#1030 - Brett Cooper - Inside the Conservative Civil War
What’s happening to the political Right? With promises kept and broken, the Left regaining momentum, internal fractures deepening, and young voters growing more disengaged than ever. What does this mean for the real state of politics, and how serious is the dysfunction underneath it all?
Expect to learn Brett’s thoughts on the Conservative civil war that seems to be happening and if there should there be unity on The Right, what conservatives and Republicans are missing in how can they better compete for Gen Z, what conservatives feel about trump’s performance so far, why The Left is obsessed with assassination culture, the biggest lie young women are being sold right now, why GenZ is having a hard time handling adulthood and much more…
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Transcript
What are your thoughts on the conservative civil war that seems to be happening? Starting all strong, huh?
Oh, gosh.
You know, I think that it is. Obviously, there are a lot of issues that people are debating, I think that have caused this schism that we're seeing.
But I think that there are a lot of people that are arguing and fighting a good faith. I think that there are a lot of people online who think that these are just like bad actors on both sides.
We're going after each other. I look at it as there are these groups of people.
They're extremely passionate.
They have an idea of, you know, the direction our country and this, you know, movement and party should go.
And they're worried about, you know, one side taking too much power of the radicals taking control of, you know, of us getting too involved in foreign affairs, whatever it might be. And so
I look at it as something that is
not that the civil war is a positive, but that there are good people fighting it.
So I think that makes it a little more nuanced. That's a very diplomatic way to start.
Yeah, well done. Disclaimer done.
Yep.
But I also think that, I think, my big issue with it is when it comes down to the issue of free speech and hypocrisy on the right, that's what I've been talking about a lot, is that we spent so many years railing against the purity tests.
And we're not going to dig up people's social media and cancel them. We're not going to take things out of context.
You don't do that. We're better than that.
Like we celebrate when somebody, you know, refuses to bend a knee to the mob. And then the same thing is happening on the right.
And they're demanding that somebody be, you know, is canceled into platformed because that person platformed somebody that you don't like.
Or now, you know, what he talks about on the show today, just to really get into it, is Tupper Harlson's son works for JD Dance. How does he knew that?
And they're now asking his son to disavow his father.
He must make a statement about his father.
Like, how have we gotten to this? And I said this on the show, but it reminds me so much of, do you remember when Sibby Sweeney went viral for her mom having a make 60 grade again birthday party? No.
Okay. It was like 2022, I think.
These photos made their way around Reddit and X and all of the things. And people saw her at, you know, a birthday party celebrating the mom.
And there were like MAGA looking hats in the background.
Everybody lost their shit. And it turns out it was Make 60 Gray Again.
And she took a photo with one, some relative who was wearing a thin glue-lined t-shirt that just exploded it even more.
And she had to make this statement.
And she basically said, guys, like get over it. She was like, I'm like, I'm not going to disavow my family.
I don't really care.
It was a celebration for my mom. And that's all that matters.
And the right was like, yes, this is so amazing. She's an inspiration.
This is how you handle these types of things.
You know, her values don't necessarily represent her family. This is great.
You know, she loves her family. And every we are like demanding Tucker Farlson's son, like condemn his father.
The Carlson silence is deafening. Yeah.
So anyway, so I just think it's all a bit ridiculous. I would rather people air out their ideas and debate them.
I think sunlight is the best disinfectant.
If you hate somebody's ideas, like let them speak and see what people think about them. I think that there is
a bit of a Streisand effect going on as well to mobilally say, don't listen to this. Don't listen to that person.
Especially with my variation, every reason to go like. Exactly.
I'm going to go and rumble and I'm going to see what's happening. Yeah.
Yeah. So those are my thoughts on it.
What I'm interested in is why the unity that we saw for probably the last four years has started to splinter apart. And my
notion, my bro science theory is when you're outside of the tent pissing in, it's very easy to unify because you're trying to achieve a common goal. Like we must get into power.
Like look at these people. Groups are bound together more over the mutual distaste of an out-group as opposed to the mutual love of the in-group.
But as soon as you're inside of the tent pissing out, you're the guys that are in power.
You start to to look around and go, well, maybe he's actually, we don't, maybe we don't, maybe he can go out of the tent now.
And I think if you look at the left, because this was the argument that the right always had against the left, the progressives and the liberals and the far left and the populists and the, you know, look at how it's so fractured.
They're so ununified. They can't even.
And now you look at the left and you think, well, they seem like they're pulling and rowing in sort of a relatively similar direction.
And it's the right that's doing that. And the only thing that I can see is who's in power.
They're the ones that seem to sort of fight between themselves.
That's your part of human nature is that when you get in power, I think now that we have this, you know, control, we feel like we won.
I think people got a little bit complacent, understandably so, because it felt so great last November. Like I was riding an absolute high.
The campaign was so much fun. I loved covering it.
I felt like we were on top of the world. We had so many independents come over.
It really felt like there was this unity across party lines. Come January, maybe February.
It was like everything imploded. And I think you're right.
People started looking around and going, you know, we're nitpicking this and this and this, which is, I think, a good thing in some ways.
I think that, you know, it's important to criticize the admin.
It's, you know, important to not just roll over and go, oh, just because we're in power, just because I agree with this person on some things, I'm going to roll over. I'm not going to question things.
I'm not going to push back. Obviously, you need to push back.
I think that that's something that the left has not done very well.
Even looking at Biden and Kamala, obviously there were huge errors that occurred during their presidency, things that, or their administration, things that were overlooked and lied about.
And so many people on the left were just like, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Like, no, there's no issues.
No, Biden doesn't have dementia. No, there's no issues with any of this.
It's totally fine.
He's amazing. He's the best president ever.
And so I do think that it is, it's a good thing that the right asks questions and.
probes and criticizes, but I think that it has imploded a little bit where now we've gotten a little bit loose with that. And I think it's giving the left a lot of power, unfortunately.
I mean, we just saw, you know, in New York City, Mamdani won. I think that's pretty indicative of where things could go in in the midterms and in 2028.
And so I think Republicans have a lot of work to do.
Is the idea of MAGA dead now in that way? No, I don't think so. I think that
because MAGA isn't Trump, I think people can argue that it is. Obviously, he created it, he coined the term, but the ideas and the values behind make America great again, I think those will withstand.
And I think that still drives a lot of people in the conservative movement.
It will be interesting to see
how everything
unfolds when Trump is not in office, when he's kind of, you know, out of the picture, when he officially retires, if he ever does retire, not saying he's going to, you know, run again, obviously, but if he
kind of steps back from public life and just goes and golfs with his grandkids, what the party will look like and what MA will look like.
But I think it is an idea and something that drives, I don't think that that's dead. That's an interesting point.
I've never considered what he's going to do after his presidency because that is a man who really does not like not being in the limelight. No, exactly.
Can you be a vice president after you've been a president? Or do you have to be completely out of the administration after you're president? I still have no idea. He might be able to be.
Because if he just
swapped top and bottom with
bands. Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly.
He's like, no, I'm never leaving. Yeah, exactly.
16 years of me either as president or vice president. Or we can just start another reality show.
That would be my preference.
Who wants to be a president?
Exactly.
Yeah,
I wonder whether that's going to cause power vacuum and more fracturing or whether everybody's going to have to rally behind one person. Yeah.
In order to win, we need to rally behind one person, but I do think that it will, as we're seeing right now, I think that there will be a lot of fracturing to see what the direction of the party goes.
I think that's really what we're seeing at the moment is people are fighting for what is the new conservatism without Trump.
And it feels a little bit preemptive in a way, because it's like, okay, well, we still have three more years of him, and hopefully we have, you know, eight years advance. I love JD.
I think he's phenomenal
and I'm excited for him to run.
But I do think people are trying to figure out, you know, out with the old and with the new that they're trying to decipher, especially with Gen Z, because Gen Z is a very different beast.
What would you say are the factions that are splintering off? How do you come to think about the terrain of
the right at the moment? I think we have what I would call like the establishment neocons,
you know, the politicians that have been in office for God knows how long.
And then I think we have the,
you know, the younger, I would say the cooler right that is, you know, pro-Israel. So it's not like they are these neocons that have been in office, but they are pro-Israel.
And then I think you have,
maybe there's four. And then you have people that, you know, they say are more far-right.
Maybe you could put them in the camp of Fuentes. Maybe he's in a camp of his own
who are anti-Israel. That's really caused, that's really been the biggest.
Who's the pro-Israel one? Who's in that group?
I see that as like the Babylon B guys, Ben Shapiro.
And then I think you have people that are a bit more in the middle, like the Megan Kellys and where I think Charlie Kirk was, who are actively trying to keep everybody together and who don't really fall in either or any of these camps and want to continue pushing the party forward and are are working on unifying and bringing people together
and who have critiques with both of these groups.
But often the people that sit in the middle, as we're seeing with Megan Kelly, like, she isn't good enough for either group.
She gets criticized by people who are farther right, the Grapers, Nick Fuentes, whatever it might be. But she also, you know, is not pro-Israel enough for the people in that fraction.
And so she's feels like a purity test.
Yes. And so she's constantly
ping-ponging back and forth. I think that she's doing a very good job of handling it right now.
And she's really trying to maintain her personal close relationships, which I think is important above all else.
She's obviously been in this world for a long time and she has friends on all different sides of these issues. And in the admin and out of the admin, she's in a tough spot.
But it's been interesting to watch her navigate.
And I'm learning a lot from that because I do think that she's handling it gracefully.
Well, handling it badly is not too hard to do. We've seen enough people that have faceplanted or put both of their feet in their mouths in an attempt to try and like,
I don't know, I, I,
we've definitely seen a lot of people be very gregarious when you're on the outside, this sort of anarchistic,
we must at any
way, I'm, I'm part of the rebellion, we're going to push back against the hegemony. And it's like, yeah, dude, you are the hegemony.
Yeah.
Now, like, you can't have, even within content online, it's so much easier and sexier to be the
upstart rebel
pushing back against the establishment.
When you become the establishment, you can't do that. So I wonder.
Well, that's what happened with the left. And I think that's why
we took power and control in 2024 is because so many young people looked around and went, oh, I'm no longer raging against the machine. I am the machine.
Like I'm raging for the machine.
And so I do think that that has caused a bit of a shift. And so I'll be interested to see how that happens on the right.
How do you think conservatives feel about Trump's performance so far?
I can say how I feel about it.
There's a lot of things that I feel really great about, and he's doing things that I voted for, especially at the beginning. I feel like we just like raced out of the great gates.
I am definitely in support of
deportations and getting our border secured.
I was really excited about almost all of his, I would say all of his executive orders. I think we were heading in the right direction.
I know that he is working on the economy, but I think where I and many of my Gen Z counterparts feel a bit trepidatious about things is we haven't felt the impacts of that yet.
We aren't seeing tangible changes in the affordability and life in the U.S. And I think that a lot of young people are looking around and going, okay, well, I voted for lower costs.
I want to be able to buy a home.
I am worried about my student loan debt. Whatever it may be, I want to be be able to afford the groceries that I want to buy.
I want to be able to continue living in the city that I have grown up in, like in New York. And I think that
that group, especially young people, are getting a bit nervous.
And I think that's why. Maybe 12 months in now, chop chop.
Where is it? Yeah. And of course, those things take time.
And I have a lot of empathy for the situation that Trump, you know, came into.
He was handed a hell of a project because I think that through COVID and the Biden presidency, just just so many things blew up. And so he has a lot to repair.
So I understand that, but I also understand the young people, especially who are looking around and going, no, my life is starting now. And I feel like I can't catch up.
And I need to see this change.
And to have Trump then, you know, go on Fox News and say, there is no affordability crisis. You've made it up in your head.
It's like that's.
The average, you see that stat that the average age of first home purchase is now over 40. Yeah, it's insane.
It's the highest it's ever been. And for repeat home buyers, I think it's 61.
Yep. Yeah.
And like, how, how can you not look at those stats as a young person and go like, there's no hope for me? Yeah. And why would you like to? I'm 21.
I'm at university.
You're telling me I'm going to grind for the next 19 years on average
to get my first home. Yeah.
And if the number is presumably shifting, by the time that you get there, it's 45.
Yeah. Yeah.
And I think that there's a lot of betrayal that I see with young people where they,
the sentiment is like, I did everything right.
Like I did all the right things in high school. I did all the extracurriculars.
I volunteered. I got the great grades.
I did well in the ACT. I went to a four-year university.
I took out the loans because everybody told me I needed to go to this great university and do all the right things. $150,000 in debt.
Yep, exactly. And now they're coming out.
They can't get jobs, especially when it comes to, you know, straight white men who are getting past that. There were new statistics about that.
I think that the majority of,
hopefully I'm not putting my foot in my mouth here, but I think the majority of hires in the last couple of years were DEI hires.
And so, young men, especially, young white men, are looking around and going, like, what was it all for?
And now I'm not even going to be able to buy a home and, like, God forbid, be able to support a wife and children.
If that trickles down as well, if your older brother or older friends from the sports teams that you grew up in, or just what you see being posted online, gives you this sense that the future is not going to be that hopeful, it causes a lot of despondency.
I think this is
one of the
big challenges that people face. It's not just what is the reality of the economy.
Can people afford stuff? It's what do people think the reality is? Yes. This is intergenerational competition theory.
So you, at your age, compare yourself to where you think your parents were at your age.
And the problem there is you don't actually know where your parents were.
Everybody thinks that the golden era got that into you. Husband will be happy.
Oh, yeah.
Everybody thinks that the golden era from the past was better, but interestingly, no one ever believes they're living through a golden age.
The 90s, no one thought we're living through a golden age. The 70s, no one thought we're living through a golden age.
The 30s, no one thought we're living through a golden age.
But in retrospect, you assume that that's what it was like. And in many ways, affordability, first-time ownership, you can look at objective metrics of that.
But the biggest one is how do people feel
about it? And if you feel like you're being kicked in the nuts over and over again,
that is your reality, whether or not that is your reality. And I think that's probably a lot of Trump's frustration is that he's like, I see that I'm making change.
Like I'm moving the needle.
I'm trying to make this happen. But it's really hard to fight with an entire generation of young people who, again, who are looking around and going, I'm not going to make it.
Where is what I was promised? Yeah, exactly. And you said, I always go back to this because it was just such an eloquent way to put it.
But when you came on my show, however many years ago that was, you said,
the bar is so low that you don't have to do much to stand out. And I think that that rings true in that situation as well.
There are obviously young people who do buy homes, who do make it work.
And a lot of times their mindset is different. That does not mean that just changing your mindset is going to fix everything because it does require a lot of sacrifices.
It requires probably adjusting the plan that you assumed you would follow, whatever it might be. But there is a path for homeownership for young people.
There is a path for success starting families.
Obviously, I see it every day. But for a lot of people, when you are in
this vacuum of, I'm never going to make it. I'm never going to make it.
And objectively, it is hard. Objectively, interest rates are high.
Objectively, things are not affordable.
I don't want young people to be in enlist debt. I don't want them to have to leave the cities that they want to live in and, you know, change their careers, whatever it is.
But unfortunately, that kind of is the reality that we are currently living in.
And I think one of the most important things you can do is first assess your reality and go, okay, I just have, you know, this is it. I have to accept it.
Now, what am I going to do about it?
So if I had to give advice, that would be what it is. That doesn't make the situation any better.
But it's like, okay, if we can't, if you can't fight this yourself right now, obviously you can vote differently. You can do whatever you want.
You can advocate for different policies.
But as an individual, in order to make yourself feel better and push your life in a better direction, the first step, in my opinion, is always, okay, this is my reality.
What am I going to do about it? And what I, as an individual, what power do I have?
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any
any conversation about your mindset has an influence on your outcomes in life life needs to be caveatted with, well, objective reality still exists. Yeah.
Right. Okay.
Now that that's fucking out on the table, there's some red tape. There's the disclaimer.
I think it's the best way to look at it because
every other person also has that same belief of, this is too hard. I'm never going to get there, et cetera, et cetera.
And that demotivation, that lack of drive, that hopelessness impacts their
push to go and do something.
So that further means that the bar has been lowered. Like the
fact that so many people believe it's so hard to do so little
means that if you can just the tiniest glimmer of hope that you can self-manifest or you're around three friends that you find that are a little bit more optimistic than most people are on average, that is the performance enhancer.
The average American adult is obese, divorced, and less than one K in the bank. Yeah.
That's the average. Yeah.
Again, the bar is low. Obese, divorced, less than 1K in the bank.
Doing what everybody else does sounds like a safe option, but it's actually a reliable route to a life that you probably don't want. Correct.
So that includes what you believe.
That includes what you believe about the future. So what everybody else says, it's like, okay, what are the outcomes that everybody else who says gets? Well, they're not that great.
And again, objective reality exists.
The average homeowner rate, the highest it's ever, ever been for first-time purchasers. Yes, yes, yes.
But again,
that
big cohort that's shifting that way means that the outliers can exist down here. Now,
a surprising insight here that you probably weren't expecting, Destiny, when he came on my show, he explained an idea of how I asked him, what do you say to left-wing people who outsource a lot of their
agency in the world to the circumstances that they're in, that sort of externalizing
sense of control.
And he said he thinks about it as sort of a two-step flow theory. I came up with the name, but he explained the theory.
So he said that there's a particular bracket within which you sit.
And this will be determined by your genetics. It'll be determined by where you grew up, who your parents were, the area you're in, the time of the world that you existed within.
And he's like, that bracket is really, really hard to move, right? That is kind of objective reality. But inside of that bracket, it's all you.
Yeah.
And the more effort that you apply, the more diligent that you can be, the more pro-social you can be, the more hopeful you can be,
That allows you to move within that. So, yeah, you can whine about where the bracket is.
I do get that.
But especially if you're toward the bottom end within the bracket, it's like, dude, that's on you. Yeah.
And I understand. That's a great way to put it with the bracket might be in different places.
But your movement within it is
it is all in front of you. Yeah, that's your personal responsibility.
Yeah.
Yeah. Who knew that destiny was going to be the savior for this? That's great.
But
I
get the sense
the young people conversation is going to be like increasingly important because the young people are going to become the middle-aged people in not very long.
Yeah, most significant voting block when millennials and Gen Z.
When Trump was first voted in 2016,
that would have been sort of millennials as the young and upcomers. And by the time that J.D.
Vance needs to come in, some of those millennials are going to be nearly in their 50s or probably in their 50s.
So that's a big, that's a big swing. That's a big difference in terms of of where people are at in terms of their lives if they haven't had delivered what they what they wanted.
What do you make in reflection?
What do you think Mamdani's election tells us or teaches us? What did you take away from that?
Well, first of all, I saw a lot of people responding and going, you know, this means that we need to teach young people about the dangers of socialism and communism.
And that's what, you know, that's the response here. I actually don't think that people were voting for him in large part because they were all socialists.
Like, I don't think the majority of New Yorkers are socialists. They were voting for him, number one,
because he preached about affordability in the economy. Again, that is the number one issue.
It's the number one issue in 2024.
It's what Trump talked about basically every single day on the campaign trail. It's why he won.
It's why people are desperate for him to deliver and are still, you know, trying to be hopeful.
And it's hard to argue with free when you're saying, I'm going to give free housing and free groceries. We're going to do all of these things.
People are going to go, that sounds really great.
These things are really freaking expensive. So it's like, it wasn't surprising to me at all.
I also had a lot of people asking, you know, were you shocked that young women voted for him? No.
Like, young women are the most far-left group in history. They are also worried about the economy and affordability.
Those two things combined. Like, obviously, they were going to vote for him.
They are, you know, much further left on all these social issues.
So, no, I think that it just solidifies the fact that the number one thing people are concerned about is their futures and the economy and obviously affordability.
And I also think it solidifies the fact that politics really is about personality.
And I think that we saw a major shift, especially with Obama. And, you know, I grew up during the Obama years.
And just looking back, he brought politics into pop culture and he became this pop culture figure. And then with Trump, obviously he is an entertainer.
He connects with people on that level.
Pop culture into politics. Yes.
And
I think that that still rings true.
And people, you know, they tried to run Cuomo thinking that he could beat somebody like Mamdani, who was going viral every single day on social media, who genuinely looks like he enjoyed the campaign trail.
That was the similarities that I saw with Trump and Mamdani. I think that they're, you know, two different sides of the same coin of like Trump loves the fight.
He loves being out there.
you know, the adages, you know, shaking hands and kissing babies. He loves being the McDonald's fry cook and doing the gags and getting in the garbage trucks, whatever it is.
Mamdani loves doing the same thing.
When we got to New York a couple of weeks ago, Alex and I were in New York for
that election, actually, because I had to show there and was doing a bunch of stuff with Fox. And the moment that we landed there, my TikTok algorithm completely shifted to show me all New York stuff.
And I had been kind of tuned out. And
we got there on Sunday and I was like, oh, obviously, the moment I opened TikTok, I was like, he's going to win. Because I got served these ridiculous videos that Cuomo was making.
They were like AI attacks on Mamdani. He wasn't actually out in the streets interacting with anybody.
Apparently, allegedly, he hasn't even lived in New York City since the 90s.
And he was using his daughter's address to register himself to be able to run. Like a whole weird thing.
And Mamdani, like, is this New Yorker? And he's speaking to New Yorkers.
And I remember sitting in our hotel room and a video popped up of Mamdani. And he was doing like.
Tai Chi in a old folks home in New York with a bunch of like old, like female New Yorkers.
And whoever had posted it had put this like really sad like TikTok music behind it. And I was laying in bed watching it.
I was like, oh, he's kind of cute. I'll just like, shut the fuck up.
They're getting you. That's how they get it.
Yeah, exactly. They were like, turn it off.
Don't look at it. But it showed me a lot because I was like, oh, no, he is the entertainer.
He's connecting in the same way that Trump connected with voters, where he is just like speaking like a normal human being.
Trump, the appeal of him to so many people, especially, you know, I love this about him, is that he has more money than most of us could even fathom having. He has this insane life.
He lives in these like gold-plated mansions and penthouses, and yet he looks completely comfortable driving a trash truck. He can talk to the average American.
You feel heard and seen by him. You feel like he understands your issues.
He's funny. He's relatable.
And Mamdani has that same, has those same attributes.
Meanwhile, Cuomo was probably the most like stiff, ridiculous, you know, unrelatable politician ever.
And it was also unfortunate to me that like that, that's who the GOP told us to throw our support behind. It's like, this is the best alternative.
Like, I'm tired of having like the better of two evils, basically.
So I wasn't surprised that he won. I think it shows us that people care about personality, they care about authenticity, and they care about affordability.
They want free things.
When it comes to the affordability point,
politicians... that are the challenger always have an advantage because they can make promises that they haven't had to deliver on yet.
Whereas if you're the incumbent and you say, I'm going to do X, it's like like, you've been in fucking power for this was the criticism of Kamala Harris, right?
That she had been, how can you say, we are going to get in? Who's we? You are we. Yeah.
Right. You were you then.
You were part of this. Why did you not do it before? You've been in for four years.
Free sounds great until someone needs to fuck the bill for it. Yeah.
Or until you do something with the taxes that causes people to leave, which causes the taxes to go down, which causes austerity to have to kick in more.
So I wonder how much of this, if there is more of a crunch coming, if there is a little bit of a squeeze in terms of the economy, finances,
I wonder how much is going to result in just a flip-flopping between the side that's in has come up against the physics of reality economically, socially, et cetera.
So the side that's out can always make the promise that the side that's out. That is what we're living in.
And then you just continue to like. And we're already seeing it with Mamboni.
I think it was like a week in. He rolled something back.
Yes.
Well, he was like, I actually oh I don't know if I can make this like free house he was talking about some apartment complex I believe and he was like I don't really know yeah he was like might not be free maybe less expensive um he also immediately this was just hilarious people went to his victory party expecting that there would be free booze free food whatever it is it was a cash bar And it was just like so perfect.
And there were all these posts being like, oh, I was invited to this. And I thought after all the work that we put in, you know, it would be free, obviously.
And I had to pay $13 for my beer.
Like, oh, well, I'm glad this is really working out for us.
And then he also, he had done this whole like grandstanding a couple of months ago where he was like, guys, I'm going to do what no politician has ever said before. Don't send me any more money.
We have enough money. We don't need any like millionaires funding us.
Don't send us any more. The day after he was elected, he was like, okay, so now I need more money.
So now I need you to keep sending me more money. Everybody's like, wait, oh, wait, well, I thought everything was going to be free.
I thought we didn't need to do anything. Anyway, so it's already
problems one of the problems of the political becoming personal or pop cultural which is
uh
you can make claims that sound really sexy uh but at some point that sort of check needs to be cashed or the hypocrisy can be called out of something that you meant before that was like a cool campaign slogo and you're like i don't really mean it yeah and it's not it's not as if that hasn't been the same for trump either right the h-1b visas thing like affordability uh i think
I don't know, there is some kind of plot armor that Trump has that because he's so gregarious, kind of like the
I'm just a comedian, you know, that kind of gets like, I'm just Trump.
And that's not the standard of your president should not be able to use the cliche caricature of their own surname to explain away why they didn't do the thing that they said that they were going to do.
But I think if somebody's a little bit more earnest, like Mamdani was,
you can't
you don't get this sort of
buffer zone of like him just like bloviating his, well, you know,
he just says things. It's like, well, you don't know, you're supposed to be a precise politician who's statesmanlike and doing this stuff.
So
in some ways, that gives you the advantage of seeming
real, of seeming relatable, of seeming authentic in a way that Trump seems authentic, but he seems authentic in the same way that a WWE character or a Marvel villain is authentic.
It's like where he's just being himself. He's He's larger than life.
Congruent might be a good way to put it, that like he believes what he's saying, right? But that doesn't mean that what he's saying and what he
believes what he's saying, but that doesn't mean that what he believes is accurate. Like sometimes he just has the idea of how it comes.
But yeah, that's going to be a challenge. The bigger the promises are that you make, the more challenge it's going to be when you have to deliver them when you get into office.
And if Mamdani.
Especially when you've been handed such a mess like Trump was, and when the promises are so grand like Mom Daddy
so larger than life and a completely it's like overhauling the entire system of how that city has been run yeah countries and run the Trump thing the mess thing I get but to
a big degree
Biden came into a fucking huge mess as well he came in in the middle of COVID yeah and there does seem to be I don't fully understand this but I get the sense that every administration sort of curls a steaming turd out just as they're about to depart and goes like, Good luck, good luck with that.
We've had to deal with this for ages, and
I don't know.
That one's on you, Joe.
So every administration has to deal with it. It's certainly not, it wouldn't be fair to say that Biden didn't because he entered in the middle of a fucking pandemic
and then had to do the rollout for the vaccine, even being developed. And then you've got this sort of weird balancing act that you've got to do between the two.
Like, it's Trump's vaccine, but it's our rollout. But the anti-vacc pro-vaccine.
Yep. And the lockdown started with Trump.
Big pharma. And then you've got to keep it.
Yeah. Yeah.
So everybody has their stuff that they inherit. And
people have just got such short memories. They've got such short memories around
the point that you were making only four years ago to criticize this thing is the exact one you're using as a like.
But yeah, I'll be fascinated to see what happens with
New York because you're picking like maybe one of the most sort of capitalistic, ruthless, greed is good
archetypes. Economic center.
Yes. Yeah.
Correct. And what if you strike directly at the middle of that? I mean,
what was the thing that Trump did? He shut down that like parking, that travel fine that was from 77th Street down to 20th Street, like Midtown had, if you pass your car through that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. And he was like, that's not good, that's going to go away, et cetera, et cetera.
I don't know.
Here would be another point, actually. What
do you think conservatives and Republicans are missing in how they can better compete for Gen Z if you've got this huge female swing?
I'm aware it's New York-centric, but it's probably indicative of other cosmopolitan areas around the country.
What are the right missing that Mamdani got correct?
Again, I think it goes back to saying the right things, unfortunately. Like, it's like the right has to deliver.
Like, that's easier said than done.
But we're at such a turning point as we've been talking about
that I think people, especially in New York, especially people who are on the left, were desperate for something new because I think people on the left are just as fed up with their own establishment politicians.
They were, you know, they didn't want Kamala to be insated. I think they were tired of the fact that Bernie never got a fair shot because they primarily, whatever it is, they primarily him.
And so I think that we're dealing, we're all dealing with the same type of feelings.
And
Mamdani was an outsider and a disruptor. And so I think that worked in the same way that Trump worked in 2016.
And so I do think that it comes down to what Trump and Vance are able to deliver.
And I also think if Vance is the nominee in 2028,
his messaging has to be so incredibly clear and he cannot fall prey to
the neocon messaging.
What would be the biggest error, errors that he could make?
If you were to design a campaign for JD to fail as
impressively as possible, what would he be talking about?
I think a big part of it would be tone and talking down to people.
I think that's one way that he shines right now is that J.D. Vance sounds the same when he is speaking to a supporter in middle of America.
He sounds the same when he's speaking to a reporter.
He tweets in the same way. He doesn't take himself too seriously.
I think that is a great quality. And I think if he loses that and becomes a bit too,
I guess, politician speak and a bit too diplomatic, I think that that's where he'll start to lose people. Again, because politics is personality.
So I think that is like going to be the driving force here.
I think if he talks a lot about foreign affairs, I think if he's saying we're going to send all of our money overseas, I think that's going to be a problem for young people.
Because again, if we're looking at our own country and going, you know, if my generation is saying, I don't feel like I can buy a house, I am, you know, under all of this debt, my taxes are so high, I can't start a family, whatever it is.
If that is the attitude that they have and what they feel like their reality is, the last thing they want to hear is, hey, we're shipping our money overseas.
And so I think that's going to be a real pressing issue.
I also think, and I said this in a recent episode, and I was interested to see how people responded to it.
And they actually agreed, but I kind of made a joke and I was like, I don't think my generation cares as much about owning the libs. They care about owning a house.
And the culture war is obviously important,
but it felt felt less important in Mamdani's campaign. And I think that showed a lot.
Like, obviously, he was like, you can come here and you can get your gender reassignment surgeries, whatever, but that wasn't the key point of his campaign.
He was talking about making your life better
for New Yorkers. Very radical economically, but relatively normal culturally.
I guess
normal culturally for his base. Yes.
Yeah. Not
normal than how I would say. Yes.
But it was not the focal point of
his campaign. His campaign was new york first
allowing new yorkers to be able to stay in their city and afford homes and afford groceries and that works for people and i think that that is working for people on the right like when i said that i had hundreds of comments being like oh my gosh this yes that is exactly how i feel like i'm fed up with going back and forth about he said she said oh this crazy person did this on the left like i'm tired of it
I just want to be able to move my life forward and not feel like I'm a hamster in a wheel and I'm, you know, both sides are giving me the same solution that isn't isn't making my life any better.
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I had a uh
I had a shiny object cycle that I tweeted about uh a while ago and I think this kind of explains at least a little bit of what people have become frustrated with so this is the culture wars shiny object cycle here's how it goes okay number one Some woke news story hits the press.
Cats suffer from racial discrimination or screwing in light bulbs needs to be recognized as a valid sexual kink or something. Number two, the right-wing antibody response activates.
Look at how insane these people are. Matt Walsh quote tweets the article and calls it obnoxious.
This is the problem with our convenient, decadent TikTok society. Number three,
this reaction causes the story to gain infinitely more traction than it ever would have done by signal boosting the original fringe scenario into a much bigger event.
Number four, the left-wing counter-response activates. Right-wingers lose their minds over one woman with a particularly dark cat.
The Daily Wire has a meltdown over an insignificant troll article.
In times where the original story is less insane, this includes a defense of the original article too. Cats actually can experience trauma.
Minimizing this is the real problem.
Number five, the right-wing re-reaction kicks into gear. Apparently, I'm insane for pushing back against cat trauma.
See, this is the problem.
If we don't stand our ground, these blue-head idiots will take over the country. And number six, finally, the touchgrass meta-reactionaries steam in.
The real issue is people talking about this issue.
Look at how silly this whole thing is. It's time to check out of the culture war.
We should reconnect with what really matters.
Should move into the ranch next to Ryan Holiday and hammer fence posts into the ground for the rest of time. This cycle is banal.
It's excruciatingly repetitive.
So why does it sustain our attention if basically every discussion follows the same cycle?
Because every story is sprinkled with just enough novelty to give it the illusion that this is a new event, which legitimates the pushback.
We've not seen this trans flag with people who suffer from a gluten intolerance included in it before.
It's like a 20th season of Lost where they're back on an island for the seventh time and need to escape, but this time it's winter. The Culture War shiny object cycle does my head in.
It does my head in because I get captured by it.
I see a bank rewriting classic fairy tales into a boss bitch remake called Fara Tales, Princesses Doing It For Themselves, and think, this is fucking dumb. Where's Douglas Murray?
I need him to decimate this idea with me. It's cathartic.
Calling out insane ideas written by idiots is so compelling and fun and easy to do.
It's like being a cocaine addict with Pablo Escobar as a next-door neighbor. The memes of production are whirring at maximum RPM and we're all caught in the vortex.
But it's a distraction.
It's a distraction from our attention being focused on the things which are actually meaningful.
Not meaningful in a, will you remember this when you're dead, way, but in a, there's other issues that are more important to talk about, way. There's entire American cities with fentanyl epidomics.
80% of suicides are people aged 18 to 24 that are men. I want to hear Peterson talking about dealing with finding meaning in a world stripped of all its guardrails.
I want Taleb to be writing about applying complex maths to simple life problems.
Many of the smartest people on the planet have had their attention captured, arguing about whether men are men and women are women or not over the last few years, and even more of the less smart ones too.
All of our collective minds are held hostage by an endless cycle of shiny objects that aggravate both sides and make them feel righteous for standing their ground. It's a bottomless pit.
I don't think it's going to stop. I will almost certainly bring up stories like this in future, but I'm going to try hard to focus more on stuff that matters in 50 years, not just in 50 minutes.
And probably so should you. That's great.
And I think that you have the self-awareness to acknowledge that you get captured by that, as I do.
And that's something I've thought about a lot this year. That was actually something that I was really considering as I
left comment section and was going out on my own was how often did I fall into that out of the necessity of having to do two shows a day?
I was like, okay, so I'm, you know, contract, I'm contracted to do these shows, need to come up with two things to talk about every single day.
I was doing 10 episodes a week. And in looking back, I was like, how often was I just pulling things
out of my ass?
And they were all things I enjoyed talking about. And I thought that they were, you know, funny.
And I do think that in those situations, I'm of the opinion that yes, there are far more important things to talk about.
And I think I'm landing more there these days, especially with the content that I'm doing.
However, I do think it's important when something is so egregious and ridiculous. It's less that I think it's important to wag the finger and say, this is so awful and, you know,
a atrocity, but also just to like laugh at it. And I think that's why I'm just and yeah, because it's so absurd.
And the right is doing things that are absurd.
And the left has been doing things that are crazy, but also the right right has been doing the same thing um and i think that's kind of where i found myself landing even
even throughout you know comment section where i was doing two episodes a day i did always come from a place of you know can what can we actually learn from this like i don't want to just make fun of something or bring something up for the sake of you know ha ha ha and pointing a finger but What can we actually take away from this?
There's a tunnel of truth that sits in it.
And I always tried to end my episodes with that because it was like, if I don't care about what I'm talking about, if there isn't something that people can learn from, then why am I even talking about that?
But that was a big piece of reflection as I was leaving. And I scaled back my show tremendously.
I was like, okay, I'm only going to do two episodes a week. They need to be really, really good topics.
I need to really care about them and I'll build from there. But I need to completely take a step back from this, you know, hamster wheel that I've been in of two episodes every single day
and really find out. What am I like talking about? What is meaningful? What is meaningful right now?
Because no, I think everything you said was completely true. And it's so funny with the outrage cycle of then whoever is being critiqued just digs your heel in even more or their claws and whatever.
The response and the re-response and the men reaction. And it's not actually happening.
And then they're like, no, but it's a good thing that it's happening. And the right's doing that too now.
It's not happening and it's good. Yes, exactly.
And two, you know, two things can be true at once.
But I found that humor was the best way to navigate that. was like, I'm not going home at night and thinking about the gluten-free trans flag, but I do think it's funny to laugh at it.
And we can spend 10 minutes going, this is really absurd. Can you believe our culture has gotten here?
And that felt like the healthiest way to go about it. What feels more unstable to you, politics or culture at the moment?
Can you even separate the two? I think that's my main question.
They're so intertwined.
I think culture is more dominant at the moment and is influencing more of politics. So I would say that's just a bit more volatile.
Well, Well, when we think about my initial fracturing of the right question,
we're talking about culture. We're not talking about politics.
The right. Yes.
Yeah, no, no, no, no. I mean like the YouTube right.
Yes. Right.
I don't mean the political rights.
It's the end of the human centipede with YouTube at the front. Yeah.
But that's what's so ridiculous. It's like, oh, the civil war.
And it's like with a group of people on it. Maybe.
Yeah, exactly. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
Wild. Everybody's competing for views and dominance.
You've got to quote, spend one day being grateful that you're allowed to say that online, that you're allowed to criticize your country, because a lot of people don't have that freedom. Now,
that would sound like, you know, you're talking about Iran, you're talking about North Korea.
Unfortunately, now you might be talking about the UK as well.
Just that quote in isolation. Yeah.
And then realizing, oh,
that's my country. That's actually my country.
It's Western civilization now. Well, that's certain pockets of it.
I don't know whether it's the same in france or germany i don't know what canada is like coming into western civilization when certainly coming into my civilization um but yeah that's
yeah when you're arrested at the airport coming into the country for making trans jokes graham lenahan yeah yeah uh creator of father ted it's it's happening so much more at the moment and um
i think the
the immigration concerns that people in the uk have at the moment uh
even you are starting to feel that with regards to the to the H-1B thing.
The advantage America has is it's such a fucking huge country that you can let lots of people sneak across the border illegally.
And still it doesn't get felt that much in the same way as a country with
what?
20% of the population in, I think, I think the population density of the UK is 10 times more than the US because it's, yeah, it's only 20% of the people, but it's in like 2% of the land mass or something like that.
That being said, the fact that this H-1B visa thing and we actually don't have as many smart people in the country as we need, we do need to import them from China,
that's going to start to be felt by the exact sort of upper working class, middle-class group that was supposed to be the mainstay of sort of Trump's future and JD's future as well.
And I think that
the
H-1B visa stuff is interesting because it is not a majority of workers in America. I think people look at that issue and think, oh, this is, you know, a huge, huge fraction of people.
And it is significant, but we do have more Americans working than people we've imported.
But I think for people who are concerned about it, like myself, it's more of the message that we're sending Americans that it's like, I mean, Trump said it himself and it was disappointing where he was, you know, very bluntly said, we don't have the talent.
Therefore, we need to import people. And I think you have Americans looking around who can't find work.
Again, these young people who did everything right, who went through the system, who are coming out now and can't find jobs. And they're going, you're kidding me.
And you look at
the jobs that we are, that we're filling. with these people that are coming in the country.
And Trump's talking about, you know, people, they need to be able to make missiles and batteries, but you look at it and it's like 7-Eleven employee and supply chain analysts.
And it's like, you're telling me Americans can't be supply chain analysts that we don't have these incredible graduates who have come out of our universities who are looking for jobs.
You're telling me we have to import somebody from China or India to do this job. It just doesn't make sense.
And I think the entire system just needs to be. basically blown up.
And if you do need to bring in new talent, if we need to teach people how to do certain trades and skills, then focus on that and make that the priority and make it a very specific thing.
Now, obviously, I'm not a politician. I'm not in DC.
I don't know how those things specifically work or what it would take to do that.
But from my position on the outside, that is what makes sense to me because obviously, you know, we have not been in the manufacturing business for decades. We have outsourced so much of that.
So it makes sense that it is not going to be an overnight switch to just, you know, bring everything back to America. But is there a way to do that without it being a slap in the face to Americans?
And I don't know, I don't know the answer to that.
And I think that'll be something that JD really needs to lean into because only a couple of months ago, he was echoing the sentiments of most of the base saying, this is something we should do away with.
This is, you know, I want to prioritize handling this and reducing the amount of people. And obviously the Trump administration, they have put fines and fees on bringing in
new people on the H-1B visas.
And that is progress. So they have, you know, they've tried to do something there.
But I think it was definitely a flip-flop for Republicans when we just saw JD just two months ago saying that.
And then Trump was like, nope, we're not getting rid of it. We need them because you're all dumb and you can't work.
And so I think a lot of people went, ah, this is, it's just another hit.
It's hard because you want to trust the process and you want to trust that, you know, there is a plan.
But
I think especially for young people.
especially for young people who, again, did everything right, who are trying to find work.
It's just like, that's not the message that you want to send to them
it does feel like
from every different angle hopefulness is increasingly hard like optimism is more radical than nihilism oh for sure at the moment and uh it really doesn't surprise me do you see the uh
sentiment analysis of the relationship advice subreddit has this come across your radio this stinks of you um
relationships it's never been more fashionable to ditch your suboptimal loved one for every post since 2010 a computer computer scientist used an AI to filter for and then categorize the subreddit's most upvoted comments.
He found the comments advising boundaries, therapies, and breakups have surged, while nearly every other kind of advice, telling people to communicate, giving each other space, compromise, et cetera, has declined.
So the law was correct.
Telling people to walk away or cut contact with someone, shown by an up and to the right line, is the most popular tip in the relationship advice subreddit, and it's not even close. And I can show you
what the line is. That doesn't surprise me at all.
So this is 15 years of Reddit relationship advice. It's over a million comments.
You don't even need to be able to see.
Oh, my gosh, that's insane. Yeah.
But I mean, that is a complete parallel to what we're seeing in politics,
where it's like, oh, just cut off your family, disavow your parents.
We're about to go into Thanksgiving, which is where you get the how to ignore your racist MAGA uncle around the dinner table, how to do that. Yeah.
And I think people
maybe naively assume that things have just gotten better and the messages have changed. But I was doing an episode on Teen Vogue and them being absorbed into Vogue.com, this whole thing.
And so I was looking through some of their recent media and they had their Vogue or Teen Vogue summit just a couple of months ago.
And their headliner was this like body positivity confidence woman influencer speaker. And they had posted a couple of clips from her talk.
And the thing that she was driving home was that she was so proud of the fact that she no longer speaks to her father, her mother, or any of her siblings.
And she was saying, you should do that too, because that is for the good of our country, for your well-being. You need to set these boundaries.
I feel great. I just blocked my brother yesterday.
That's what she said. And the audience is going, okay.
And you can tell there's a bit of apprehension, like as you listen to the response there and even reading the comments, people are like, this is radical even for us.
This is like a bit crazy, but that's still a message that is being set
is you have to build these walls. We're not going to talk about things.
We're going to cut people off that we disagree with. We're going to live in our echo chambers.
And so, yeah, that transcends just
relationships. Well, I, it is strange that
at the same time as people have a loneliness crisis,
existential issues,
they've never felt more like a droid number just bleep bleeping away in some soulless, faceless, big
apartment block.
People are struggling to find a partner that can commit, that is available, that they like,
one that you'll even go on a date with them.
And yet, at the same time, for the people who have got that or who do have a family that does make them feel less alone,
the
resilience to work through challenges and difficulties and to negotiate and compromise,
or just to, in Mel Robbins' language, to just let them.
these two
worlds need are trying to exist at the same time but they feel like they're part and parcel of the same like if you cycle through
if you cycle through more people you have to find more new people yeah like you okay I've gotten rid of mum dad and both my brothers okay well you now need like 10 friends to take the place of four family members And then,
well, you've gotten rid of your partner, which that's why you're back in the dating market, is because you got rid of your person that you were dating. Yep.
And you have these people that are stuck in their own cycles of victimhood and life is awful.
And I've cut off all of my family members and they want to feel better about that, which is why that woman is sitting on the stage saying, You should cut everybody off, not because she's happy and because it's so great, but because she's like, I'm doing this because I feel like it is morally a good thing.
I'm virtuous. I need you guys to applaud me for doing so, for doing these incredible things, setting these boundaries.
You need to do it as well because then we can be miserable together.
We can hate the world. We can hate our out-of-touch parents, whatever it may be.
And people who are in unhappy relationships or are not in relationships, it is more comfortable to encourage people to be in their same situation than to say, communicate, talk through it, compromise.
You know, your future as a married couple should be something you are working towards together. Do not abandon it altogether.
It is easier to say, screw it.
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modern wisdom. Cut off contact with your family, your partner is
socially and relationally the exact same philosophy as body positivity is for health.
It's like, Try and become thin or try and become healthy at a healthy weight. And if you can't, declare that weight has no bearing on health anyway.
Exactly.
Maybe don't even try. Don't even try that.
Just like declare that it doesn't in any case if you go straight to the end, the end goal. But the same thing here.
Maybe some people might try to fix their relationship with their family that they fundamentally disagree with or whatever.
But if you can't, you can just cut off contact and announce that the desire for having a family or being in connection with your brothers and mother and father is misguided and must be subdued in any case.
Yeah, well, it all goes back to creating the reality that you want to live in and what you're most comfortable in. It is more uncomfortable to say,
I don't agree with these people, but I love them and I want them in my life. It is more uncomfortable to say, oh, I've cut these people off and now I'm really unhappy and I'm really lonely.
So if you can trick yourself into saying, this is empowerment, this is great. Actually, everybody should be doing this.
Then you're creating this really unhappy reality. Body positivity in the age of Ozempic is a really radical position to take now.
Ozempic just showed how much of a scam body positivity was all along.
Oh my gosh, yes. As soon as they...
photos, no. Oh, she's sick.
Yeah, the wind could blow her away.
It's like Megan Traynor. She's no longer all about that base.
She's like this big.
Lizzo's lost the weight. Lizzo has lost the weight.
Yeah. I mean, Adele did it in the before times.
Yeah. You know, she did it through health and fitness.
Interestingly. Oh, she looks phenomenal.
She looks fantastic.
Interestingly, I wonder whether Adele's weight loss would be more or less accepted by her fans now. I don't know whether part of the reason that Adele's weight loss was seen as such an
objectionable middle finger to her fans that she did it with a
resource, with a fuel that is even less accessible to most people because she did it with discipline and hard work and willpower.
So I have this theory.
First off, that the introduction of Ozempic proved that body positivity was a scam. You look at the golden globes.
Everyone's like a fucking crypt keeper. These emaciated people that use.
Yeah, exactly. It was terrifying.
That was the first thing. Second thing was
in-shape people are more prejudiced against Ozempic use than fat people are.
So you could imagine in one world that somebody who is bigger in body would be
less supporting of Zempic because maybe it's like the erasure of their culture. Oh, yes.
People who are in it would be leaving. But I don't think that that's the case.
I think that it's people who are already in shape that have the greatest pushback because
in evolutionary psychology, there are cheap and costly signals. So a reliable signal that what you do show is what you actually mean to show and you can't fake it.
It's why a fake Rolex is a less reliable signal than a real Rolex or something that's harder to fake, like a Ferrari is a better signal than a Rolex because the Rolex, you can get counterfeit.
The Ferrari is really hard to get counterfeit. Or the big house, right? Or
so people who use Ozempic to go, anybody who loses weight now
might have done it with Ozempic. Might have done it naturally, but they might have done it with Ozempic.
And our first thought as a society is to say, oh, Ozempic. Exactly.
So that means the people who have had to use old school Adele fuel in order to get themselves into shape, it's like, well, I worked really hard to do this and you just got to get a prescription and now for whatever, 500 bucks a month, you're cheating and you're getting to do what I had to do the hard way.
I had to do it the hard way. So it's the people who are in shape.
And I'm aware that people who lose weight throw a Zempic don't end up in shape necessarily. You need to change your habits.
You need to do weight training a lot or else you're going to lose bone mass and muscle mass.
But
I think you can objectively say that someone going from 300 pounds to 180 pounds, like the 180 pounds, even if it's skinny fat and all the rest of it,
in clothes, you're like, wow, look at that transformation. How fantastic.
That means the people who are already in shape have their identity threatened more by the introduction of new people into their cohort than fat people do of people being taken out of their cohort.
But I have seen more outrage from the body positivity group. Okay.
And even pre
Ozempic really taking hold, it was like a sign of betrayal when one of them
made their life change. There is an influencer.
I'm forgetting her last name. Her name is Remy,
but she was
always overweight, a body positivity girl. Her, she blew up for doing like outfit try-ons.
Like, I'm going to try all these things for Abercrombie that are really trendy.
I'm going to try them on my body. And we're going to laugh.
And, you know, we're going to talk about how none of these, none of these companies make clothes for me. That's why she blew up.
She was in this relationship. had a heartbreaking breakup.
They were together for like seven years. She kind of went offline for a while.
She came back totally skinny, looked completely different.
Nikicado avocado did it. Yes.
Yeah.
The female Nicocado Avocado. Yeah.
A little less abrasive than that. She didn't have the pre-recorded videos or anything like that, but she definitely took a step back, didn't show as well.
She didn't talk about it at all, didn't address it. And the outrage was so.
insane.
It was like the quintessential like female hatred of just like the claws came out and that like passive aggressiveness. Like, oh, it's well, it's so great that you can do that.
Some of us and our larger bodies, we can't do that, whatever.
And it's like, is anybody, does anybody else feel so betrayed that she built this brand and we paid all of her bills and now she owns this home in the Hampton, you know, Hamptons and now she's skinny on our backs, on our body positivity, you know, backs, whatever it is.
I see more of that than
people who are in shape. But I do, as somebody who stays in shape, I understand that.
But the majority of the outrage that I've seen just on social media has been from the betrayal from the body positivity. Yeah, sure.
You're abandoning us and you capitalized on it.
That being said, it's really interesting. You used the word,
well, it's all right for you, dot, dot, dot.
And this is where I think
just
licking a finger and putting it in the air culturally, I think you're going to see more
people from the body positivity community not having that response
because anybody who has the desire to now get skinny
and is prepared to go through whatever risks are or are not there that are sort of real or imagined with regards to using weight loss drugs, they can access it.
And this is the point I was making about the Adele thing. I think
Adele may have got even more pushback because her transformation felt even more out of reach. Oh, absolutely.
Yes.
And I think we're, if in the scope of what you're saying, I think that we're going to quickly get to the point of now we have all the in-shape people who are worried about, you know, fat itch is a choice.
Yes. yes is a choice yeah exactly and i think we're in this transformation now because the remy story adele
even lizzo from earlier this year
i i'm sure that that will begin to change those are all stories from six months to a year and a half ago uh when it was a little less common and now everybody and their mother can go get a glp one shot the
hypocrisy thing of um you made this position and now you've reversed this position didn't
hasn't alex cooper come out recently in support of
support of something to do with relationships like you should be monogamous you shouldn't have casual sex did this not happen recently
yes she had something it was even like four days ago or five days ago where she did a
I should have watched it and prepped for this, but no, she, it was one of her sit-down, like straight to camera, talking to her daddy gang.
Um,
and it was talking about what to look for, I believe, in a partner and why,
I think, why her mind changed about being married and what to look for. Well, that, and she's already publicly changed her mind about, I mean, she changed her mind by getting married.
That was radical in and of itself. We talked about that the last time I was on.
And then she had a few months ago where she talked about wanting children and then she kind of took a step back because she didn't want to sacrifice her life.
It's like she's inching.
She's inching there. One step, one step at a time.
She does seem like she's moving in that way. Yeah.
But there always has to be the caveat, like for her audience of, I guess, I don't know if caveat is the right word, but disclaimer type thing. Yes.
Well, I'm not like that. I'm not telling you yet.
I'm not saying that. It's this land acknowledgement.
It's this social land acknowledgement that you need to do before. Look,
I think the last time that I was on, I did throw my toes out of the prime about the Alex Cooper thing. And I've had time to reflect on my behavior.
It must be very difficult. This is my diplomacy coming in.
It must be very difficult to
hold a position ardently. And maybe it was wrong at the time, or maybe you disagree with it, or maybe you're going to regret it later.
The ability to U-turn on that is really tough. And navigating that is hard because if you plant a flag in the ground really firmly, and for firmly, you could see that as a
euphemism for uh like ardent consistent and like vociferous like i'm militant about what i'm saying here and for years yes yes yes yes yes consistently uh
then going oh
i don't know if i believe that anymore yeah uh is really hard and one of the reasons that it's seductive is that people who have certainty online always sound like experts.
We confuse certainty for expertise. So if someone goes, like, this is what's true and we know it, and so on and so forth, everyone around is like, well, I have self-doubt about everything.
But this person that's saying that this is absolutely the way that you should live, the glug, glug 5,000, you should sleep with him and not catch feels, this is,
and you're like, okay.
And she's hot and she's successful. That must be the route to being hot and successful.
Everybody wants that. She doesn't seem to be getting her heart broken, all the rest of it.
And then life comes along as a young woman and delivers you.
The thing that you probably, in many ways, were looking for is like a hopeless romantic. Like you were obsessed with romance.
It was just a a particular flavor of it, and it was one that kept your heart safe.
And it was by never fully investing yourself. And then, some guy's come along, and congratulations for him.
He's taken a fucking pickaxe and like hacked away at this shell that you've created around yourself. And now you've cracked open, and now you're like, oh, fuck.
Yeah.
What I said isn't what I believe now. And everybody goes on these journeys and changes and trajectories.
The problem is how you navigate that. And I think like owning it and what that means, like identifying that you're wrong
is tough. It's tough to navigate.
So I'm, you know,
and I think it's taken her. She, I think, got married a year ago, a little more than a year ago, and so she feels like she's finally coming around.
And it's interesting because you can watch how her brand, how she, in my opinion, she's intentionally tried to shift her brand since being in a serious relationship and getting married, where she's created this unwell network.
So she still has Caller Daddy. It's now an interview show.
And they'll talk about sex and her, you know, guests, crazy sex lives, whatever whatever it may be, but it's less about her.
Well, hubby's not going to be too happy if you come on and start talking about your past sexual exploits. Yes.
Well, she still does, but it's, but it's more
rare and it's toned down. But now she's built this umbrella and she's brought other podcasters in to fill those gaps.
She has this girl, Haley, her name starts with the B.
Belcher, something like that, who now is the new like Alex Hooper crazy party girl. Like her first intro was like, here's a threesome that I had that I told my dad about.
Like all of this stuff.
Like it's so shock value insane. And it's not successful because people wanted Alex.
They wanted her. They fell in love with her and her relatability.
Yeah, they don't want this new other blonde chick that looks like her.
And I think that she's done a good job of pivoting into doing interviews. She obviously is very successful.
She has her huge Sirius XM deal. She's building an incredible empire.
But I think her audience has noticed.
that shift and she has like intentionally tried to fill that hole rather than just saying, hey, so I've changed my mind about a few things and I'm going to take you along with that.
It was very evident that when she got engaged, she was like, I've been so afraid to tell you.
I feel, again, I feel for her in that regard. No, me too.
Me too. And
the line between
you should have known this earlier, seen this earlier, and just hypocrisy or
like contrived,
not negligence, but like purposeful obfuscation. Like,
I get it. I get it.
It must be fucking rough to be like, oh shit, this like amazing guy has turned my worldview upside down. And I've got all of these people
hanging on my every word. And I've created this version of me that's incompatible.
And even the dating thing, like for the girls out there who kind of are from the Call Her Daddy
fan club,
that growth, because you tend to join someone at the stage of their journey that you're at as well, and you start to move with them.
they must look back at their journey too and see that tracking.
Also, I know that the people that listen to Modern Wisdom are like that, like these guys that were like hustle and grind set five years ago and have been listening since then.
And now they're like, I'm trying to connect with my emotions a little bit more. I really want to settle down and find a partner.
I'm starting to learn about fatherhoods.
Like, I care about my community. It's like, it's less about me.
It's more about pro-social stuff.
And if you still have this big expectation from an audience to show up in a way, and
again, for the girls that are listening, there is no quicker way for you to put yourself out of the camp of long-term viable prospect than to talk about your sexual exploits from the past. Yes.
It immediately puts you into a particular category of non-serious girl
because it takes a very particular type of guy to want that in his future partner.
And I think that was something that I was going to say as well is that it's unfortunate because Alex is now saying in a way, like, you know, maybe I was wrong about these things.
I've, you know, I'm taking my life in a different direction. I said I was never going to be married.
I am. But she isn't completely disavowing
the messages that she sent out to young women because if you look at her life, it worked. They were true at the time.
Yeah. And she did all those things.
She had her sexual exploits.
She talked about the glock 5000, whatever it is, you know, use men, spit them out, all of that stuff, you know, date like men, play the games. And she still got married.
Yeah. And she's rich.
She's successful, and she has an attractive husband. So she can do it.
Yeah. Well,
one in however many million can do it. Because that's a rare guy and she is a rare individual.
And so for her. Fascinating.
Yeah. This is just now the Alex Cooper show.
We just like to check in.
But I think she's a really important
tip of the spear of what's going on with young women. And
if nothing else, it should be pretty endemic of, well, someone that was kind of like
the canonical role model for the sleep with him and not catch feels like young party girl archetype goes through a transformation.
So given that that's where you're going to end up, on average, if you're, you know, the example, the superhero of that world,
can you shortcut it? Like, can you, can you get some like Brett Cooper into you at 23 as opposed to having to go through the full Alex Cooper arc?
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bottom wisdom. Have you heard Kelsey Ballerini's new song? No, what's that? Who's that? Okay, so Kelsey Ballarini,
she had her EP roll up the welcome Matt, country singer. She's from Tennessee.
She went through a divorce in 2022. I believe her husband was Morgan Evans.
They got married young.
They had a very, very public breakup and she wrote an EP about it that basically exploded her career. And she was always like a relatively okay, okay, well-known country singer.
Like I listened to her growing up, but she was nothing huge. This took her mainstream.
She wrote an incredibly raw EP about her divorce.
And in one song, I think it was Blind Side, Blind Spot, something like that, she talks about one of the reasons for their divorce was that he was ready to settle down and have kids.
He's seven years older than her and she wasn't. And she wanted to focus on her career.
And he had had a bit more of a successful career at the beginning of their marriage.
She was, you know, sort of catching up. She was not ready for that.
And they publicly talked about this she gave interviews she actually went on call her daddy and she said the children conversation was
it and they apparently went out to dinner and she told her then husband my 30th birthday present to myself and us is going to be i'm going to freeze my eggs because i know i'm not ready but i know you want to have kids and i'm going to freeze my eggs and her husband was like absolutely not like i want to have children now i am ready to settle down so they split up
she was 30 he was 37 i believe so yes or she was 29 about to turn 30 when they got divorced And it also seems like maybe they weren't super compatible.
There were other things there, but that was the crux. So now she's had this incredible success.
It has been this wild ride. She's dating the guy from Outer Banks.
They had this, like, you know, fairy tale love story. She's writing all these songs about him.
She's winning all of these awards.
She's very much in like the, she's just like exploded out of national country and now she is extremely mainstream.
She released a surprise single five days ago called I Sit in Parks.
And the entire story there is that she goes, what the song says, she goes and she sits in parks and she watches families have picnics and play with their kids, swinging on swings, and she's sitting there hitting her vape and saying, she literally talks about that and saying, I want that.
And is it too late? How old is she now? 33.
Wow. Is she still with the guy? This
banks guy? Yeah.
They almost, they broke up, but then they got back together. It was this whole thing.
They were taught in yeah so yeah tumultuous bullshit it's not the same as being in a relationship with a guy that you're gonna get married they were but it seemed but they were for like two and a half years and then they had a bit of a breakup now it seems like they might be back together but she released the song and she's saying i sit in parks and i wonder if this mom wants my freedom like i want to be a mother and i wonder if it's too late and she says rolling stone says that i'm on the right path but i wonder if i've you know, sacrificed my future.
And then at the end, she's kind of like, oh, well, this is the life that I've created for myself. And she goes, my friend is due in March.
My album's due in April. So I'll go refill my Lexapro
and I'll get back to work.
And it is so incredibly raw, but it's the timeline of that, that she was divorced only three years ago because she wasn't ready to have kids.
She had this mountain of success, everything that she wanted. And now she's sitting here and going,
shit. Like, did I, did I wait too long? And I'm guessing that she wrote this when she and the boyfriend were on a break, whatever it was.
But the women who are relating to that, if you look on social media, the success of the song, I mean, the comments are heartbreaking.
It's all these women going, I don't know if I made the right decision. I thought I did all the right things.
I focus on my career. I've emphasized, you know, that I haven't found.
Relevance, financial security. Yep.
Look, I mean, it's kind of trite to say it because it's been, I've talked about it so much, so have you.
But I do think we're getting into a slight new era now, which is
asking the question,
is there a way to shortcut the unteachable lesson of financial independence will not give you the sense of belonging that you want as a young woman?
And I understand that it feels very safe and secure rather than having yourself be a financial prisoner of some guy.
I mean, women out earn men up to the age of like 30 or 31 still at the moment by a couple of grand a year. So I think that's really an issue, at least to that point.
That's something they're concocting up in their minds. To a degree, yeah.
Or that you wouldn't be able to go back to work, you wouldn't be able to go back to your career. I think that that paternity problem, maternity leave, I get it.
All of all of those issues.
But asking yourself the question: like,
is it actually
worth it to avoid the very thing
that most women have been working towards? Like, what's the financial independence for just to like Chelsea handle your way through the rest of life? I don't think that that's the case.
It's an F you to men. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm going to
need you. Well, it's assuring your failure privately to be able to stick the middle finger up at men publicly.
Yeah, I don't need you. And I will be a miserable
flag bearer for this movement. But it's just, it's a really unpopular perspective to take.
So the fact that the comments was sort of with other women who had done the same thing, but
it's kind of the same as
being body positive. It's toxic empathy.
Yes.
The optics of this argument are much more sexy than the reality of it, right? The optics of the argument are
you don't need a man. You are enough as you are already.
You don't need to wait to be chosen by him. In fact, you don't need to be chosen at all.
You and your friends and your girlies and your vibrator are enough to get you through the next however many decades of your life.
And maybe he'll come along, but if he doesn't, you don't need to worry.
And like that is a really supportive and caring message if you take it without the sort of militant anti-men perspective on it, which is
you are enough as you are. And wouldn't that be a wonderful place to get into a relationship from as opposed to one from desperation? You're sharing it with somebody.
Yeah, and also that you don't make the sort of decision out of desperation. Like, I'm going to pick this person because I want a person, not because I want that person.
Yeah.
Understood. That doesn't tend to be the way that it's delivered.
I saw this. I went onto the child-free subreddit.
That's a dark place. When Taylor Swift got engaged.
Meltdown.
They were not happy. And there was some, I was like real impressed with most of the balance on there.
There was some insane ones.
One of the most insane ones was basically like, I can't believe that she would get into a relationship with that monster, that animal, like referring, because it made me the way that he presents or what they think about his politics or whatever it might be.
But yeah, people, in the same way as Adele's weight loss was a threat to the body positivity community, Taylor Swift's engagement was a threat to the child-free community. Oh, it absolutely was.
And the fact that now all these things are coming out saying, oh, they're going to get married relatively quickly. Allegedly, they want to start a family.
That's really important.
But I also think, and this is something that was so funny to me, is
I talked about this, obviously, and I was, you know, reading those same comments and the same posts, and they were outlandish and absurd. But
if you look at Taylor Swift's discography, you look at her music, everything she's written,
she always wanted. She's a romantic.
She is. Like, that's the thing.
And they were like, she's betrayed us. I'm like, I don't think she has.
She's people mocked her for years because she went from boyfriend to boyfriend, but she wasn't in, she didn't have any flings.
Like, she was wholeheartedly in love with these guys, writing these songs. I'm going to marry you.
I'd marry you with paper rings. I'm still thinking about you all these years later.
That's what she wants. It's like, have you not actually been listening to her music?
Have you just liked the fact that she, I think that's what it comes down to, is have you liked the fact that she has been so unlucky in love and it has made you feel better about your situation and that has validated your choice?
And now you have to face the music, literally,
that she's happy and she's finally gotten what she wants.
And I think another thing that weaves into this conversation about women is something that I do think that has been harmful coming from more of the right wing is this like women hit a wall conversation.
Obviously, there is a biological clock that you have to consider, but saying that a woman at 30 years old has peaked, has no future, no prospects, can never have any children anymore.
I think that's such a harmful thing to tell young women, especially if you're having, if you have a woman who's come up in the era of, you know, the child-free type folks, of the Alex Coopers, who then is having her mind changed and is looking for something.
And what she's hearing from so many prominent men, male voices, I think they're less prominent now,
is that you're too old. You've hit a wall.
You're ugly. Nobody will ever want you.
You've screwed up your entire life. It's like, that's not the way to address that.
And I think Taylor Swift was kind kind of a middle finger to that movement as well because she's 33 years old or one of the most eligible bachelors in America. Yeah.
And she's happy and it worked.
And I look at, you know, Kelsey Ballerini and I understand, you know, at 33 years old, she's going, oh, this is, you know, I don't have much time left, but 10 years, obviously don't waste those, but it's not like you're 50.
It's, I don't know. Well, I think you should be, I think you should be cautious about the 10 years thing.
Yeah. I think I guess with fertility treatments are great, but even they are not, magic.
I think it comes from personal. My mom had me at 42.
Yes. So it's like
my mom had me relatively late as well.
But fertility is on a decline. Correct.
I get the sense that,
and this is
my least impressive strategy to fix the birth rate. I think that Taylor Swift will have a non-zero impact on the West's birth rate.
Okay. I think when she has,
if she has kids, I think that that causes a cascade of sufficient size that there will be a noticeable bump.
If you were to look at the sort of demographics of that, I think the sort of two, three, four years after that, I think you are going to see a tick in that.
Well, and culture is shifting. I mean, you have, you know, her, you have Kelsey Ballerini.
Millie Bobby Brown got married very young to Jake Bon Jovi, and they just adopted a baby less than a year after getting married.
And she's very open about, you know, this is everything she's ever wanted. She's incredibly happy.
She's
protecting this baby girl's privacy.
Timothy Chalamay very recently was saying that he feels, what was he? It was like, he feels like it's,
I'm trying to remember the exact word he used, but basically he was saying that it is very depressing when people talk about not wanting children.
And he's surrounded by a lot of people who do have children and are starting families. And he thinks that's really wonderful.
And he was essentially saying, I think it's a marker of a very sad society if we are now saying that it's empowering to state that you're not going to have children and that you don't care.
So we're seeing these shifts. And I think that's one thing where I think conservatives are better at this now, but where they've said, you know, ignore pop culture.
We're not going to be involved in that. It's like, no, they,
these people do influence culture. They influence society.
They influence the attitudes, especially of young women who are far more emotional and who lean on these figures.
That's just an objective fact.
Who are more
emotionally swayed?
Those are important changes. And I think those are worth celebrating and looking into.
So I've had some people when I've done episodes about that or talked about it, they say, like, Brett, it doesn't matter. I'm like, no, it does matter.
Well, I think this is where country music, speaking of which we're in Nashville, there's a Dylan Scott song, Can't Have Mine,
Find You a Girl, Find You a Girl That Lives You Speech, Gets Wild on the Town, but still loves Jesus.
One that's worth the wait, even when she ain't on time, find you a girl that loves her daddy and talking about babies makes her happy. Yeah, take it from me, that's the kind you need to find.
You just can't have mine. It's like, I think country music is sort of still, you know, like holding the the fault for
the, the pro family stuff. But
I'm interested since the last time that we spoke, your mom? Yes. How's that changed you?
Oh, it's amazing.
The first thing that comes to mind is that I give less of a fuck about things now. I think it radicalizes you in a way because
so many other things in life seem less meaningful because you have this incredible life that you've created,
and it truly, and I, I would hear people say this after they have kids, and I'd go, Okay, I mean, I understand it, but
really, when you've created this life and when this baby comes out of you and is, you know, placed on your chest, granted, I didn't have this feeling the moment that he was put on my chest.
I was like in shock, but when you bring your baby home and you are settling in and you look at this life that you've created, it's like this is the only thing that matters.
And for me, that has not transpired in a, I am only going to be at home and I'm going to focus on you 100% of the time.
I think it's fueled into a lot of my work and the things that I've talked about because it's like, okay, well, now I have this child and I want to make this world as incredible as possible for him.
I want him to grow up in a world where he can debate ideas and where free speech is celebrated.
I want him to grow up in a world where he can start a family and own a home and be financially empowered.
I want him to have a great girl to fall in love with and marry. I want all of those things.
So, what can I do to try to make that happen with a platform that I have?
And so, I think it's given me a fire under my ass in that regard.
I think it's softened me even more so than getting married has. Did you find yourself having masculine traits, more masculine traits than a typical woman? Yes.
Okay.
I've always been very tomboyish and very
like, I can do this myself. I don't need you.
And which broke that more, the
marriage.
Yeah, marriage. Marriage was the
that was the breaking the dam. Right.
Yeah. And then
you become so vulnerable postpartum when you have, you know, this child and your hormones are just completely out of whack. Those first two weeks are so hard.
At least they work for me.
And you just feel broken open. You literally have been broken open.
And you have this life that you're trying your hardest to protect. Like I just want to keep you alive.
And
you have to rely on other people. You can't do it all yourself.
I think that's why it's so damaging.
This has been going on for decades at this point, telling women that you can have it all at the same time. You can have the best career and the best sex life and the best marriage.
And you can be the mother and you can travel and you can do all of the things all at once. That's the feminist messaging that started in the 80s.
That's such a lie. You can have a lot.
You can have most things in life. You can't have them all at once.
It's about priorities. And you do have to make sacrifices.
You have to lean on other people.
You have to admit you can't give 150% to everything at once.
And I knew that, but then actually being in the throes of that was eye-opening. And I think there's a lot of humility and surrendering.
And
mo, it's been wonderful. It's hard, but it's incredible.
And I think I'm having more fun than I've ever had.
Like, it's, it's so incredible. Like, you have this silly little baby who just like babbles at you and laughs at you and is following everything that you do and is tracking you every single day.
There's something new that they're doing.
It's like he started like cooing now and he's trying to like mimic the things that we say and he'll, you know, grab onto Alex's finger and we're like, oh my God, take a picture. This is so incredible.
It just puts so many things into perspective. It was everything that I hoped it would be.
I wonder how much of what we're seeing with
purposelessness,
the
chasing of
random, some may say sort of seemingly seemingly pointless hobbies and business pursuits and hustle and grind mindset and all the rest of it. Is that
child-rearing energy just being directed
to something where there is no child around to be able to do it?
I certainly, I think that's one of the things that people see when somebody's got, you know, kids and maybe grandkids too, but are still
playing the
high school status game
thing,
chasing the next business deal, like really, really aggressively, not just because they want to build a better business, but because it like sort of fills their soul. And you go, are you
you scored a goal and didn't realize that you'd won the game? Yeah. Like you, you're looking past the thing that was the reason.
for doing this stuff and you're still doing this stuff.
Like you've run past the goal post and you just haven't stopped.
And there's something particularly like it feels sad to see someone who basically got one-shotted in high school into playing the same status games for the rest of their life and didn't realize that you were already outside of them because the person that's 10 feet above you in the next bedroom,
they don't care. They think that you're a superhero.
Yeah. Says the guy that's unmarried without kids at the moment.
Have you heard of laying in? Do you know what this is from medieval times? Is that
like the 40 days postpartum? Yes. Yeah, it made me think about that.
In medieval times, laying in was a 40-day postpartum confinement period
where a mother rested in a special room surrounded by women while her husband and male family members were excluded.
This period was crucial for recovery and was followed by a churching ceremony, which marked the mother's reintegration into public life. And
the
like frankly fucking barbaric maternity leave
in America. It's like nine months in the UK, end to end, which is still not enough, but is a a little bit better.
At least you can get your fucking lying in period, laying in period. Sorted.
But it made me think about, you said that, you know, the two weeks after, I'm like, yeah,
I'm as useless as he is. Yes.
Physically, emotionally, you don't even know. I mean, I felt like I was in a daze.
It's kind of good. I think biologically, you kind of forget it.
Like the further away from it, I get.
I'm like, oh, it's, it was fine. But in the middle of it, like, I genuinely, I haven't actually said this, but
in the first few days after he was born, I wondered whether we had made the right decision in having a baby at that moment. What was the emotion that you were feeling? Just
being so overwhelmed, being in pain and uncomfortable and being like, I couldn't,
you know, you, your baby just wants to be fed, wants to be held, needs to poop, needs to sleep. But it's, you know, they can't communicate.
So it's trying, it's like, okay, I'm going to try all these different things. Like, what do you need? And it was, it was after a very particularly like frustrating afternoon.
And I was in pain.
I was in gorge. I was uncomfortable.
I was standing in the shower. And
that was like your one place of peace. I was like, Alex, okay, I'm going to go and give you 30 minutes and hopefully he doesn't cry and need me.
Because I wasn't pumping. So literally, he just required everything.
And I was standing in the shower. And I was like, I have never felt so overstimulated and overtouched and exhausted.
That was something I didn't expect. Where it was.
Especially given that you've already had the chaotic life business lady. Yeah, that is culture war on stage, rah, rah, rah.
Yeah.
That just being, and I expected, I almost felt guilty because I was like, I've always wanted this and I want this baby to want me and I want to hold him and be with him.
But after five days of basically having 30 minutes of not touching him or not having somebody touch me, it was like, can I just go sit at a coffee shop for like an hour and just drink a matcha and decompress for a second?
So that was surprising to me, but thankfully it didn't last. I think that's a cool lesson.
Just to interject there, I think it's a cool lesson to hear that you cannot like your baby for half an hour in the shower. You can be like, dude, you fucking suck today.
I still love you. I don't love you any less, but
I don't like you right now. And you've been a lot today, okay? You've been a lot.
And it's hard because I think in a really great, beautiful way, and I understand the reason for this, you know, some people, especially more traditional, conservative right, will say it is this magical thing.
Breastfeeding is so magical, all these things, and it is, and it's wonderful, and it's remarkable.
But when you are in the throes of it, sometimes you're like, this is like my body's going through a lot. Denies the reality.
It denies the reality of discomfort. Yes.
And discomfort is.
Part of what makes it so incredible is because you are sacrificing and because you're doing something that's so incredibly hard for the benefit of this tiny human that can't live without you.
But to just say that it's all rainbows and sunshine and that it's going to immediately or immediately going to be insane and it's immediately going to be so wonderful.
That was just more of a shock to my system. I mean, even like right when he came out, there's a photo of Alex and I, as he was like placed on my chest.
We're looking at him and it's kind of like in horror because, you know, their heads come out and they're kind of in a cone shape. He's all blue.
Cause he had like, I have struggled at the end there. Both of us are like, oh my God.
Like, it was just like, oh, he's here. Like, this is crazy.
And it was not the like really romantic, like, oh, this is wonderful.
But no, the sacrifices and the hardships are, I think, actually what gets me through those harder moments because you know that it's worthwhile.
You know, you're doing something that is, you know, in pursuit of, you know, you're molding a human being. I feel like there isn't anything that is
more valuable than that. Well, I can extol the virtues of VO2 max training all I want.
During the middle of a workout, nobody wants to be done. No.
Nobody is enjoying it. And the fact that nobody is enjoying it is exactly what makes it meaningful.
You realize that there are very few things that are worthwhile having or that are meaningful that aren't hard to get.
If it was super easy and seamless to raise the child, that would be wonderful and beautiful and convenient.
But there would be less meaning in it because the meaning is derived from the struggle. Yes.
This great idea from Freud. He says, in retrospect, the struggle will strike you as most beautiful.
And that is where the meaning comes from, because if it was easy, you would have to put less of yourself into it, right? Because you would be distracted.
Well, you know, I'll just answer a few emails over here. It's like, no, no, no, no, no.
23.5 hours of this day is completely dedicated. Yeah, all I do is like, do not die.
Like,
for fuck's sake, do not die. I've worked so hard.
Yep.
And going back to the maternity leave issue, you know, some people in America will get, you know, 30 days, three months. We're coming up on three months.
And I'm in a very unique position where
my studio where I film is five minutes from my house. I drive the four-wheeler over there and I go shoot.
I'm like filming on my phone right now. I don't even have a producer.
Yeah, I've been watching. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And because I'm just doing it myself, because I wanted to be able to be on his schedule and I'm very, very fortunate to be able to do that.
That is not the case for most women. And I'm very aware of that.
And so I would not have been able if I was.
still working for a company where I'm on somebody else's schedule, that wouldn't, I would not be able to be doing this.
And I did, but the 40-day lion, I did, I guess it's probably the Americanized version of it because they know
I did the, yeah, the race, but no, it's the 555. So it's five days in bed.
You're fully in bed in the covers, five days on your bed. So you're really not leaving.
Like you only get up to like go to the bathroom, grab some food. Okay.
You're not lifting every, anything. You're not doing anything.
Okay.
And then five days near your bed. So you're not really going out into being able to do that.
How do you feel
for the
hyper-independent driven boss ladies?
How
and I'm aware that you were able to go back to work more quickly or whatever, but those 15 days, that's a big change. Oh, yeah.
Right.
What was the
internal
hungry ghost drive for
extremely hard?
Talk to me about that. That need for productivity pregnancy and post-pregnancy.
Yes, especially because I've been so productive throughout my entire pregnancy. I found out I was pregnant
four
days after it was announced that I was living Daily Wire.
So then my entire pregnancy was starting a business,
building a show, hire people, figure out how to hire people, figure out how to assemble a business, find advertisers, do an entire tour, pitch different things, get all of these projects under my belt so that then I could have this baby.
And we're going to do all of this in like the nine and a half months that we have. So it was a sprint.
And so to go up against that wall and then again, have to completely surrender and be so vulnerable, it was very hard. I remember my mom talking to me
very delicately before I gave birth. And she was really the one who pushed me to do that.
And I didn't, I probably could have done it better. I could have stayed in bed more.
But I think I did a pretty good job for me.
And she was like, this is probably going to be one of of the hardest things that you do.
It might even be harder than you actually delivering the baby is that you have to just give your time, yourself time to rest because the wound when your uterus contracts and when you deliver your placenta, it's like this big.
You just have a gaping wound in your stomach.
And you need time to heal and you need to not be pushing your body. And she sat me down and was like, you need to do this for yourself because you have so many things that you need to do.
Afterwards, you have this huge life and you have commitments that you've made and you are not going to be able to function at the level that you want to function at and be the wife that you want to be, and the mom, and keep working if you do not give yourself time to actually heal.
And so, I was very grateful that she had that conversation, but it was really hard. I'm just not used to that.
I'm so go, go, go, go, go.
And
the thing is, I did do a little bit of work, which was not intended, but Charlie was assassinated four days after our baby was born. And
I mean, that was just horrifying in in and of itself, but to be so emotionally and hormonally fraught already, it was just like, I don't even know how to, it's all just a blur at this point.
But I got up and I did two episodes about it. Granted, I went upstairs to our guest bedroom and sat in front of a window and didn't have a script or do anything.
And I just talked and then immediately went back downstairs. And I was away from him for about 10 minutes in total.
But I did, I guess, emotional and intellectual labor in that regard. But no, it was very, it was hard.
And I can't imagine.
I mean, I have friends that
have had babies around the same time that I have and the sacrifices that they're making, the decisions that they're making about their careers and whether they're going to go back to work and how they're going to go back to work and what daycare looks like and weaning and breastfeeding.
It is
very, very difficult. But I think people,
again, especially on the right,
in more of a,
in an effort to just say, you know, we need to fix the birth rate. Everybody should have babies.
It's so incredible. It's so wonderful.
I think they focus on just like, have the baby, do it, do it, do it, do it, without really getting into the logistics of what that looks like for most women. Most women work in America.
Most women need to work in America or want to work, which is great.
The majority of women, even if you argue that it would be better if they were completely at home and didn't work, they are going to be working. They definitely choice.
And so what is that going?
Or they want to, which is totally valid. What is that going to look like for them? And what kind of support do we have for them?
That's something that actually I think JD can do a great job at if he runs, is that he's a bit more populist in that regard and he's very pro-family. And
even though I lean more in the direction of I kind of want the government hands off, let the free market decide, I do think it's like, what can we do for families if we're saying we need to increase the birth rate, if we want people to get married and live happy lives and have children and raise good, productive members of society, what can we do to support that rather than just saying, just quit your job.
Everything's great. Just have they've figured it out.
Because it is hard. And I don't, again, I don't know what the right solution is for that.
So many countries have tried different things of, you know, we're going to give you a little bit of money here. Tax break.
You know, that none of them have been supremely successful.
Possibly because it does come back to cultural attitudes.
In a way, that's why we need Taylor Swift.
Exactly. There was this really cool example.
The country of Georgia,
I think, is highly Christian. And there is this pastor there who is like the rock star, rock star pastor.
Everybody loves him, adores him.
And they had a cultural intervention for their birth rate, which worked. And what he said was, I will personally baptize the third child of any family.
And then there was literally this speedrun race for all families to have.
Another interesting one, you were talking earlier on about
young people who do everything that the government told them that they should do and that their elders told them they should do and have now arrived in this world and gone, oh, fuck.
Like the future that I was promised hasn't come to pass. This is one of the explanations that I've heard, which is really interesting for why South Korea's birth rate is so low.
So what they had was they allowed women to get into education without some of the constraints and ceilings that had been placed on them
like
authoritatively, authoritarianly and culturally. So they put girls into the classroom and
as I think it's pretty uncontroversial to say now, girls perform better in the current education model.
More conscientious, better at sitting still, less disruptive, rah, rah, rah, like highlighter girls, like very, very good, well done.
And what that meant was
from being constrained to being fully enabled, they just blew past a lot of the boys.
The employment world had not had the same cultural revolution that the education world had. So these young girls gone through the education system, maybe into higher education.
and then came out the other side to still find the same discrimination in employment.
And that was where the four B's movement, at least, has been contributed to which is like four different words in korean which are like no men no this no babies no something else no no men no sex no babies no marriage whatever it is yeah yeah uh and shaving their heads hardcore feminism but for south korea and uh
that is this promise that has been made uh that is not delivered and i think the indignation that people feel of
fuck like i i i did what you said like i did what you said i followed the rules and someone came and screwed me over You just need to look at South Korea the the women in South Korea that are a part of that movement and and tangential you know, that's kind of militant but like even the
light version of the mild version of that
and one of the interventions that's super interesting
K-pop. So
K-pop stars, when they join the groups, one of the agreements that they make is that they will not date. And obviously as a byproduct of that, they cannot get pregnant.
They can't have
a family. So you have the biggest cultural export from one country and also obviously the biggest cultural influence inside of a country never being pro-family ever.
And well, what does that mean?
It creates, it would be like if Taylor Swift made her
signed away her contract at the beginning of her music career saying that she's never and also none of the songs are around having families. None of the songs are around heartbreak.
So an obvious cultural intervention for South Korea to fix the birth rate is allow women to get what they want.
I mean, you should do that in any case, regardless of whether or not it's got to do with the birth rate. But then also say, if you want to be a K-pop star, you have to have had one child.
The only way that you can become a K-pop star is to do that. Interesting.
And that's my
campaign for South Korea to turn them into Georgia without a pastor. Excellent.
That's my plan. And we have Taylor Swift.
Yeah, we do. Fingers crossed.
What's next? What's next for you? Oh, gosh.
Try to be a good mom was the number one thing. Keep him alive.
And
I think keep my show going. I love what I'm doing.
I've never had more fun with my work.
And
it took a while to get there. The last year was really hard.
Felt really long.
Took a long time to get to being able to be independent and start my own thing. And then it also
Think took a lot of stumbling around to figure out what did I actually want to do independently and what was going to work, what was going to make me happy. I think I
rejected initially a lot of what I had been doing because I was like, no, I'm going to walk away from this. I'm not going to do this type of show.
I want to do something completely different because I was unhappy. But was I unhappy with the work I was doing or was I unhappy in the situation? It just took a while.
to figure out.
And I feel like I stumbled around a bit. And so I'm really grateful that I have such a wonderful community and audience who stuck with me and enjoyed the room.
I did. Yeah.
And we tried basically every single thing under the sun.
And I feel really, really at peace and
flexible and like I have a lot of autonomy and I'm having a ton of fun being a mom. I'm having a ton of fun with the work that I'm doing.
I feel like it's meaningful and I'm enjoying it.
I've loved doing live shows. It was my first time doing it this spring.
I know you're on your tour right now. That was like undescribable.
Sick, isn't it? Yeah. It's incredible.
What does your live show look like? What's it consist of?
It is like a live version of my show, but many topics other than just being one thing that I'm talking about.
I go up on stage and I just riff on things going on in the world and some of my favorite people to talk about.
I didn't really know what it was going to be like. I was just like, let's do a tour.
I'm just going to go on stage. I'm going to talk.
But it ended up becoming more like stand-up.
And I feel very insecure saying that
because that is like, oh,
it's comic. I'm like, no, no, I don't think so.
But that is sort of the format of what it's become. And it's the exact, it's very similar to mine.
I think Justin agrees. Yes.
Yeah,
he agrees about
what we're both doing. Yeah, it's a weird one that pivots.
Look, I understand.
I feel like I need to make this disclaimer anytime that I say it.
Some of the things that I say on stage may make some people laugh, but I must,
I feel like another land acknowledgement is important. This is not stand-up.
I'm aware that that is a protected term.
And if you encroach on the comedian's hallowed ground of the word stand-up, because unless you've done seven years of slumming it in gigs and all the rest of it, people don't like the idea of anyone jumping to the front of a queue.
Yeah, of course. And I wouldn't want, I'm like, I don't feel like I'm doing that.
No.
But
if something that you say makes someone laugh. You're having fun.
You're talking to your audience. And no, it's really special.
I don't know how you feel about it, but
when you've spent,
so I was, I've been on YouTube now three or four years. And when you've spent those years looking at numbers and seeing like, oh, okay, this many people watch this.
And, you know, oh, I had 4 million subscribers at this point.
And you have all of these, you know, numbers, but actually seeing people in person and putting faces to numbers is what I like to say and doing like the meet and greets at the end. It's crazy.
It's like undescribable. And it's, it's like very gratifying too when I meet the people that come to the shows and engage with my content.
I'm like, you're all great people. Like, this is really cool.
I would happily go for a coffee with most of my audience, which is something that I know most creators can't say, which is pretty cool.
But I think the meta lesson to take away from that for anybody that's trying to do anything, build a business, let's say that you, I don't know, you have a vintage clothing store and it's online and you're sourcing all of these great pieces and you're selling them on Depop or you're doing whatever on eBay.
But you never see
people in your clothes. You don't see how it gives them more confidence, or how fucking cool they look, or all the compliments they get.
And even if you do, it's this disembodied fucking email, a 2D image or whatever.
But if you were to do an in-person meetup where you would bring like this month's haul and all of these people would be able to come and it would be your super fans or you're a PT, an online coach or whatever, doing an in-person event, I think for me, the reason that I now understand why musicians and comedians have such an obsession with tour is that the feedback mechanism is so tight.
Like this episode might go out in like four weeks time. And then so the feedback period is fucking a lifetime eon away.
And then when it goes out, loads of people that see it don't react to it.
And of the people who react to it, they do it through comments. And then it's only if you look at the, it's like so
the bandwidth is, yeah, it's so minute. Whereas you go on stage and you make a joke about a train and like that, immediately a thousand people get to
you hear the noise or do something or you tell a story that hopefully is real engaging and it's fucking just silent and everyone's paying attention and you think, oh, this is really cool.
So I understand why and I think the sort of lesson I've taken away from tour, at least this tour, is
trying to inject that real world stuff into
things that you do where you think, I love what I do, but I feel like I need a bit more motivation for it. If you try and find a way to take that AFK, the sort of touchgrass equivalent of that,
touch of the people, but legally, that would be, I think,
a good way to do it. You can do more, more tour? Yes.
Yeah, next year, I'm excited. Sick.
All right. Yeah.
Brett Cooper, ladies and gentlemen, Brett, I really appreciate you. You're awesome.
Thanks for having me.
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