Episodes
Wednesday Jun 26, 2019
Tiffany Cabán's Election Mini-analysis
Wednesday Jun 26, 2019
Wednesday Jun 26, 2019
This is a special mini-episode giving a quick analysis of Tiffany Cabán’s likely election to be Queens’ next district attorney. This victory rivals the election of AOC in importance.
Some further reading on the election:
An article I wrote for Jacobin on the significance of the race
The Nation: Tiffany Cabán is Running a Nationally Significant Race
The New Yorker: Tiffany Cabán’s Feminist Coalition
New York Magazine: Tiffany Cabán Wants to Reimagine Criminal Justice in Queens
The New York Times: Why Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Endorsed a Little-Known Public Defender in Queens
Jacobin interview: Tiffany Cabán Knows Who the Bad Guys Are
Tuesday Jun 25, 2019
5 - Pete Davis on Deepening Democracy
Tuesday Jun 25, 2019
Tuesday Jun 25, 2019
Today’s guest is Pete Davis. Pete wears many hats. I first came across his work as the host of the podcast for the Current Affairs magazine and we met at a live taping of a show in DC. But I also came across Pete through the commencement speech he gave at Harvard last year in which he implores the audience to ignore the siren song of “keeping your options open” and instead commit your life to a worthy cause. This speech’s topic and metaphor- infinitely browsing Netflix- struck a chord with our generation and a version of the speech shared by Goalcast racked up 27M views on Facebook. In no small irony, the mentions of Catholic radical Dorothy Day and unheard prisoners were left out of the success-bro Goalcast version- calls for actually committing to social justice are less popular than calls to commit to “something”.
While at Harvard Law, Pete wrote a book called Our Bicentennial Crisis, which called for reforms to the school’s culture and policies with the goal of getting the majority of harvard law students pursuing public interest law. If you’re at all interested in how the legal profession fails to meet the needs of the overwhelming majority of the country, Our Bicentennial Crisis is an excellent summary of the problem in addition to being a source of good ideas for solutions. Pete is now one of the founders of the Democratic Alternative, a national infrastructure to develop and promote policies that deepen democracy.
We cover Pete’s many projects and whether you can be a leftist and an entrepreneur, institutionalists and insurrectionaries, how Chapo Trap House radicalized me, escaping "the David Brooks gaze", communicating the ideas of the left in many political languages, building up expertise to get the confidence to challenge those in power, how to get more out of reading the news, the importance of making political movements welcoming, and using concrete policies to bring people into the left.
Show notes:
Pete’s book Our Bicentennial Crisis: A Call to Action for Harvard Law School’s Public Interest Mission
Article “Why is the Center for American Progress Betraying the Left?”
Wednesday Jun 19, 2019
4 - Emily Anthes on Clones, Cyborgs, and Sado-Masochistic Cows
Wednesday Jun 19, 2019
Wednesday Jun 19, 2019
Emily Anthes is a science journalist and writer based in Brooklyn. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Atlantic, Nature, Scientific American, and many other outlets. She has also appeared on far more prominent shows than this one, including NPR’s Fresh Air, PBS News Hour, and BBC Radio. Her 2013 book Frankenstein’s Cat explores the cutting edge of bioengineered animals.
We get into some pretty wild territory this episode (pun intended), covering:
A few chapters from her upcoming book The Great Indoors: what our dust says about ourselves, the ideal workplace, amphibious houses, and humane prisons (if there is such a thing).
We spend the bulk of our conversation on topics from her book Frankenstein’s Cat, including: cloning, the tension between expensive innovations in animal treatment and more cost effective ways of helping animals, whether biodiversity matters, bringing back the wooly mammoths, sado masochistic cows, animal cyborgs, the ethics of animal testing, CRISPR babies, and human animal hybrids
Show notes:
A (questionable) article claiming China has been engaging in decades of eugenics (and a criticism of that article)
Academic paper on the prevalence of Scandinavian pretrial solitary confinement
An article I wrote about the Brooklyn jail with no heat or power
The German man who asked to be eaten (warning: very gross)
Tuesday Jun 11, 2019
3 - Malaika Jabali on the Real Reasons Hillary Lost Wisconsin
Tuesday Jun 11, 2019
Tuesday Jun 11, 2019
Malaika Jabali is an attorney, activist, and writer based in New York. She is a contributing writer to Essence Magazine and has had her work published in Current Affairs, Jacobin, the Intercept and elsewhere. She’s written on many topics including police shootings, white nationalism, black radicalism, and hip hop. She has also done excellent reporting on the dramatic declines in black voter turnout in Milwaukee during the 2016 election. Malaika makes a persuasive case that these declines help explain Hillary’s loss. The real reasons for this drop are at odds with the narrative advanced by the Clinton campaign and Democratic establishment. They also chart a path forward for 2020. In addition to this reporting, we discuss: How the DNC fails to learn from its mistakes, the corrosive impact of wealth in politics and music, Bernie and race, Bonnaroo, political labels, Black Panther Fred Hampton, why Joe Biden should stick to eating ice cream, and the mysterious deaths of Ferguson protest organizers.
Note that this episode was recorded before Joe Biden declared his candidacy. Malaika wrote a Jacobin piece about Biden called: Joe Biden is Not a Blue Collar Candidate.
Malaika's articles we discuss:
Hillary Clinton is Still Deeply Confused About What Happened in Wisconsin
Other articles and events referenced:
Bernie Sanders Campaign Announces 10 New Women Hires
Bernie Eugene V Debs documentary
New York Magazine article on socialists
The 10 Worst Things Joe Biden Has Done in His Political Career
Will Black Voters Still Love Biden When They Remember Who He Was?
Bill Clinton's Crime Bill Destroyed Lives, and There's No Point Denying It
Joe Biden accidentally tells a man in a wheelchair to stand up
Thursday Jun 06, 2019
2 - Nathan J. Robinson on Persuading People to Join the Left
Thursday Jun 06, 2019
Thursday Jun 06, 2019
Nathan J. Robinson is the founder and editor of Current Affairs, a left-wing print magazine based out of New Orleans. He is also the author of five books on politics. Nathan holds a law degree from Yale and is pursuing a PhD in sociology from Harvard. He also happens to be my favorite active political writer.
In today’s show we cover a lot, including:
Current Affairs, persuading people on politics, understanding the actual positions our political opponents take and engaging with their arguments, the rhetorical strategies employed by the intellectual dark web, the claim that the left is afraid to engage with the actual ideas of the right, giving a platform to odious people, purity policing on the left, 2016 and 2020, whether Bernie should give his millions away and whether anyone should choose to be wealthy, the surprising non overlap of effective altruism and the left, the risks of quantifying values, Bernie on immigration, nationalism, Steven Pinker and the decline of violence, and why we think joining the left is the best way to influence the future in a positive direction.
Show notes:
Nathan’s articles that we discuss:
Why Bernie should give his millions away
Nathan’s spot on prediction of the 2016 election
New York Times propaganda about immigration
The media’s hierarchy of victims
Misleading inequality statistics
Nathan’s EPIC TAKEDOWNS:
Other links:
Jordan Peterson being interviewed by Cathy Newman
Book If You’re an Egalitarian, How Come You’re So Rich?
Twitter thread on Steven Pinker’s faulty sexual assault sources
My article in Current Affairs on psychedelics
ContraPoints on Ben Shapiro and gender pronouns
My review of The Better Angels of Our Nature
An Effective Altruism take on 2020 candidates
Thursday Jun 06, 2019
Thursday Jun 06, 2019
NOTE: This is a re-release of my discussion with Chloe Cockburn. At the beginning of the episode, I make the following endorsement of Tiffany Cabán, a candidate for Queens District Attorney:
On Tuesday June 25th, Queens will hold an election for District Attorney. The DA is the top prosecutor for Queens, a borough of nearly 2.4 million people. If you are inspired by this episode, I would encourage you to support Tiffany Cabán. Cabán is the only public defender running in the race- the other six candidates are career prosecutors and politicians. She is also the only candidate who is refusing corporate PAC money. The other front-runner, Melinda Katz, has taken over $150,000 from real estate players. Chloe doesn’t make endorsements as a matter of policy, but a number of organizations she has directed funding towards have endorsed Caban, including Real Justice PAC, the Working Families Party, and VOCAL New York, a group that organizes formerly incarcerated people. Cabán has also received endorsements from congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, and activists Cynthia Nixon and Zephyr Teachout. This will be a low-turnout election, so each donation, volunteer, and voter will have a big impact on the outcome. Prosecutors are the group most responsible for mass incarceration, but their enormous amount of power and discretion also makes them most able to end it.
You can learn more and get involved at www.cabanforqueens.com
Chloe Cockburn leads Open Philanthropy's strategic grant-making aimed at ending mass incarceration in the US. Prior to joining Open Phil, she oversaw state policy reform work for the ACLU’s Campaign to End Mass Incarceration. Previously, Chloe worked with the Vera Institute and the civil rights law firm of Neufeld, Scheck and Brustin, and clerked for Judge Sifton of the Eastern District of New York. Chloe can be found on Twitter at @chloecockburn
We cover:
- An overview of mass incarceration in the united states
- Open Philanthropy’s approach to criminal justice reform
- The importance of criminal justice reform relative to other problems like global poverty and factory farming
- The role of rehabilitation and deterrence
- Why we think punishment should play no role
Show notes:
Wage theft vs. all other theft
Books discussed:
The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander
The Collapse of American Criminal Justice by William Stuntz
Thursday May 23, 2019
1 - Chloe Cockburn on ending mass incarceration
Thursday May 23, 2019
Thursday May 23, 2019
Chloe Cockburn leads Open Philanthropy's strategic grant-making aimed at ending mass incarceration in the US. Prior to joining Open Phil, she oversaw state policy reform work for the ACLU’s Campaign to End Mass Incarceration. Previously, Chloe worked with the Vera Institute and the civil rights law firm of Neufeld, Scheck and Brustin, and clerked for Judge Sifton of the Eastern District of New York. Chloe can be found on Twitter at @chloecockburn
We cover:
- An overview of mass incarceration in the united states
- Open Philanthropy’s approach to criminal justice reform
- The importance of criminal justice reform relative to other problems like global poverty and factory farming
- The role of rehabilitation and deterrence
- Why we think punishment should play no role
Show notes:
Wage theft vs. all other theft
Books discussed:
The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander
The Collapse of American Criminal Justice by William Stuntz