic political arrangement is is not the same right as calling for, you know, cleansing all of the Jews.
[163] They think that they're, they're supporting one thing, but they aren't as read in on what Hamas is actually doing, you know.
[164] And so I would say they're not exactly the same.
[165] And also when I focus, I tend to focus in my writing on groups like Hamas or groups like Hezbollah, which is the Lebanese militia that's to Israel's north that's currently, you know, firing on their civilian areas and has caused the evacuation of some 100 ,000 Israelis already and killed people within Israel.
[166] And this is barely making any news or headlines in America.
[167] And then both Hezbollah Hamas, who are funded by Iran, which is a Holocaust denying megapower that has a tremendous amount of resources and uses it to fund proxy wars around the Middle East and including on multiple borders of Israel.
[168] So those people, you know, their form of what I would say, anti -Semitic, anti -Zionism, pretty straightforwardly.
[169] They're very open about being anti -Semitic and being anti -Zionist and how those are connected.
[170] You worry to be more than people with placards on a campus, especially who don't necessarily know as much about the issue as they should, but are in a long -running tradition of people like that on campuses on all issues.
[171] That's more or less what you wrote in November.
[172] You wrote, whatever one thinks of these students, they mostly have placards.
[173] Iran and its militias have guns, and they are happy to use them, which seems to me so obviously true that I want to argue with you about it.
[174] I totally agree with you that the people who are willing to blow people up and kidnap them and do terrible things are more dangerous in the short run, but isn't it easier to destroy a foreign organization that has a command structure and hideouts and a logistical infrastructure like Hamas than it is to kill a domestic ideology that just sort of pops up among people?
[175] In the long run, isn't it really more, and again, I'm arguing devil's advocate, But isn't it really more dangerous to have people here believing dangerous things and people abroad believing dangerous things?
[176] Well, if it's all just about beliefs, it's one thing, but it's what are people doing with those beliefs and what people are doing with those beliefs in the Middle East is attempting to literally eliminate by mass murder and other means an existing country, whereas people on a college campus might be, you know, in one way or the other, supporting some of that, but they aren't actually able to affect that really one way or the other.
[177] And also as like that thing I mentioned with this, you know, the study that was done by this UCLA professor, very often people can be reasoned with what it is simply an ideology about facts overseas.
[178] You can, in fact, tell people some more facts and they can say, oh, wait, so the thing is a little bit more complicated or different than I thought it was.
[179] I don't think I could really, you know, like a UCLA professor could do some, you know, study on Hamas members and then say, well, here are some facts that you might want to know.
[180] And then they'd be like, well, you know what, that has changed my opinion of this matter.
[181] Right.
[182] So I think there is some fundamental differences between Hamas.
[183] members and even someone who I might have really strong disagreements with on a college campus.
[184] No, true.
[185] And I just want to quote you one thing from that, from that Wall Street Journal article you mentioned.
[186] They did a survey to see of students who agreed with the slogan from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free if they could name the river in the sea and a majority could.
[187] And then they showed a bunch of these students who profess to agree with the slogan a map of the Middle East and identified the Jordan River in the Mediterranean Sea.
[188] And after seeing the map, 75 % of those students, there's only a total of 80, so it's a small study, but 75 % of those students change their minds.
[189] So, you know, little information can go a long way.
[190] I do want to ask you another question about campus anti -Zionism, anti -Semitism, it's sometimes blurs, with the understanding that we have agreed that the people with guns are more dangerous.
[191] When did anti -Zionism, at least, become wrapped up in anti -colonialism and the white settler thing, I'll admit that it was sort of news to me after 10 -7 that Israelis are considered settler colonialists and white for that matter.
[192] So the settler colonial paradigm is one that has been used in various academic contexts to discuss a whole bunch of different countries, whether they're founding or various other actions they took after they were founded when they expanded to territory.
[193] I think it's a perfectly reasonable paradigm, actually, to apply to Israel's continuing designs on the West Bank, where it continues to build settlements at the direction of, you know, committed actors who are currently in the Israeli government.
[194] Like many kinds of academic ideologies as they become more and more popularized and then they enter like, I don't know, TikTok form, it starts to become this catch -all that then it relates to everything and becomes much, much less useful and frankly, sometimes very offensive and not actually how it was originally used in a much more rarefied intellectual context.
[195] And so then suddenly you get things like the entire state of Israel is settler colonial, which is strange because what colonial power are the Jews when they were basically kicked out and expunged from pretty much any country you would get to claim they should go back to.
[196] Whereas the state of Israel, the rest of land, that is the historic homeland of the Jewish people, is filled with relics of the Jewish faith, with all the Jewish holy sites, which conveniently predate all of the non -Jewish holy sites, all those sorts of things.
[197] That doesn't justify one claim over another claim.
[198] There are people who live there who have all legitimate claims.
[199] That's the core of this problem.
[200] But it says that this is not a colonialist project, it's different groups with legitimate claims.
[201] You might say indigenous claims of certain sorts, although that, of course, different scholars will dispute the nature of that term.
[202] But when you take like settler colonial from a certain context of like Israel in the West Bank and post -1967, and now you start saying, well, now it's all of Israel.
[203] And then you start adding in American identity politics and saying, the Israelis are the white settler colonials.
[204] You get into really strange places because, of course, half of Israelis at this point, more than half are dissented from Mizrahi, that is Middle Eastern and North African Jews from Muslim and Arab countries, from which they were pushed out, persecuted, expelled, depends on the context, where they've lived for centuries, right, before Islam.
[205] And then Israel has found it, and a lot of these countries decide that we're going to, as we've seen now during this war, people take out their anger at Israel on Jews locally.
[206] And also a lot of Jews who are in those countries said we've been living a second -class citizens for a while.
[207] Maybe we should go somewhere where we might be not second -class citizens.
[208] And then they do that, and of course it turns out that the Ashkenazi Jews and the Mizrahi Jews in Israel don't necessarily get along, right?
[209] And Mizrahi Jews faces a fair amount of persecution themselves.
[210] But over time, they've really taken up a lot of cultural and political power.
[211] Netanyahu's political base in Israel is predominantly Mizrahi.
[212] When we had that, listeners and viewers might remember this huge controversy in Israel before the war over the overhaul of the Israeli judiciary, which was being initiated by Netanyahu and his government.
[213] Now, the people who were some of the most vocal supporters of sort of gutting the Israeli judiciary, in the name of giving more power to the people were Mizrahi Jews on the right who said that we've been disempowered by an Ashkenazi elite in all these institutions and this is necessary and that the people who are mostly against it were Ashkenazi Jews on the left.
[214] So if you're making this out to be some sort of white settler state, none of its politics make any sense.
[215] You have no idea when Netanyahu's in power.
[216] You have no idea where his political base comes from.
[217] You just can't understand what's going on and then you can't affect it.
[218] But it sort of like begins as like a useful academic idea.
[219] I mean, you could say the same thing about something like intersectionality, which has some really interesting insights to tell us about prejudice operates.
[220] I've used it in my writing a bit about anti -Semitism.
[221] But then when it becomes pop intersectionality as applied on college campuses and used to apply to a million different issues of conversations, it basically loses a lot of its intellectual rigor and starts making contradictory and problematic claims.
[222] And I think that happened with settler colonialism as well.
[223] Yeah, I think that's right.
[224] And I think also part of what gets missed in this conversation is exactly well, it's two things.
[225] One is exactly how, for lack of a better word, diverse Israeli society is, and also it is the imposition of American sort of race conceptions onto a region where those don't really make sense.
[226] So as you said, half -ish of all Israelis are descended from Middle Easterners, right?
[227] Instead, as opposed to Europeans.
[228] So if you put an Israeli and a Palestinian next to each other, you wouldn't necessarily be able to tell who is who.
[229] But there are other kinds of Israelis, too.
[230] besides Ashkenazim and Israel, there's a large number of Ethiopian Jews, right?
[231] Which I think if you were coming at this with a purely American racial sensibility would confuse you, because they're the only ones in the situation who are, you know, black.
[232] And there's small numbers of other communities, too.
[233] They're, you know, Indian Jews who are living in Israel now, and there are Chinese Jews.
[234] And anyway, a lot of this gets sort of smushed into American sort of racial understanding, which just does not apply.
[235] It's a very American thing to do.
[236] you know, we are the main character of the world, and all of our ideas get imposed on everybody else.
[237] Everyone else has to speak English.
[238] We will not learn a second language, right?
[239] It's one of the privileges of being American.
[240] You can do this sort of thing, but it can make for some really lazy analysis, and it's why America sometimes has problems in the Middle East, because sometimes we are applying our own paradigms to paradigms that are not, you know, totally different.
[241] And you have to really try to understand societies from within if you're going to actually influence them in some way.
[242] And so part of this is, is that if you want to understand Israeli society, and maybe you don't like, for example, the right -wing government of Benjamin Netanyahu and the general drift of Israeli politics for quite some time under him, you need to understand why he got elected and who are his voters and things like that.
[243] And if you're not able to understand, say, the identity politics of Israel and the different populations and why they have the politics they do, like, why are Mizrahi Jews traditionally more right -wing than Ashkenazi Jews?
[244] Well, Mizraqi Jews lived in the Middle East, right?
[245] in Muslim and Arab countries, and they got kicked out, and they felt dispossessed, and so they look around, and they say, I don't trust your piece of paper for peace and all of this stuff.
[246] None of these people can be trusted.
[247] We need to, like, you know, have hard power and things like that.
[248] They find those to be more compelling arguments.
[249] And if you want to assuage those, you have to address those.
[250] But if you just pretend away these people and just say this is a giant white colonial state of a bunch of people from Brooklyn, you're going to have a lot of problems, even reaching anybody there, let alone impacting the political discourse.
[251] Okay.
[252] Situated somewhere between the armed, organized, really urgent anti -Semitism of Hamas and their ilk, and the unarmed, disorganized, not nearly as dangerous, campus anti -Semitism, there is the armed but disorganized right -wing anti -Semitism that you described of individuals in the United States motivated by conspiracy theories, shooting up synagogues and kosher grocery stores, and things like that.
[253] Give me your hierarchy of anti -Semitic threats.
[254] Where do the right -wing nutjabs fit in with the sort of left -wing campus cranks and the major terrorist organizations?
[255] My answer to this is always the rankings are deceptive because typically, and this is not why you're posing the conversation, but in general, in our potters in reality, you know how this works, which is that people say, well, where's the real anti -Semitism?
[256] What's the biggest threat?
[257] And then the idea is we don't have to talk about the other ones, and almost always the biggest threat is very conveniently the one that's happening with other people.
[258] It's the other party.
[259] It's the perpetual sin of the people I already disagree with on everything else.
[260] And you might be pointing to real anti -Semitism, what you're really doing is making sure everyone's looking over there, because it enables you to not have to confront any anti -Semitism where you are.
[261] So if you're on a college campus, you're not going to be able to solve for Hamas.
[262] Like, it ain't going to happen, right?
[263] I don't know.
[264] Maybe you want to go and parachute down and good luck to you.
[265] But you're not going to be able to fix, you know, like that kind of violent anti -Semitism on the ground in the Middle East.
[266] It's not your problem and you can't really do much about it.
[267] But you can do something about anti -Semitism that might be going on in your college campus community and just making sure that if there's like pro -Palestinian protest, that it doesn't lapse into that.
[268] And like that's a legitimate thing you can do.
[269] If you're a right -wing person involved in politics in America and you notice anti -Semitism has been creeping into all different parts of sort of the, you know, Republican base and certain types of discourse about Jews and things like the great replacement theory and certain popular personalities who, you know, have sanitized versions of these things, you can speak out against it.
[270] And you can say, that's not something that I support.
[271] And that's not something our party should do or support.
[272] And you're going to have much more impact in those spaces because people listen to people who are part of their own community and they trust.
[273] And if you're like a left -winger and trying to police right -wing anti -Semitism or a right -wing anti -Semitism, or an American trying to police, you know, Middle Eastern anti -Semitism and so forth or reversed, you're mostly going to make very little headway because you don't have the credibility in those communities and the connection is to change anything, which is why it's sort of cost free to signal against anti -Semitism outside, but it costs a lot to stand up to anti -Semitism inside.
[274] So it's understandable why we tend to have the outside conversation and not the inside conversation.
[275] So, like, I would acknowledge all of the things that you just listed, and I would just say people listening and watching, think about what communities you're in and that you're part of.
[276] And that can be political.
[277] It can be social, right?
[278] You can be like, you know, I'm, you know, this is what I do at work, this is the industry I'm in, things like that.
[279] And you can make a difference in those places because people will listen to you.
[280] And you also feel more satisfied once you do it because you might actually make, you know, like railing against something you can change actually is kind of enervating and it can be very depressing.
[281] And so, but you can, it might be hard, and you might have a hard conversation internally, but in the end, you often will find that people can shift and can change and you can make a change, but only if you really are willing to look inside instead of out.
[282] Okay, quick detour, because you talked about projection and people always pointing to the other.
[283] side to point out their problems rather than at their own.
[284] And, you know, once you're talking about projection, you're basically talking about Donald Trump.
[285] And you have one of the most interesting ideas about Donald Trump that I think I've read, which is, and I'll just summarize it here, but feel free to fill it in further, which is that, in my words, not yours, Donald Trump is basically what we would normally call an anti -Semite, except all of the qualities that anti -Semites typically ascribe to Jews.
[286] Trump actually likes because his worldview is flipped upside down.
[287] He thinks Jews are kind of selfish and only looking out for their own and good with money, but he also warns Jews against voting against him in his Russia -Shana message.
[288] What do we make of this guy?
[289] And I guess the real question is, is he getting worse?
[290] So those are two good questions.
[291] We'll start with the general theory to, you know, sort of spell out for people.
[292] I wrote about this in the Washington Post some years ago because Donald Trump confuses a lot of people when it comes to Jews because he's got, you know, Jewish grandkids.
[293] He's got a Jewish daughter, right?
[294] And sudden law, and he will say, you know, I'm a big fan of Israel, I'll do this or that thing for Israel, so forth.
[295] But then he'll also say ridiculously anti -Semitic things at the same time, where that sound anti -Semitic, like the Jews used to control Congress or the Jews, you know, used to whatever controlled the New York Times, and the Jews are always looking out for Israel, or they want to own their own politicians, which is a thing he said to the Republican Jewish coalition back during the 2016 campaign.
[296] So what is going on?
[297] And the answer is Trump accepts all of these anti -Semitic stereotypes about Jews, that they're clannished, that they're self -interested, that they only look out for themselves.
[298] But of course, that Trump sees as the highest ideal for a person.
[299] Those are things that he thinks everyone should do, right?
[300] That is like the Trump philosophy.
[301] And so he looks at Jews and says, these are my kind of people, as long as they're adhering to anti -Semitic stereotypes.
[302] If they end up acting like, you know, more left -wing Jews and they don't adhere to those things and they don't like sign up for his program, and then he's like, well, then you're not, right, you're the bad kind of Jews.
[303] But he doesn't have a problem.
[304] And this is not unique to Trump, and that's something I've written about.
[305] This is a saying that's attributed to a bunch of different intellectuals.
[306] You know who first came up with it, which is a phylo -Semite is an anti -Semite who likes Jews.
[307] And that's unfair.
[308] There are a lot of phylo -Semites who just like Jews.
[309] But there's a certain kind of phylo -Semite that simply says, yeah, Jews are scheming, canyving, and they run all the banks in the economy.
[310] And that's why I want one of them to be the guy who handles my finances.
[311] And I want to read all their books so I can find out how to be as clever as them and I want them to be on my team.
[312] And you will find this, you know, I wrote about it in the context of Asia in a lot of Asian countries where there aren't even a lot of Jews.
[313] There are a lot of positive associations with Jews along with Jewish like cleverness and industriousness and, you know, utility with money, which isn't really related to real Jews, right, but it's related to these cultural stereotypes.
[314] It's certainly better than believing those things and hating Jews for them rather than I believe those things, but I admire them.
[315] But you can see in some context, once people buy into the stereotypes, it's like a coin, and you can flip it from phylo -Semitic to anti -Semitic pretty easily.
[316] And this gets to your second question about, is Donald Trump getting worse?
[317] Right.
[318] So there was this case in South Korea, where there was a big controversy within Samsung, which is a company that is accountable for a remarkable, a large share of the GDP of that country.
[319] People did not realize, and they were debating whether I think to spin off a certain subsidiary and a minority investor named Paul Singer, who's a Jewish financier based in the United States was against this particular move because he said it would be bad for the long -term future of the company and shareholders.
[320] But the South Korean ruling family that really controlled the majority of Samsung really wanted to do this.
[321] But they didn't just debate it on the merits.
[322] As the debate got more heated, cartoons and articles started appearing in the South Korean press talking about how those, you know, manipulative Jewish vultures are coming in and trying to tilt all this against our best interests.
[323] And this sort of thing shocked a lot of people because South Korea is known as one of these phylo -Semitic countries where people really love Jews.
[324] They sell, like, sort of weird, kitsy extracts of the Talmud translated into English as, like, how to get rich and learn how to be industrious sort of guides, which is, by the way, not a good way to read the Talmud, you will end up very confused.
[325] But that's the sort of thing that they did.
[326] And there's articles of The New Yorker about this.
[327] It's been done for a long time.
[328] They were shocked that they could see this sort of anti -Semitism in the public sphere.
[329] But all that happened is that the phylo -Semitic coin had been flipped when it became convenient for some people in power to do it.
[330] And so Donald Trump expresses a lot of anti -Semitic stereotypes, but he expresses them positively.
[331] But should he decide that he's really angry at Benjamin Daniel or certain types of Jews, like all the liberal Jews who aren't voting for him, that he yelled that and threatened on social media, he could be quite comfortable trafficking in those stereotypes and using them negatively.
[332] And I think if we get a second Trump presidency, we're going to get a sort of live stress test of whether or not Donald Trump will or won't flip that coin and in what circumstances.
[333] I think one of the things holding him back is the fact of the historical accident that he has a daughter who converted to Judaism and married a Jewish guy.
[334] And so that changes like what he'll say or what people might say to him if he says certain things.
[335] If that hadn't happened, I wouldn't have been surprised we'd already have gotten to a much darker place much more quickly.
[336] And because Donald Trump has these notions about Jews and two, not news to your viewers, has a general conspiratorial worldview, which is very congenial to anti -Semitism.
[337] He has all of the ingredients, right?
[338] He's the sort of person that when I'm reporting on certain people, I know it's often a matter of when, not if, that they're going to end up expressing some anti -Semitic conspiracy theory.
[339] Again, they may have no personal prejudice towards Jews, right?
[340] So someone like RFK Jr., who I don't think has any problems with any real living Jewish people that he's ever met.
[341] But he, like, started just randomly spouting about how the coronavirus might have been, you know, genetically engineered or whatever not to target, you know, certain types of Jews.
[342] And it's like bizarre.
[343] But it's again, once you're a conspiracy theorist, right, you're going to end up encountering anti -Semitic conspiracy theories because anti -Semitism is one of the oldest conspiracies in the book, so you'll end up encountering one of those, and you'll end up expressing it, right?
[344] So the more you swim with conspiracy theorists and someone like Donald Trump does that all the time, the more likely you'll express anti -Semitic conspiracy theories.
[345] And so, you know, so I think is he getting worse, right?
[346] I think he is getting worse.
[347] I mean, when you're not having, you know, dinner at Marilago with Kanye West and Nick Fuentes, if you're not, you know, swimming in certain dangerous waters, you know, it's the sort of thing that will continue to fester and grow and then get reflected back in the sort of, you know, voices that get empowered in the Republican base.
[348] because Trump empowers certain voices on the far right and brings them closer and closer to the mainstream as a result.
[349] And he's been doing that since 2015.
[350] And that's how you get it.
[351] Nick Fuentes, who nobody would have heard of, right, in the position that he's in now of some influence.
[352] And so, you know, all of that stuff, you know, it has gotten worse, right?
[353] How bad it's going to get?
[354] I couldn't tell you.
[355] But it's not static, and then you're right to ask about it.
[356] I would almost argue it the other way.
[357] I think, you know, I think it was 2019 you had that piece in the Washington Post.
[358] we basically said Donald Trump believes all these anti -Semitic stereotypes.
[359] And I think a lot of people miss what I took to be your larger point, which is not Donald Trump is an anti -Semite, even though he has Jewish family.
[360] It was, this is a guy who thinks in stereotypes and conspiracy theories.
[361] And this was, you published this years before the Italian space satellites and Hugo Chavez and Dominion voting systems and all the rest of it.
[362] I mean, that's really the danger, I think, is not that people who are conspiracy theories will become anti -Semites, but that if someone, shows the types of thinking that make them in these semites, they become a conspiracy theorist about all sorts of things, right?
[363] Well, it's, you know, it's both.
[364] And to like elaborate on the point about it being dangerous and getting to dominion and, you know, the election, one of the things I've written about on, you know, in multiple contexts is that conspiracy theorists are really bad for democracy, because democracy is this notion that we can collectively get together to rationally solve our problems, you know, whatever they might be.
[365] And we vote and we empower people and we figure out what's wrong, and then we act to change those.
[366] And maybe we get the diagnosis wrong.
[367] We do something wrong, but we're actually actively able to figure that out.
[368] If you think there's some shadowy cabal that's actually running the whole show, right?
[369] And there's actually some string -pulling Jews behind the scenes who are responsible for everything.
[370] Well, then you spend all your time chasing imaginary Jews instead of solving the real causes of your problems.
[371] And so the more you empower conspiracy theorists and cranks in your society, the more anti -Semitic it will probably get, but also just the more inept it will get at fixing itself, at self -diagnosis.
[372] And so that's like why anti -Semitism is like a fundamentally anti -democratic ideology, because it teaches people that actually no matter how you vote, no matter who you vote for, no matter what you do as an individual actor, none of it matters because the Jews are the ones behind the scenes making all the decisions.
[373] The Pittsburgh shooter, you know, the Tree of Life synagogue literally had a cartoon that he posted on Gab on his social media account, which was, you know, it was called the illusion of choice and it shows like a character looking down two pathways.
[374] And on one side, it's like the right and one side it's the left, you know, Republican Democrat.
[375] But then if you look carefully, the paths then converge at the end and there's just, you know, a caricature of, you know, a hook -nosed Jew rubbing his hands together.
[376] And on top of it, it says Zog, which is Zionist occupied government.
[377] Right.
[378] So the idea is you have the illusion of choice in voting for Republicans or Democrats, left or right, but in the end, the Jew makes the decision.
[379] Like, it's a fundamentally disempowering movement.
[380] It destroys people's faith in democracy.
[381] And so, you know, to have people who are in thrall in that running your country seems like a really bad recipe for being able to have elections and to do them right and for people to trust them.
[382] That's why, like, we see the rise of conspiracy theories and anti -sitism together hand in hand, and it's not a coincidence.
[383] Amen.
[384] Now I'd like to transition from the hyper -irational to the super rational, because you mentioned that you had a list of legitimate reasons why people could be anti -Zionist, but not anti -Semitic.
[385] And I think this is an important point to drill down on because I would say sociologically, or as you observe it in the real world, the Venn diagram of anti -Zionism and anti -Semitism is not quite a perfect circle, but it's pretty close.
[386] But ideologically or rationally or in the realm of pure ideas, it's totally legitimate to be an anti -Zionist without being an anti -Semite.
[387] So can you tell us a little bit about what your legitimate anti -Zionist reasons are?
[388] It's a great question.
[389] So I wrote this piece, which we titled when anti -Zionism is anti -Semitic?
[390] Because that's a question that a lot of people have.
[391] When do these two things become the same and in what situations?
[392] And I pointed out that a huge number of anti -Zionists are very straightforwardly and unashamedly anti -Semitic, whether they're Hamas or Hezbollah or the Iranian regime, right?
[393] And a whole bunch of other actors out there who are either openly anti -Semitic or if we judge them pretty straightforwardly on the things they say, whether they admitted or not, they are anti -Semitic.
[394] But that being said, there's a whole bunch of specific cases where you have people who have regenerate reasons for understanding themselves as anti -Zionists.
[395] Now, I want to do a quick methodological note, a terminological note, which is people use anti -Zionist to mean different things, and that leads to a lot of confusion of this conversation.
[396] To a lot of people, actually, I think in the mainstream discourse these days, especially if you're on social media, when they say anti -Zionist, they just mean I'm very critical of Israel.
[397] They don't mean, I don't think Israel should exist.
[398] They don't really know very much about like the history of Zionism or what that means.
[399] And they're just saying, maybe I really hate Benjamin Netanyahu.
[400] I really hate right -wing Israeli governments.
[401] I don't like the occupation or settlements.
[402] I want them to stop.
[403] And I'm an anti -Zionist because of that.
[404] Because Zionist means I support Israel.
[405] And so anti -Zionist means I don't support Israel because all these things that is doing.
[406] Now that creates a lot of problems because a lot, you know, anti -Zionists in the original conception and the way that most Jews, I think, understand it, because Jews came up with Zionism is Zionism is the idea that Jews should have a homeland in their historical land in the state of Israel, and that Israel should exist.
[407] And then there are many different understandings of what Israel should be like and so forth.
[408] Zionism is just that Israel should exist.
[409] So if you say you're anti -Zionist, they hear that and they say, you want to destroy Israel, and they think that you are the people like Hamas and Hezbollah and Iran.
[410] And so you have all these people who are like sort of at each other's throats, and sometimes it's just because they're using the words differently.
[411] And so you have somebody calling themselves as an anti -Zionist because they hate Netanyahu and wants to end the occupation.
[412] And you have someone who calls themselves a Zionist who also hates Netanyahu and wants to end the occupation.
[413] And the two of them think they disagree, right, and they don't.
[414] And so when I say you can be an anti -Zionist and not be anti -Semitic, so one, if you're just like a very strong critic of Israel and Israeli policy and Israeli government, that's not anti -Semitic.
[415] And also, you're probably not really an anti -Zionist in the traditional sense anyway.
[416] But in colloquial usage you are, and it's fine.
[417] And you're not about being anti -Semitic.
[418] You're just doing what everyone does, which is critique state actors, whether the United States or anybody else.
[419] Then you have people who might be anti -Zionists and say that Israel shouldn't exist.
[420] And there are different reasons why people might say that.
[421] Some people might be principled anti -nationalists.
[422] There are people who really hate nationalism and ethnic nation -states, and they think they're the root of a tremendous amount of strife and suffering in the world.
[423] And they oppose them all, and they would like Israel to go away and all the rest.
[424] And they might think Israel is the easiest case because it's one that's more threatened and more contested.
[425] And so maybe we have a better shot.
[426] So they focus a little more on that.
[427] Right.
[428] They might be a Jewish person who particularly is offended by the existence of Israel because they don't like its actions of its government or they don't like the existence of nation -states in general, but they're really, really angered by Israel because this is the state that purports to speak in their name and people connect to them whether they like it or not.
[429] And so somebody who disproportionately is Jewish and disproportionately focuses on Israel's sins, they're not being anti -Semitic, right?
[430] They're just being this kind of anti -Zionist.
[431] There are ultra -Orthodox Jews in the world who have never aligned with Zionism because they have a theological view that Jews should not return to Israel until the Messiah comes and then they would form a religious state in Israel.
[432] Instead, you have a secular state that was formed by secular Jews, largely speaking originally.
[433] And so it's just completely, separate from their theology, and they have no particular ideological commitment to it.
[434] And at the extreme end of those, you have, like, very strange, cultish groups of ultra -Orthodox Jews who go and hang out with, like, the Iranian president and, like, give thumbs up.
[435] And those people are really despised by pretty much every Jew across the spectrum.
[436] But, like, they exist.
[437] And, like, you know, those people who are, like, you know, adobeying the Supreme Leader of Iran, that's actually anti -Semitic.
[438] But the belief, right, that being theologically and non -Or anti -Zionist, that is obviously non -Antisemitic.
[439] Yeah, we don't give them turns on the space laser.
[440] Yeah.
[441] And so, like, there are all these cases that exist.
[442] The question is whether people have, like, done the homework to actually be part of any of those groups, right?
[443] Or if they point to those examples in order to excuse the fact that they're actually engaging in some form of anti -Semitism by saying, well, here, like, it's true that anti -Zionism isn't necessarily anti -Semitism.
[444] And so, therefore, I can't be anti -Semitic, which it doesn't follow.
[445] Right?
[446] Just because there are absolutely multiple intellectual cases to be made for non -antemitic forms of anti -Zionism doesn't mean that you or yourself haven't done this thing.
[447] And we've seen plenty of examples.
[448] in recent days, both violent and, you know, in terms of arguments or various other interjections in the public discourse that are pretty straightforwardly anti -Semitic, that call themselves anti -Zionist, right?
[449] When people have, you know, shot at synagogues, they've vandalized holocaust memorials they've, you know, with things like, you know, writing free Palestine on them and things like that.
[450] So one, this helps no Palestinians, right?
[451] You're wrapping your prejudice in their plight, and then that ends up tarring their plight with your prejudice.
[452] But all of that stuff, like, you can't just turn around and say, well, you know, anti -Zionism, is it necessarily anti -Semitism?
[453] and now I'm going to be begun this synagogue, right?
[454] Like, that doesn't work.
[455] And so, you know, the annoying answer of what I give people, they're like, is how do I know if something anti -Zionist is anti -Semitic?
[456] Because, like, you have to ask if you follow -up questions.
[457] You have to just, like, actually look at what the person is doing, why they're doing it.
[458] And usually people will tell you who they are pretty quick.
[459] If you do this on social media, I just ask, you know, a couple follow -ups to the person, like, do you think it's okay to, you know, attack a Jewish institution in, you know, Europe over something that's going on in the Middle East.
[460] If they are yes or no, they'll tell you something about what form of anti -Zionists if they subscribe to.
[461] I actually, this is a piece I haven't written, but I ought to write a list of questions that you can basically ask.
[462] You can also ask people about run -of -the -mill anti -Semitic conspiracy theories, because you'll be people who tend to be anti -Semitic, anti -Semitic on other axes too.
[463] So who actually did 9 -11?
[464] Amazingly useful question.
[465] Did the Holocaust happen as is traditionally understood?
[466] If you just ask these questions that might seem crazy, but you ask them to people who call themselves anti -Zionists and they answer them wrong, you've learned who they are, right?
[467] And you've learned that perhaps they're not a good faith interlocutor in this conversation.
[468] And so that's what I would say.
[469] But I do think it is important to distinguish between, you know, criticism of Israel, including very harsh criticism of Israel and anti -Semitism on an intellectual plane because otherwise it becomes impossible to actually have a normal conversation about Israel like you'd have about any other country and make it better.
[470] You know, the great thing about having a country and the great thing about democracy is that you actually can improve the country, but you have to be able to have that conversation.
[471] Both Israel and the United States.
[472] I mean, it applies to both.
[473] We would be remiss if we didn't talk a little bit about the relationship between anti -Semitism and free speech, starting with the three university presidents, one of whom is no longer a university president, Liz McGill, of Penn was asked to step down because of her performance.
[474] And I'll just say, let's leave aside all of the sort of reviews of their performance and how they said what they said.
[475] And, you know, you can go watch the video and decide for yourself if it makes your spine tingle or not.
[476] I don't think they acquitted themselves very well.
[477] But I'm also not convinced they gave the wrong answer to the question.
[478] You're someone who not only makes this living off a free speech, but I know it takes it very seriously.
[479] So what do you think of the answers they give, which is basically we allow for someone to say, the Jews should be driven from Palestine into the sea, as long as they don't make it into some sort of action, like harassment.
[480] What's your opinion on that?
[481] So I think that the thing that they kept coming back to in their answers is that whether something is anti -Semitic or harassment or bigotry and within their codes of conduct comes down to it being context dependent.
[482] So if you're going and chasing around a Jewish student and yelling free Palestine at them, that could be a form of harassment and is taking this sort of political point and weaponizing it in an anti -Jewish way.
[483] Then you have a middle case where you're like going and disrupting classes and yelling on a foghorn from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free and make it really hard for people to actually do what they're there in university to do, right?
[484] And then you have another, you know, just a totally different case where people are having a rally in the quad, right, and they might be chanting the same slogan.
[485] Those are all very different.
[486] And so it really does matter.
[487] Universities really should be exercising careful judgment on each of these cases and figuring out what each of them warrants and whether there should be punishment or whether it's perfectly fine.
[488] The reason why their answers were poorly received is one they conveyed them rather poorly.
[489] They use very lawyerly language.
[490] But also because of the context that colleges, for sometimes, many universities, including elite ones, have thrown this context and nuanced dependent standard out the window in many other situations, in an increasing array of cases where you have dissent or criticism or things that offend certain progressive pieties, you know, and certain types of microaggressions.
[491] And so there's a lot, a lot of things where you would say, well, yeah, shouldn't we look at that in context?
[492] Shouldn't we have greater latitude for this?
[493] You know, you have some, you know, crazy cases.
[494] You may have remembered this one, but there was a particular professor who was teaching some sort of a class about doing, and it was talking about doing business in China, and he used a particular word that in Chinese sounds like, it's a Chinese word, but it sounds like the N word.
[495] And some student heard it and misunderstood it as him saying the N word.
[496] He had not said the N word.
[497] He had used the Chinese word.
[498] It had nothing to do with it at all.
[499] That's a classic example of nuance and intent, right, mattering, and context mattering.
[500] The professor was penalized anyway.
[501] And you have like, you know, that's an extreme case, but you have a fair number of these sorts of things where this level of careful parsing of what the person meant to say, where saying the intent matters, not just the impact, isn't applied, right?
[502] Instead, people say things like words or violence, and the subjective receipt of a statement matters just as much or more than the intent of the speaker saying it.
[503] All of those things have become sort of watchwords on many campuses.
[504] And suddenly, when it comes to speech that Jews find subjectively offensive or worse, people are saying, wait, we got to get out the nuance microscope.
[505] And that looks not like principle.
[506] That looks like a prejudice.
[507] They ended up looking like they're hypocrites.
[508] That also, I think, upset a fair number of people.
[509] But the answer to hypocrisy is to align your actual policies with your values and stop being hypocritical.
[510] It's not to chuck the values out the window further.
[511] And they were right to say that we need to actually start moving back to a nuanced standard.
[512] I would like to hope that if they're going to do that on pro -Palestinian speech, which they should, they will also do it on many other kinds of speech and open this space for discourse on campuses, not close it, which is often, I think, how a lot of people have perceived campus discourses for some time.
[513] So, yeah, so I agree with you that, like, they were giving the technically correct answer.
[514] They gave it in one of the worst possible ways.
[515] They also, when they're asked, do you condemn genocide?
[516] You have to understand the context of that and just give an emotional, like, you know, aspirational explanation of what you're doing and saying, obviously, I find genocide abhorrent, right?
[517] And if any of my students on campus experienced that I would be really upset about it, of course, in every individual case, we want to give, you know, be extremely fair and judicious and make sure that we're understanding what people were saying and why they said it and investigate each of those cases individually.
[518] That's how you have to answer that question.
[519] Instead, they just gave the lawyer answer and looked very callous.
[520] And so, you know, there's a lot of lessons you could draw from this, you know, from the sort of professional to the broader free speech realm.
[521] Okay, whoever's going to be the next president of Penn, I hope you're listening, because next time you could ask that question and you very likely will be, that's how you answer.
[522] But from the, should we say, the depressing to the ridiculous, the other claimed avatostar of free speech is Elon Musk, who has led a bunch of conspiracy theorists back onto the website formerly known as Twitter, and also has shared some anti -Semitic tweets himself, while of course also, I don't know if we know this for a fact, but it's pretty obvious, tipping the skills to boost his own reach on the site.
[523] Isn't he also a free speech advocate?
[524] I mean, what's the difference here, right?
[525] So, I mean, the thing with Elon is that he uses the language of free speech, but very clearly actually just means speech I like versus speech I don't, which is unfortunately a very common thing in the free speech space.
[526] Most friends of free speech in America, I think, are fair weather friends.
[527] And they are for free speech up until they have the power to restrict the speech they don't like, and then they exercise that power.
[528] And in a certain sense, that's what we saw in the congressional hearings and the whole debate over the college presidents, which is you have, you know, sort of academia in its strongholds where it has the power.
[529] It has been restricting speech on a whole variety of sort of left -wing pieties.
[530] Then when it comes to Congress, and suddenly it is, you know, the Congress person asking the questions who have the power.
[531] So then suddenly they appeal to neutral principles in defense.
[532] And meanwhile, you had all of these conservative critics of college campuses for quite some time saying, you guys are closing down space for debate.
[533] And discourse, what about free speech?
[534] Right?
[535] Because they don't have the power on campuses, so they're appealing to neutral principles.
[536] But then they come to Congress and they're like, you got to shut down all these pro -Palestinian rallies.
[537] Right.
[538] So everybody here is being a hypocrite.
[539] They're being a selective censor and a selective snowflake.
[540] And what we really need, of course, is people to sort of, you know, come up with a set of principles that they will all adhere to, no matter how they feel about the specific subject at hand.
[541] And it would be a good thing.
[542] If that is what this led to, I'm not super optimistic about it.
[543] But that would be obviously much better than just coming up with more and more ways to restrict speech to make more and more people happy.
[544] It's like, well, why don't you also restrict this speech and also respect that?
[545] I mean, that seems to me counter to the point of a university where you want more discourse on these issues, not less.
[546] And you say, we are a platform for the smartest and best people to hash these things out and hopefully come to something better.
[547] The idea that the university could possibly know the answer to all these questions before people showed up just seems extremely dubious to me. And I think, you know, it's a problem.
[548] I think in general, the sense that a lot of people on campuses have where they already know the answers before they start the conversation strikes me as very anti -intellectual and, you know, not making anything better.
[549] And I do think, you know, obviously I would say this.
[550] I'm a journalist, right?
[551] I have a self -interest.
[552] But I think that the more we actually hash these things out, the more likely we are to come to not necessarily agreement, but understanding and a healthy.
[553] your way to deal with even the most controversial and incendiary subjects in our public discourse.
[554] So I think that's basically right.
[555] I would be comfortable if the universities took that line and Twitter had a more rigorous speech policing policy.
[556] I don't think Twitter is quite the reason to be as protective as universities.
[557] Yeah, well, I would also say I'll put it differently.
[558] Here's what I would say.
[559] Private companies and private universities have the right to do whatever they want.
[560] They can come up with their own set of rules.
[561] And what you really want is actually just that set of rules to be public and transparent and applied fairly.
[562] And you might find that, like, one platform is much more permissive, and one platform is more prohibitive.
[563] And it might be even more prohibitive in a right -wing direction or prohibitive in a left -wing direction.
[564] But you would know what you were getting.
[565] And then people could sign up for the one that they want, whether that's a social media platform or a college.
[566] But what we have instead is sort of these sort of arbitrary rules that are ended up being done by bureaucracies or mercurial billionaires, all sorts of weird actors who make these decisions ad hoc on the fly.
[567] And that just creates a tremendous amount of uncertainty and distrust, because you never actually know what's going to happen.
[568] next.
[569] And before Elon, previous Twitter management was doing that with a different set of ideological values.
[570] You never knew what you could say about the coronavirus and what particular, you know, offenses against left -wing pieties you could say or you couldn't say, right?
[571] And now you don't know what particular offenses against right -wing pieties you can and can't say and all that stuff.
[572] And if you're a journalist covering Elon Musk, maybe you'll get zapped tomorrow, maybe you won't, right?
[573] You don't know.
[574] That's what destroys trust, right?
[575] And that's what makes these things unworkable.
[576] It's not that you have more restrictions or less.
[577] It's that you're not open about what they are and you're not transparent in applying them.
[578] If Elon wanted to make a rule saying you're not allowed to criticize Elon Musk and made it that like a thing, right?
[579] He could do that and the people would decide whether they want to be on the platform when that's a rule.
[580] But it would be fair because it's his right because he owns it and he did it.
[581] I would advise not to do it.
[582] But it's fair.
[583] But the difference is that one day he might decide, I don't like this article, so I zap this journalist.
[584] And then three days later he puts the, he allows them back on.
[585] And other times he's like, oh, no, I always let people criticize me. Right.
[586] So it's sort of the mercurial nature of it, the uncertainty of it.
[587] college campuses, one day saying this kind of speech, we're going to be very protective of students and we only care about the impact, not the intent, and then the next day saying, we need context and nuance.
[588] You've got to have just a consistent set of rules, whatever those rules are.
[589] And then people can sort it out by the market.
[590] And they'll decide, I want to go to that university or I don't.
[591] Right.
[592] I want to use that social media platform or I don't.
[593] Yeah, Your Rosenberg, thank you so much for joining us.
[594] Safraudder at the Atlantic, author of the Deep Sheddle Newsletter.
[595] Thank you all for listening to the Bulwark podcast.
[596] Charlie will be back in the new year.
[597] And in the meantime, stay tuned.
[598] because someone else will come back tomorrow and we'll do this all over again.
[599] The Bullwark podcast is produced by Katie Cooper and engineered and edited by Jason Brown.