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The Anatomy of Autocracy: Timothy Snyder (2021)

The Anatomy of Autocracy: Timothy Snyder (2021)

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[0] This message comes from NPR sponsor PolicyGenius, where you can get peace of mind by finding the right life insurance.

[1] Some policies started just $292 per year for $1 million of coverage.

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[3] On January 6th, a group of people angry at the electoral loss of President Donald Trump stormed the U .S. Capitol in an attempt to stop the certification of the election.

[4] They chanted, stop the steal, claiming the election had been stalled.

[5] by the Democratic Party.

[6] For many, that day felt like a direct attack on the very idea of elections.

[7] It was a scene many Americans believed only happened in failed states.

[8] One year later, the reverberations are still being felt.

[9] Politicians and many other Americans still believe the election was stolen.

[10] Divisions and anger linger.

[11] And a special committee in the House of Representatives is still investigating what happened that day.

[12] They've yet to arrive at any definitive answer.

[13] And without answers, there are concerns that something like January 6th could happen again after future elections.

[14] Back in early 2021, we reached out to Timothy Snyder, a history professor at Yale, who specializes in the study of autocracy in modern nation states to try and make sense of what had just happened.

[15] As a proper historian, I can only say that, like, in 50 years, we'll understand it a lot better than we do now.

[16] He told us the warning signs were all there and that such events don't pop out of nowhere.

[17] January 6th, honestly, for me, was a bit of an anti -climax because I, I mean, no is a strong word, but I would have been very surprised if it hadn't happened.

[18] We recently revisited this conversation and found that many of his insights still apply.

[19] Many of the things he warned about came true.

[20] And the questions he asked still feel urgent.

[21] So in light of the continued tension in this country, we want to return.

[22] turn to that conversation with Timothy Snyder to see if we can gain any more insight on what might be coming in 2022 and 2024.

[23] I'm Randabdel -Fattah.

[24] I'm Ramtin Arab -Louis.

[25] And on this episode of ThruLine from NPR, the future of our past.

[26] I'm Albuquerque, New Mexico, and you are listening to ThruLine from NPR.

[27] Thanks for the show, guys.

[28] I just don't want to leave a mess.

[29] On Bullseye, the great Dan Aykroyd talks about the Blues Brothers, Ghostbusters, and his very detailed plans about how he will spend his afterlife.

[30] I think I'm going to roam in a few places.

[31] Yes, I'm going to manifest in Rome.

[32] All that and more on the Bullseye podcast from Maximumfund .org and NPR.

[33] On the TED Radio Hour, MIT psychologist Sherry Turkle, her latest research into the intimate relationship, people are having with chatbots.

[34] Technologies that say, I care about you, I love you, I'm here for you, take care of me. The pros and cons of artificial intimacy.

[35] That's on the TED Radio Hour from NPR.

[36] We started off our conversation with Timothy Snyder asking for his take on what happened on January 6th.

[37] And he quickly pointed out a critique that directly confronted our work.

[38] journalism.

[39] I think one thing that journalists are a little bit hesitant about these days is causality.

[40] So, you know, we live in this world where people get to say things and then things happen, but it's very hard to pin down accountability.

[41] People are very hesitant about making claims of causality.

[42] And the people who are trying to get bad things to happen take advantage of that by defending even the most atrocious form of incitement as free speech.

[43] Right.

[44] So I think there's a certain hesitancy about writing about A causing B as opposed to there was A and then there was B. And then I guess another thing, I mean, I write about the big lie, but there's just no way the big lie could have sustained itself just on the strength of Trump.

[45] Despite the fact he has a huge megaphone and he has a certain kind of charisma, the reason why the big lie lasted from November to January is that is that senators and members of Congress went along with it.

[46] They gave it those two months of life.

[47] Without that, this couldn't have happened and wouldn't have happened.

[48] And Tim, can you break down for us what the big lie is?

[49] Yeah.

[50] I mean, I got to say three things.

[51] The big lie, what Trump said, the big lie is a structure and then the big lie in U .S. history.

[52] The big lie that Mr. Trump uttered or utters over and over again is that he won the presidential election.

[53] Now, the reason why that's a big lie is that it's manifestly not true.

[54] But a big lie structurally is a lie, a falsehood, which is so grand that if you believe in it, then you have to disbelieve everyone else.

[55] You have to start to think of the actual real world around you as a conspiracy, which is denying your own true belief, the thing that you actually think is true.

[56] Now, a big lie often points to an enemy as this one does.

[57] And this is how we get into American history.

[58] This is the third part of what I want to say about this.

[59] What Mr. Trump is saying when he says fraud is he's saying black people.

[60] And that's where we get into the U .S. history.

[61] And Mr. Trump says, I lost in the cities, I lost in Philadelphia, I lost in Detroit.

[62] What he's really saying is that's the fault of black people.

[63] Black people shouldn't vote.

[64] When he says he's the legitimate president, he won in a landslide, that's only true if you're only counting white people.

[65] And that's how this connects to U .S. history, because all of U .S. history, I mean, since 1877 anyway, is this fight about who actually gets to vote and who actually is represented.

[66] Is it only white people or is it all American citizens?

[67] And so Mr. Trump's big lie of today depends upon basically the central lie in the happy version of U .S. history, which is that everything's always been all right.

[68] We don't have this big problem of racism.

[69] We do have this big problem of racism.

[70] And if we lie to ourselves about history, then we end up with these big lies in the present.

[71] But, you know, sort of one piece of pushback on that point is that Donald Trump did better with people of color in the United States in this election.

[72] And there were people of color in that crowd, including some people who entered the building.

[73] Is there a danger in boiling it down to that narrative, perhaps?

[74] And or, or, Or is there a danger in not boiling it down to that narrative that, as you wrote in your essay, that this is kind of part of the long American argument about who deserves representation?

[75] Of course, there are, there are, there are, there are, there are large numbers of people of color and large numbers of, you know, of African Americans who, in absolute numbers, who voted for Mr. Trump.

[76] There were certainly some people of color in that, in that demonstration.

[77] Figuring out just what's going on in their minds, I think is, is the work, is the work, is the work.

[78] of reporters, right?

[79] But Mr. Trump's big lie is going to appeal to different people in different ways.

[80] What I'm confident in saying is that he's riding a particularly central wave in U .S. history when he makes the claim that I was done out of this election by fraud and referring to cities.

[81] And by the way, when Senator Cruz refers to 1877 as a model for what we should be doing now, right?

[82] The 1877 compromise was the political basis for the exclusion of African Americans from equal rights in American politics.

[83] So it's all kind of just there under the surface.

[84] And then, by the way, and we've already talked about this, but the people who are crashing the barriers and the people who are organizing for this were in their vast majority, I think it's fair to say, white Americans.

[85] I want to take kind of a little bit of a step.

[86] back because I think one of the things that we've been thinking a lot about is sort of, you know, this larger context this year that all of this is happening in.

[87] You know, we're seeing, you know, unemployment and depression, suicide, homelessness.

[88] You know, we're in a pandemic.

[89] And I guess I wonder from that sort of pulled back perspective, how you see everything that the countries going through factoring into, you know, what played out on the day of the insurrection, but also what's played out more generally in terms of kind of the growth of this movement under Trump.

[90] Yeah, I think that's a wonderful question.

[91] So people are vulnerable to big lies and they're vulnerable to stories that make sense of everything when everything doesn't make sense.

[92] And in particular, when they themselves are isolated.

[93] So we've just gone through almost a year now where Americans have been isolated from one another in a way that I think it's fair to say none of us, at least collectively as society, we haven't experienced before.

[94] And being alone, just being physically separated from other people, makes it less likely that you're going to remember other people's points of view or take them into account.

[95] And it makes it more likely moving on to a second point that you're going to be spending even more time in front of screens and that you're going to be exposed even more to what social media does to you, which is take your own inclinations and turn them into your own convictions, which is to find people or usually algorithms that are like -minded and echo back to you the things that you already think that you believe or that you think that you care for or committed to.

[96] And that relates to a deeper problem, which is the American information sphere.

[97] Much more important to our national security and our democracy than so many other things we spend billions of dollars on is the presence of factuality in American life.

[98] It's just much harder for big lies, conspiracy theories, polarizing arguments to get through to people if they're living in a world where they have local news, where they know reporters, where they're concerned about the things which actually matter to them, like, is there mercury in my water, or is my school board corrupt, or is this new local politician taking bribes?

[99] Those are the things, the kinds of things that people used to know, and now we don't, because most of the United States is now, technically speaking, a news desert.

[100] Americans on most of the territory of our country, especially the less popular, parts of our country are basically have no choice but to be following the world by way of social media.

[101] And then I agree with the point about COVID, which I made in a couple of articles, arguing that COVID made it more likely there would be some kind of some kind of political disaster.

[102] Or to put it more specifically, the negative emotions generated by COVID were not just a problem for Mr. Trump at the polls.

[103] They were.

[104] But those negative emotions could also be captured and directed in ways that Mr. Trump would like.

[105] And I think that's part of what's happened here.

[106] But, you know, to build on that, since the 2008 housing crisis, there does seem to be legitimate reasons why many people in America distrust elites and distrust the media and distrust the policy structure and the chattering class, how much do you think, given from a historical perspective of what has happened in other countries in the past, how much does that alienation or that feeling of distrust feed into what we're seeing today?

[107] I think you put it nicely.

[108] I mean, I think what's happened is that we're switching from being a trust society to a belief society.

[109] In a trust society, you realize that people have different views, but everyone has roughly the same access to the same sorts of information.

[110] And maybe even everyone has, at some basic level, similar commitments.

[111] And so you can trust a stranger.

[112] You can trust another American, if only for the purposes of a financial transaction or believing that your vote is going to count, right?

[113] The little things like that, which make a society go.

[114] We're shifting into being a belief society where you don't recognize other people unless they already believe the things that you do.

[115] You're not willing to try to persuade them of the things that you believe.

[116] It's either yes or no. It's binary.

[117] You're with me or you're against me. And this is connected to the media problems that we were talking about before.

[118] It's also connected, as I think you're suggesting, to inequality.

[119] When people talk about the media, they're talking about people who are far away, right, who don't care about them, who are making lots of money showing up on television.

[120] And in some measure, I think they do have a point.

[121] And I think also inequality plays into this because inequality makes it much harder for a lot of Americans to imagine that their children are going to have better lives than they did, which has always been the American dream.

[122] And of course, you can try to solve that problem.

[123] You could support unions rather than breaking them.

[124] You could support health insurance rather than breaking it and so on.

[125] But what Mr. Trump has done with that problem is that he's encouraged people to personalize it.

[126] The reason why the American dream is dead is the migrants or it's the Chinese or, you know, It's the quote -unquote elites.

[127] The reason for it is affirmative action.

[128] The black people are jumping the line.

[129] Those kinds of arguments personalize this experience of inequality and then turn it, you know, turn it towards this kind of angry, resentful politics.

[130] When we come back, lessons we can and can't learn from the history of fascism in Europe.

[131] Aaron from Chicago, Illinois, and you're listening to ThruLine from NPR.

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[150] Over the last few weeks, we've seen dozens and dozens of historical hot takes about the political upheaval.

[151] People have drawn comparisons to pre -World War II Germany or Stalinist Russia or even the 19th century United States.

[152] Timothy Snyder is actually an expert in interwar Germany and the Soviet Union.

[153] So he was the perfect person to ask this basic question that gets at the heart of what we grapple with on this.

[154] this show.

[155] How helpful or unhelpful is it to make direct historical parallels to the current moment?

[156] My own view is that the more that you know about history as such, the less likely you are to be shocked or hoodwinked, especially in moments like this or something surprising has happened.

[157] In terms of the stuff that I know best, which is the Soviet Union, Nazi Germany, Eastern Europe, it of course doesn't make sense in these cases or ever to say history repeats.

[158] Because if you say history repeats, you're basically saying what human beings do doesn't matter because somehow there are larger forces making things repeat.

[159] And that's just not true.

[160] At every historical moment, there are individual decisions which are unforeseeable and yet consequential.

[161] However, what you can use history to do is you can use it to see patterns, right?

[162] So one pattern that you can see, for example, in interwar Germany, is that political violence, if it's not substantially punished, will tend to repeat itself.

[163] Another pattern you can see in interwar Germany is that if paramilitary organizations get out of control, they end up shaping the political atmosphere and playing an intimidating part in elections, which is something Americans could think about for 2024.

[164] Another example from Interwar Germany is the relationship between conservatives and fascists or Nazis in that case.

[165] You can call it the old right and the new right if you want.

[166] It was the case then and it can be the case in the U .S. now, that people who really are conservatives who do have some set of values associated with the past, with tradition, with law, with stability, and so on, do not recognize that people who claim to be like them are actually very, very different indeed.

[167] and then old right, conservatives, can end up making decisions that allow a new right, people who don't care about institutions, people who care about much more radical visions, can allow them to come to power.

[168] I mean, that's broadly speaking, the story of 1932 and 1933 in Germany.

[169] And although, of course, America now is not Germany then, that's if, you know, if I were a conservative, that's the kind of lesson I would want to keep in the back of my mind as a check on my own actions, right?

[170] Am I sure that this guy is like me?

[171] should I really be trusting him?

[172] Should I be telling the same lies that he's telling?

[173] Or maybe I should make a break?

[174] Specifically about something you just mentioned about the punishment, I think that's the term you used.

[175] Right now, I think people in America, including the political class, are figuring out how to respond to the kind of the insurrection and the movement surrounding it.

[176] Specifically, what happened in post -World War I Germany that allowed kind of the rise of the Nazi party Like, what lesson can we learn from how lenient or how severe the punishment was against kind of the ideology of fascism that was growing in the 1930s in Germany?

[177] Yeah, I mean, honestly, I would rather answer that one just with respect to us because I think we have a specific problem in the United States with the impunity of people at a certain level of wealth.

[178] And then in Mr. Trump's case, power, although it's blurred here.

[179] I mean, part, we, we have a fairly functional rule of law society.

[180] But every American also knows that certain kinds of people aren't going to go to prison, or at least not for very long, for certain kinds of crimes, even though those crimes might be much worse than the sorts of crimes that other sorts of people will go to prison for for much longer terms.

[181] And I think we're now seeing, you know, this has been true for a long time.

[182] And Mr. Trump, basically up and set it, right?

[183] When he says, I could shoot somebody on Fifth Avenue and nothing would happen.

[184] And once people have that idea that I can't be punished, that spreads.

[185] But the word punishment is probably not the right word, but that people should bear legal responsibility is very important.

[186] And Americans aren't going to take that seriously unless it starts from the top down.

[187] Or put it a different way, I mean, part of Trump's magical appeal, part of his non -democratic appeal, his mythical appeal, his charismatic appeal, and frankly, his fascist appeal, is this idea that he's above at all, that nothing bad can ever happen to him, that he has some kind of superpower, which prevents ordinary facts or ordinary laws from touching him.

[188] And that's why I personally think it's important that this be proven not to be the case.

[189] I mean, even just the language you're using to describe him almost mythical and kind of like almost bigger than life, right?

[190] I mean, I think this big lie, which we've described, I mean, it becomes greater than the lie itself at a certain point, right?

[191] And it and it becomes greater than even the person who introduced the lie.

[192] And so I wonder what you think the power of the lie is, you know, with Trump out of office.

[193] Like what what does it become independent of him?

[194] that's a great question because of course you're right that the big lie isn't necessarily connected forever with the liar in germany there was a big lie about the end of the first world war and the big lie was the jews did it we were courageously fighting on the trenches but the jews and the left back behind the front lines on the home front they sold us out they betrayed us they stabbed us in the back.

[195] We never really lost this war.

[196] It was taken from us.

[197] That was a lie which was told by a number of people in Germany, starting the 1918, including Germany's highest commanders.

[198] But notice, it's 15 years later when Hitler comes to power in 1933.

[199] And that lie still has legs.

[200] It's now become less about the individual commanders, the individual battles, and more about the general situation.

[201] whenever we lose, it's because we were stabbed in the back by Jews.

[202] I mean, so sadly, what we're looking at now is Mr. Cruz and Mr. Hawley trying to take the big lie away from the big liar.

[203] They're trying to see if they can ride this particular myth that Mr. Trump was stabbed in the back and make it the Republicans were stabbed in the back, the real Americans were stabbed in the back and then take on its mantle for themselves.

[204] This is why it's, I mean, for me, it's so important that Republicans, whatever else they do, just start telling the simple truth about the election.

[205] Because if that part of the party, the part of the party which says we can only win with the big lie, if that part somehow prevails, or if one of those candidates becomes a candidate in 2024, then we're going to be doing this all over again.

[206] If you're telling the big lie, you're basically saying, I'm willing, I'm willing to try to take power by non -democratic means.

[207] You know, related to that, one thing is really interesting in terms of a parallel to Germany, and you talked about this a little bit, is that President Trump and his followers, but particularly President Trump, doesn't seem to have any cohesive ideology like many fascist or pre -fascist movements did in the past.

[208] What do you make of that?

[209] that this has grown despite the fact that it doesn't really have like central tenets.

[210] Yeah.

[211] I mean, that's, I think that's, I think that's right.

[212] And I think that's one of the, that is, as you say, one of the ways this is not like fascism.

[213] I mean, fascism had a story about the future of the nation.

[214] It was a, or the race, really.

[215] It was a terrible violent story.

[216] It involved war and seizing territory and driving away or exterminating others.

[217] But it was a kind of vision of the future.

[218] Trump has no vision of the future.

[219] That's really striking.

[220] And when I look at the seizure of the capital, I have trouble seeing a vision of the future in that, too.

[221] I mean, besides a future in which the same guy gets older and tells you the same lie for longer, right?

[222] Which isn't a particularly aesthetically impressive in vision of the future.

[223] So I think what we're finding out is a big lie can function basically without substance, you know, that it's more form than substance.

[224] It's about saying it's us against them.

[225] We know the real truth.

[226] They don't know the real truth.

[227] We're the ones who are suffering.

[228] They're not the ones who are suffering.

[229] If they say they're suffering, that's just a lie to distract from our own suffering.

[230] So it's much more, it turns out to be much more social than ideological.

[231] But I agree with you.

[232] It's really, it's really striking.

[233] how there's no vision in this, except if you accept this fiction, I'm going to give you more fiction.

[234] Or even, I mean, to put it a little bit more dramatically, take some pain for me, and I'm going to give you some more pain down the line.

[235] And that's how we're all going to be happy.

[236] How lessons from history might help us fix our damaged political system when we come back.

[237] Hi, my name is Gregory Pink.

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[247] Okay, so over the last year, Ramtin and I have both been struggling with the question of how useful it is to separate out the history of class and the history of race in America to understand our current moment.

[248] How related are they?

[249] How should we understand that relationship?

[250] So we put that question to Timothy Snyder.

[251] Yeah, one of the reasons why I wanted to put race in the forefront of the conversation is that you can really only understand this kind of grievance if you have both.

[252] inequality and race in mind at the same time.

[253] And here's why, I think.

[254] It's true that everybody in America has a harder time seeing a better future than, let's say, people did in 1980.

[255] Basically, whatever measure you want to take, we're doing worse in terms of income inequality.

[256] We're doing worse in terms of wealth inequality.

[257] We're doing worse in terms of the chances of children having better lives than their parents.

[258] We can kind of pick your measure of inequality, and we're doing worse than we were doing 40 years ago.

[259] However, the people who are most susceptible to seeing this as someone else's fault are people who express a certain kinds of politics of grievance, right?

[260] So it's not, I mean, of course there are exceptions, but it's not generally the black people who say, because of economic inequality, I'm going to vote for Trump, right?

[261] I'm not saying that phenomenon doesn't exist, but it's not, I think it's fair to say not white, widespread.

[262] I think it's rather, it's rather white folks who are used to having the system work for them, who are more shocked when it doesn't work for them.

[263] And so they're the first ones to say, hey, you know, this isn't working.

[264] And because they're used to things working, they're maybe more vulnerable to what are, I mean, honestly, less persuasive explanations for what's going on, namely that it's somebody else has taken it from you.

[265] Right.

[266] And so I absolutely agree without inequality, we wouldn't be where we are.

[267] But I think you have to address it both ways.

[268] I mean, there's an ongoing argument on the left, right?

[269] Is it inequality or is it race?

[270] And it's both.

[271] I mean, we have to address race by taking by taking our own historical past seriously and drawing conclusions.

[272] We also have to address inequality by making rich people pay taxes.

[273] You know, that's the basic thing that we don't do.

[274] And we have to address inequality by having good enough health care, public schools, retirement, pensions, and so on, that people have a more predictable life.

[275] Basically, Americans' lives are just way too unpredictable.

[276] There's too much chaos going on anyway before you even get to COVID and attempted coups in the capital.

[277] And that's how inequality plays out.

[278] It's the wealthy who are masters of what's going to happen in their own lives, most importantly.

[279] As you move down, you get more.

[280] and more unpredictability, but less and less ability to be confident.

[281] And you need a certain amount of confidence to take part in a Democratic Republic, a certain amount of dignity that comes from knowing, like, with some confidence, what's going to happen next in life?

[282] Speaking of what happens next, I think that's something that we're all grappling with.

[283] What comes next?

[284] What do you do after there is an insurrection in the Capitol?

[285] when you have this movement that, as you say, is driven by a big lie that exists beyond the person who created it.

[286] What comes next?

[287] So I'm going to wheel back to an example that nobody has heard of, which is Poland in 1922.

[288] In Poland in 1922, there was a presidential election.

[289] It was carried out in parliament rather than directly.

[290] But in that presidential election, a candidate won basically because he had the votes of the center left and the votes of the national minorities.

[291] It was a narrow victory, but it was a clear victory.

[292] That victory was treated by the right -wing press as illegitimate.

[293] He abuse was heaped upon him.

[294] And a person who was, let's say, mentally vulnerable, assassinated that president of Poland.

[295] So here you have a kind of object lesson in what you really shouldn't do.

[296] You know, you shouldn't say that people who win narrow victories or people who are elected by people who are different than you and so on are not legitimate.

[297] You shouldn't have media hate campaigns because people will take those seriously and act on them as we've just seen.

[298] But as a historian, here's what I want to say about all that.

[299] There's a reason why you haven't heard of 1922 in Poland.

[300] And it's not just that it was 99 years ago and in a different country.

[301] It's that in the writing of Polish history itself, this story, important as it was was never treated as a serious turning point.

[302] It was treated as an aberration.

[303] And because it was treated as an aberration, people didn't take seriously enough the intolerance and in this case, the anti -Semitism that had a lot to do with the event.

[304] I'm going to make a very nerdy proposition here.

[305] I think it would be an excellent idea if President Biden would appoint some kind of Blue Ribbon Commission of forensics experts, national security experts, digital forensics experts, historians, activists, and so on.

[306] You know, people of repute to write a report in the first three months of his tenure in office about exactly what happened.

[307] A document, you know, which calmly and rationally and using all of the sources lays out a first draft of history of what actually happened because you need it for the future of the nation.

[308] You need it so that the nation knows how to tell its own story five years or 50 years down the line.

[309] I mean, where do you think all, I mean, as we've discussed, there's a lot of factors contributing to, you know, this politics of grievance that you've talked about.

[310] So now where do all these grievances and ideas go?

[311] They're not going anywhere fast.

[312] There's no easy solution to this.

[313] I mean, I can point to, I can point to three things, though, that are helpful.

[314] Number one, you do sometimes need to be shocked when you believe something that's very damaging and wrong.

[315] Sometimes it helps to be shocked.

[316] I mean, in the fascist example, people stopped believing when the leader looked weak.

[317] And I'm afraid something like that is probably pretty important for Americans as well.

[318] You have to realize that this guy is not actually a demi -god.

[319] You have to realize that he's just human and, you know, in some ways, all too human.

[320] That kind of a shock, you know, the recognition that, oh, this person is not actually on an international selfless crusade to save us all from pedophilia.

[321] This is just kind of a guy.

[322] This is just a flawed person.

[323] So I think a shock is going to be necessary.

[324] Number two, the welfare state is really important.

[325] Care is really important.

[326] Supplying people with healthcare isn't immediately going to change their political views, but it does create a sense of stability and predictability, which makes it easier for all of us to calm down and listen to one another.

[327] It reduces the amount of overall anxiety and fear, which is out there in our political ecosystem and gives democracy something like its chance.

[328] And the third thing I've already mentioned, people who have responsibility need to take responsibility and just speak the truth.

[329] I don't agree with Ben Sassi about a lot of things, but he's been telling the truth about the election, right?

[330] Liz Cheney has been telling the truth about the election.

[331] Romney has been telling the truth about the election.

[332] These people have taken responsibility, you know, for an affair larger than themselves and just spoken the truth.

[333] And if people speak the truth, it won't make, you know, those tens of millions of people go away, but it will make it harder for them to think, everyone's on my side.

[334] That's Timothy Snyder, Professor of History at Yale University.

[335] This conversation originally ran on January 21st, 2021.

[336] That's it for this week's show.

[337] I'm Randa Abdel Fattah.

[338] I'm Ramtin Adablui, and you've been listening to ThruLine from NPR.

[339] This episode was produced by me. And me and Jamie York.

[340] Lawrence Wu.

[341] Lane Kaplan Levinson.

[342] Julie Kane.

[343] Victor Iveez.

[344] Parts Shaw.

[345] Fact -checking for this episode was done by Kevin vocal.

[346] Thanks also to Yolanda Sanguinei, Beth Donovan and Anya Grunman.

[347] Our music was composed by Ramteen and his band Drop Electric, which includes Anya Mizani.

[348] Navid Marvi.

[349] Show Fujiwara.

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