Human-Kind or Human Evil with Rutger Bregman [VIDEO]
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Speaker 2 So, I've got a toddler of three years old, and if my toddler would compete with a pig, with quite a few tasks where intelligence is being measured, you know, the toddler would actually lose.
Speaker 2
I'd watch that, by the way. Great TV.
That's great.
Speaker 5 I was just like, that's great TV. We need to make that a show.
Speaker 6 How do we look at Japanese
Speaker 2 show like the toddler and the toddlers and the toddler? Which one shops better? I'm actually in for the show.
Speaker 5 Yeah, we're gonna make this show. Toddler versus Pig.
Speaker 5 This is What Now
Speaker 5 with Trevor Noah.
Speaker 5 Rutger, welcome to the podcast.
Speaker 5 I was thinking about
Speaker 5 having you on, and I was like,
Speaker 5 Do you get invited back anyway? This is the thing I found myself asking.
Speaker 2 You invited me back, Trevor.
Speaker 5 Well, I mean, yeah, but I don't think you've ever said anything against me.
Speaker 5 And I was was just thinking, you're the guy who went to Davos and told all the billionaires who were there, like literally everyone, you sat there and you basically said, you guys are a bunch of hypocrites.
Speaker 5 I'm paraphrasing, obviously, but what I think they heard was, you guys are hypocrites, you are not paying your fair share and you're acting high and mighty when, you know, avoiding the elephants in the room.
Speaker 5 You went to TED and you told everyone there they should be giving away their money.
Speaker 5 And everyone in the room's like the 1% and like, you know, poor people are actually right and like the rich people are wrong for the way they're doing it.
Speaker 5 So I really wondered, like, do you get invited back to places?
Speaker 2 Like, has, has,
Speaker 5 how did, like, did Davos ever invite you back? Did Ted, like, where, where do you find that you have the best recidivism rates?
Speaker 2 Well,
Speaker 2 no, I didn't, I didn't get another invitation to go to Davos.
Speaker 2 It was something I said, I guess. Tucker Carlson, I also never heard from him again when I was in this show.
Speaker 2 But apart from that, you know, yeah, people invite me back.
Speaker 5
Wait, but okay, help me out with the Tucker one. I thought that you and him would have been on the same page for what he's been saying.
Where was the big divergence?
Speaker 2 Well, I mean, this was just after I had gone to Davos, and indeed I had said some nasty things about billionaires and their massive tax avoidance and their massive tax evasion.
Speaker 2 And then, you know, how they keep whining about their philanthropy.
Speaker 2
Well, maybe, you know, just start with paying your fair share in taxes. Right.
So then Tucker...
Speaker 2 Carlson invited me on his show because apparently he liked it that I had, you know, stuck it to the globalist
Speaker 2 or something like that. And I was like, well, you know,
Speaker 2
you're also the elite. You know, you're part of the problem.
Like you're, what is it? A millionaire funded by billionaires. So
Speaker 2 I like that. Love it.
Speaker 6 Where's your cut-up point? Like, what's the income where you won't throw shade? I'm very curious about that. What's the number?
Speaker 2
That's a good question. Depends on where you live, I guess.
I mean,
Speaker 2 I just moved to New York and it feels like you need to be a multi-millionaire even to raise kids here.
Speaker 6 Yes, you do.
Speaker 2 I guess that depends. But it's it's easy to forget how wealthy people are
Speaker 2 when they live in rich countries. So where I'm from, the Netherlands, if you have just a median income, which is about, what is it, 35,000 euros annually? So what is that? $40,000 or something?
Speaker 2 You're part of the richest 3.5% in the world. So
Speaker 2 remember Occupy Wall Street, where people were saying we are the 99% and they are the 1%?
Speaker 2 Well, actually, from a global perspective, very often the people who say that stuff on TikTok or Instagram,
Speaker 2 they're actually part of the top 5%.
Speaker 2 But you know,
Speaker 6 I completely agree because I'm from England. And, you know, well, whenever I go home, I'm like, this country is so poor.
Speaker 6 And I'm going to say that because American could skew your perception of what money is, right? Because there's just so much money here. Everything is so expensive.
Speaker 6 There was a piece in the New York Times recently about how they are giving financial aid to families that make $800,000 a year to attend private school. Because
Speaker 2 even though they have $800,000
Speaker 6 a year, they cannot afford to send their kids to these private schools, which cost about $70,000 a year. And if you have two, three kids, do the numbers.
Speaker 6 And that's kind of the class that does pay taxes.
Speaker 6 And sometimes it's just, you live in a place where even though
Speaker 6 in the abstract, you know, you're like among the wealthiest in the world, you're like, how am I going to pay for gas? How am I going to pay for my accommodation?
Speaker 6 How am I going to give my kids a better life? So you can be rich here and feel really poor.
Speaker 5 Well, actually, then maybe
Speaker 5 that's a good place to sort of jump into. Like when we talk about people being in a 1% and in a 99% and et cetera, et cetera, is it fair to do that to people when they're not living in the globe?
Speaker 5 And I mean this because I sometimes think about like how people see their lives. You know, politicians will always talk to people and say,
Speaker 5
your lives are better than ever. The mortality rate is lower than, and someone's like, yeah, I'm broke.
I'm poor. You know, someone will be like, oh, white privilege.
Speaker 5 And then there's a white guy working in like the Appalachian mountains somewhere vibes and he's going where's my white privilege like I want this white privilege you're telling me about and then you have to get academic and explain it to him if you were black your situation would be way worse what are we actually trying to do when we tell people that they're in the one percent are we trying to get them to give more or are we trying to get them to feel guilty about having more so i do think it's valuable of people you know who are really privileged who went to a fancy Ivy League university or something like that, that they really realize that they are very privileged.
Speaker 2 Maybe you guys remember from 2016 when Trump was first elected, we had this big round of soul searching in the United States and elsewhere as well, all about how is this possible.
Speaker 2 And we were trying to get into the minds of the Trump voters, or in Germany, into the minds of the AFD voters, or in the Netherlands,
Speaker 2 into the minds of the Geert Wilders voters.
Speaker 2 And you know what? Now that Trump has been elected again, I think, can we please not do that again? You know, so not another round of soul searching and looking inward and like, oh,
Speaker 2 all these calls for more empathy and compassion. Well, maybe it starts with actually practicing what you preach.
Speaker 2 I think that the big betrayal of educated elites in this country and elsewhere has not been a lack of empathy, but a lack of actually contributing. to making this world a better place, right?
Speaker 2 You've got so many of these Ivy League graduates, like Harvard, 45% of Harvard graduates go into consultancy and finance. What do they do for a living? Do they really
Speaker 2 contribute to society? Well, you can ask them,
Speaker 2 and quite a few polls find out that they're often very likely to consider their own job socially useless. So I really consider that the big betrayal,
Speaker 2 that kind of hypocrisy, where people claim the moral high ground but don't actually live up to it.
Speaker 5 But let's talk about this through the lens of different countries. I actually love the fact that all three of us come from a place where we're all experiencing the world slightly differently.
Speaker 5 and obviously we all now live in the us
Speaker 5 but we've all seen the idea of poverty and the idea of suffering expressed and maybe even experienced differently you know so when i think of the netherlands i think of a place where things are going well you know every time i'm in the netherlands i'm just like wow your roads are great and the everything seems to be working and things are good but then i see people voting the same way that let's say what a quote-unquote typical Trump supporter would vote like in the US.
Speaker 5
And they and they're saying the same things. Oh, you know, our lives are getting worse.
Things are getting worse. I go to the UK.
Now, the UK doesn't seem as up-to-date as, let's say, the Netherlands.
Speaker 5 You know, London might be great. But as soon as you get a little bit out, even when I went to Brixton, I was like, okay,
Speaker 5 no, no, no, it's true.
Speaker 2 It's true.
Speaker 5 Yeah, but there's like a part of Brixton that's super nice. Oh, yeah.
Speaker 6 And then you cross, you go past it.
Speaker 2 You're like, what's going on here?
Speaker 5 Exactly. There's always one station.
Speaker 5 But even then, when I'm in the UK, I'm like, oh, wow, this is, I understand that for your country, you're having a tough time.
Speaker 5
But the people there are really like, wow, this is the worst experience we're having. It's all going down.
And then in South Africa, it's the same thing at a different standard or quality of living.
Speaker 5 And so
Speaker 5 it almost makes me wonder, I go, what is more important? What's actually happening to people or how they feel about what is happening to them? Do you know what I mean?
Speaker 5 Like, I don't know what you think. In the UK, do you think how they feel matches up with their lives? Or do you think they just notice their lives depending on how they feel?
Speaker 6 You know, it's interesting, maybe, because now i compare the us to the uk a lot more now i've lived here for like nearly 10 years yeah and you know when i go back to the uk everyone's like oh my god the guns
Speaker 6 they're like oh the guns and healthcare and obviously trump and the other lady that was trying to be president they're like you live in a crazy place but the thing i have noticed is kind of like this because of austerity i don't know how much you know about the tory government it's kind of like this urban suburban rural blight you can see the lack of investment yeah you can in people and the country and stores are boarded up stores are boarded up dilapidated yeah like the where i used to work i used to work in this um department store called alders which is now closed in the witgift center in croydon and if you go to the wit gift center now it used to be this like bustling kind of shopping mall and now you're like it's like a ghost town right like this nhs which is like brilliant free healthcare but people are like i'm on a list for two years to get a knee replacement okay and when i go into central london a lot of the wealth i see is foreign wealth i don't necessarily come across people like, I was born and raised in London and I made my dream come true here.
Speaker 6 So, you know, I see the, I just see this, have, the gap between the have and the have not seems to be getting wider everywhere.
Speaker 6 But in America, it's more acute because there's just so much money here, if that makes sense.
Speaker 5 That makes a lot of sense. Rodka, I want to know, like, when I think of you, and I think maybe this is probably how most people see you in the world who are familiar with your work.
Speaker 5 You know, they see the historian, they see somebody who's a journalist.
Speaker 5 And I think in many ways, they also see somebody who is really adept at looking at studies and the way the world actually works versus how we think it works.
Speaker 5 So when you look at three different places where people have the same feeling, even though they're having a different experience, what do you think it tells us about how people are experiencing the world?
Speaker 2
So I think that there are two ways to travel. You can travel in time, obviously, or you can travel in space.
And if you go to another country, then very often you realize, oh, wow.
Speaker 2 So it's not, there are different ways to doing things, right? And that's just like history. I think the main lesson of studying history is that things can be different.
Speaker 2 There's nothing inevitable about the way we've structured our society and economy right now.
Speaker 2 I've personally also always been fascinated by this question of how radical ideas, seemingly crazy ideas, can over the years and decades become reality, both for better and for worse.
Speaker 2 Actually, I spent about a year studying the abolitionist movement, mainly the British abolitionist movement, because that was the most successful one.
Speaker 2 And what you realize if you go back to, say, the year 1750, and you would have stood on a street corner in London or Pennsylvania or New York, and you would have said, abolish the slave trade, abolish slavery.
Speaker 2
Most people would have said, you're utterly nuts. You know, that could never happen.
And we really need this. You know, this is like fundamental to our economy.
Speaker 2
And then obviously it took many, many decades. And it started with a small group of really committed black and white abolitionists.
But it does happen.
Speaker 2 So I've always been fascinated by those processes, how the crazy can become inevitable. What did they do well?
Speaker 5 Like, what was it that made their movement as successful as it was?
Speaker 2 You know, you could write a very long book about that. I think that actually.
Speaker 5 I mean, that's what you do.
Speaker 2 It's exactly what you do.
Speaker 2 So as I was studying, in particular, the British abolitionist movement, I was like, this is almost like a self-help book for modern day activists and revolutionaries because there's so many lessons we can learn from it.
Speaker 2 One of the first big lessons is that it takes a coalition. So very often these days, people are, I think, too purist about their ideals, right?
Speaker 2 They only want to work together with people who are exactly on the same side.
Speaker 2 But then you study some of these great movements and you realize that they were actually coalitions of people who very often disagreed vehemently about, you know, pretty fundamental things. So damn.
Speaker 2 In this case, it all started with the Quakers, which was a very weird, radical Christian sect.
Speaker 2 They didn't get much done for a long time until they started working together with the evangelicals, right? This was in the day when evangelicals were not just on TV trying to make money.
Speaker 2 So that's one really important lesson.
Speaker 2 Another one that is, I think, very relevant today is that in history, very often the right things happen for the wrong reasons.
Speaker 2 So I really had this epiphany as I was studying the life of Thomas Clarkson, who was one of the main British abolitionists.
Speaker 2 He was trying to make the argument in Westminster, in the British Parliament, that the slave trade ought to be abolished.
Speaker 2 And from a modern day perspective, you would say, well, obviously, your most powerful argument is that this is the most immoral system that ever existed, right?
Speaker 2 The historians of the future will judge us very harshly for this. Well, actually, that didn't work at all.
Speaker 2 What Thomas Clarkson did discover is that once he started advocating for the suffering of white sailors on these ships who were dying in droves, then all the politicians were suddenly paying attention, right?
Speaker 2 And that was a really powerful political argument.
Speaker 5 Yeah, I mean, this is something I'll chat to friends about when I think about movements or ideas.
Speaker 5 I go, oftentimes we think, because we live in the age of the most morality, we think that morality is what moves people.
Speaker 5 But most of the time, it's an incentive that's, you know, just attached to the other person. Oftentimes it's financial, but when it's not, it's literally directly attached to them.
Speaker 5 And so you think of like Martin Luther King, it's amazing how the boycott was really like, you know, one of the biggest tools in his arsenal.
Speaker 5 It was like, okay, black people are not going to ride on your buses. We're not going to
Speaker 5 support your businesses. And then people are like, okay,
Speaker 5 apartheid in South Africa. As much as it was like, yeah, shame and this and that, it was the world saying, yeah, we're not going to buy your stuff and we're not going to sell you stuff.
Speaker 5 And then at some point, the apartheid government says, this is not, this is not sustainable for us. We can't keep doing this.
Speaker 5 And so then it makes me wonder, like,
Speaker 5 with your work, you know, you talk about like humans being kind and being good, et cetera.
Speaker 5 But then the work that you study seems to suggest that kindness isn't necessarily the thing that moves us in the right direction. So how do you deal with the paradox in your own work?
Speaker 2 Yeah, so my very first book was called Utopia for realists, and it was about all these crazy ideas like, can't we just abolish poverty by giving everyone money, you know, which is called a universal basic income?
Speaker 2 Can't we abolish all borders around the globe? Can't we move to a much more participatory form of democracy?
Speaker 2 And at some point, I started to think, you know, what do all these crazy ideas have in common?
Speaker 2 well it's a different way of looking at humans it's a more hopeful and more optimistic view of human nature there's this old theory which says that humans deep down are just fundamentally selfish right it's it's often called veneer theory you know the idea that civilization is just a thin veneer and that below that right lies raw human nature and i think the problem with that theory
Speaker 2 It's not just that I think it's wrong. The biggest problem is that it can become a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Speaker 2 Because once you start assuming the worst in other people, that's how you're going to design your whole society, right?
Speaker 2 You're going to have a society with a lot of bureaucracies, with a lot of cameras, with a lot of police.
Speaker 2
And you're going to bring out the worst in people. You're going to create the kind of people that your theory presupposed.
So
Speaker 2 obviously, you know, humans are capable of the most terrible atrocities. We do things that penguins would never think of doing, right?
Speaker 2 Concentration camps, genocides, apartheid, you name it. But then, on the other hand, we're also capable of incredible altruism.
Speaker 2 And I think that, you know, shifting that perspective a little bit and assuming the best in people and also designing our systems of government, of companies, you name it, around that
Speaker 2 could be a great way of making this world a much better place.
Speaker 5 I actually think animals are as capable as we are. I think maybe I'm in the minority here.
Speaker 5
I think animals are literally just like us. Oh, you know.
I just don't think they have like the systems.
Speaker 6 Oh, you know, I have a vendessa against dolphins.
Speaker 2 Wait, tell me. Dolphins are like rapists.
Speaker 6 They're like the most evil.
Speaker 2
No, okay, I don't agree with this. Nope.
Dolphins? Tell your story. Dolphins like this.
Tell your story, I'll respond.
Speaker 2 Tell your story.
Speaker 6 Just read up on the stuff that dolphins do.
Speaker 5 Tell me what you've read up on, and then we will fight about this. I don't like this anti-dolphin.
Speaker 6 Please go. I am very anti-story.
Speaker 5 Tell me what you've read.
Speaker 6 I know that dolphins are capable of rape. They often do rape.
Speaker 2
Okay. Just like male cats.
Okay.
Speaker 6 And
Speaker 6 pigs are incredibly intelligent.
Speaker 5 Let's stick with dolphins. Don't run away from dolphins, Christian.
Speaker 6 No, but my point is, no, because like every at the daily show is like a bit about how much I hate dolphins.
Speaker 2 And I seem like a weird because I hate dolphins.
Speaker 6 But I'm just saying that there are some animals that are capable of like being incredibly cruel.
Speaker 5 Here's, here's the, I agree with, look, I'm on the same page. Animals, I think, can be as what we consider cruel.
Speaker 5 as for sport just for pleasure as we can yeah i will say this however uh about dolphins we take for granted how intelligent dolphins are, right?
Speaker 5 We take for granted that dolphins do things for pleasure. They have many of the aptitudes that humans have, right? So they'll even like smoke puffer fish, right? Like a lot of people don't know that.
Speaker 5 They'll literally smoke puffer fish and get high, right? They poke it, it blows up, and then they have the toxin, okay?
Speaker 5 So if dolphins are as smart as we are, how do we know that they aren't engaging?
Speaker 5 in S ⁇ M the way humans do and we are watching it from the outside if you watched 50 shades of gray as an animal, you would be like,
Speaker 5
this is torture. This is a terrible story of torture.
Because you don't understand what they're saying. You don't understand.
You're just watching somebody tie another person up and whip them.
Speaker 6 Okay, but
Speaker 6 what I'm trying to say, I'm actually disagreeing with our friend Rutgers here, like belief that things can be eternally good. Yeah,
Speaker 5 I agree with you. I think animals, we are.
Speaker 5 And what I mean by that is I go, I think every animal does the most terrible things, but because they don't don't have systems, they haven't figured out ways to
Speaker 5 expand them outward. Do you know what I mean?
Speaker 5 Okay, for instance,
Speaker 5
I'm bad with specific troops and what the names of the different chimps or monkeys are. So don't correct me on this.
Chimp, Twitter, chimp, TikTok, monkey crew, whatever.
Speaker 5 I know it's wrong, but I know they do it. There's a group of monkeys or whatever they are somewhere.
Speaker 5 And what they'll often do is they'll invade the territory of other chimpanzees or monkeys and they'll slaughter all of them. No reason.
Speaker 5 Just like slaughter them, and they'll like play around with the entrails everywhere, and then they'll just leave.
Speaker 2 Okay.
Speaker 2 Well, here's an interesting story, Trevor. So, there are two species of primates who are like 99% genetically similar to us.
Speaker 2 On the one hand, you have the chimpanzees, who indeed behave pretty much like you just described.
Speaker 2 So, like a tribe of chimpanzees meets another tribe of chimpanzees that they never met before, you know, and it can get pretty violent.
Speaker 2 Now, we also have the bonobos, and they're pretty much the opposite um so if like two groups of bonobos meet each other what they'll have is an orgy you know that's their basically their way of of of saying hi
Speaker 2 so this has been a question that's that's that's been uh asked by primo primatologists for a long time like are we the chimpanzees are the bonobos maybe we're both i think men are the chimpanzees you know i want all the restraints on men and everyone else is fine you already know like really i'm a massanderist in the making wow you're just gonna throw us all under the bus
Speaker 6 men are scary i don't speak to men after 5 p.m that aren't like my husband or trevor or my dad
Speaker 2 that's my jet middle after 5 p.m
Speaker 6 that aren't like they have to be vetted like trevor or like my husband and my son wow and my life has never been better never been better actually
Speaker 5 how do you respond to this so as the person who writes a book talking about how humans are kind how do you respond to people who say to you well then what about murders well then what about serial killers well Well, then, well, what about, like, there's many bad things that happen in the world.
Speaker 5 How do you respond to them and what data do you use to support it?
Speaker 2 Yeah, well, that's the problem. If you write a book about human decency, is that you have to go on for hundreds of pages about all the terrible things we do.
Speaker 2 Look, for me, it all starts with this question: how have we conquered the globe, right? Why have humans been so successful compared to other species?
Speaker 2 And for a long time, we liked to believe that it is because we are so smart, right? Because we have these huge brains that take up, what is it, 20, 25% 25% of our energy.
Speaker 2 But then, you know, scientists started studying other animals. And again,
Speaker 2 as you just said, they're pretty similar to us in many respects.
Speaker 2 There's now a new group of scientists who think that what has made us special as a species is something called survival of the friendliest.
Speaker 2 It's really the case that throughout our history, it was actually the friendliest among us who had the biggest chance of passing on their genes to the next generation, because that basically helped people to work together on a scale that no other animal has been able to do.
Speaker 2 Now the technical term for this is self-domestication syndrome. We know this with animals that we have domesticated, right? Sheep and dogs, they've turned very friendly.
Speaker 2 And what Charles Darwin already noted is that these domesticated animals have certain traits in common. You know, you can see this in their genetic profile, but they also get like these
Speaker 2 floppy ears or white spots in their fur. And most importantly, they look a little bit more childlike and they also become more playful.
Speaker 2 Now, what's so interesting, if you study the skeletons of humans over the past, you know, thousands of years, what you see is the puppification of humanity. So we literally look much
Speaker 2 friendlier, more childish than we look to.
Speaker 5 Humans have become cuter over time.
Speaker 2
Exactly, exactly. So this is my grand theory of human nature.
I call it homo-puppy. That's the term I hope to be remembered for in the annals of science.
Speaker 2 But it's very, very much contrary to the way people often think about you know, how we have conquered the globe, right? That we, you know, we
Speaker 2 murdered all the Neanderthals or something like that. Well, actually, modern scientists think pretty much the opposite.
Speaker 5
So I believe that theory. And the reason I believe it is because I drive.
I know a lot of people who are anti-humans and they'll be like, you can't trust humans. You can't.
Then I go, but you drive.
Speaker 5
If you spend any time driving, you believe humankind is good. No, I drive perpetually terrifying.
Yes, but you drive.
Speaker 6 Because I live in Los Angeles.
Speaker 2 No, but you drive.
Speaker 5 If you drive, you are inherently believing that every other person on the road who's driving is going to respect a painted white line.
Speaker 2 This is literally.
Speaker 6
That's not morality. That's just a reason.
I believe no one is irrational.
Speaker 5
Yes, but what I'm saying is that's what I believe in. I think we have made it all about like kindness.
Yeah. When rarely most of humankind is rational.
Speaker 5
And so in our rationality, I believe we are rational enough to realize that it's not a zero-sum game. And so when you see somebody else's child fall, you'll pick them up most times.
I don't think so.
Speaker 5 No, but I think that's why we exist as people.
Speaker 6 Have you been to a park recently, Trevor?
Speaker 5 Have I been to a park? Yeah, but now you modern parents, you're not even allowed to like look at another person's child or help them.
Speaker 5 When I grew up, when I grew up, even in South Africa now, people can still be like friendly and help you with your child.
Speaker 5 You're talking about a very specific, like sad thing that's happened in America. I argue for the most part, human beings, and I think it's demonstrated in our very nature.
Speaker 5 right we get on a plane we trust we don't even know the pilot we've never even seen this guy's certificate right we just we just fly it's this weird system where we because the trust is so latent and the the morality is so latent we then notice the anomalies in society yeah and then we go look how bad we are okay so I understand what you're both saying, Rutger, Trevor.
Speaker 5 She's very pessimistic.
Speaker 6 I mean, I objected to your work because you don't like Hobbes. And I agree with Hobbes.
Speaker 6 I have a very like dismal view of human nature.
Speaker 2 You've got a picture of him on
Speaker 2 near your bed or something. I did the
Speaker 2 old British philosopher.
Speaker 6
I have a Leviathan poster in my bedroom. No, but I think, and maybe it's, I think actually becoming a parent has probably deepened my, not pessimism, it's fear.
That's where I'm speaking from.
Speaker 6 And a lot of people have this genuine fear of other human beings,
Speaker 6 of systems, of institutions right now. And I think a pronounced version of that is like the Trump voter who's like, I want the wall, I don't want immigrants.
Speaker 6 Or it's like like a mother like myself who like doesn't believe in sleepovers because I'm like, I don't want my kid getting molested. And everyone's like, everyone's like to me, you're crazy.
Speaker 6 And I'm like, well, child molested everywhere. They're like, are they really?
Speaker 6 But like, I think for a lot of people who are afraid for valid reasons, or, you know, you'll read the newspaper and they'll say crime is down. But like people feel like crime is up.
Speaker 6 Like women won't jog.
Speaker 6 in a park at night, you know, so it's really hard for, I think, for myself and for a lot of people to reconcile this idea of like a good good world and people being kind with like what your lived experience, I guess.
Speaker 6 And I think as a parent, I feel that acutely because I'm like everywhere I go, I like grab my kids' hands.
Speaker 5 Rodka,
Speaker 5 you recently became a parent.
Speaker 5 I want to know if your views have changed because you were the person who was, and please correct me at any point, but I mean, like, you were very much the person who's willing to experiment and say, let's have open borders.
Speaker 5 Let's give everybody universal basic income. This is the world we should be living in.
Speaker 5 Open it up a lot more than you think we should because we will actually be good to each other. I want to know if you noticed any changes in yourself once you became a parent.
Speaker 5 Did you become more or less conservative in your own eyes?
Speaker 2 Hmm. So often people say, oh, becoming a parent really made me more idealistic because, you know, that was the moment when I realized that we really need to take care of future generations.
Speaker 2 You know, actually, quite often I see the opposite is that people, I don't know, maybe turn inward a little bit. So I've been actually trying to fight that.
Speaker 5 Oh, but you feel it, though. It's pulling you then.
Speaker 2 Yeah, um, I think it's fine.
Speaker 2 You know, this discussion really reminds me of that this news story from, I don't know, maybe 10 years ago, when a Danish woman was arrested in the US because she had parked her stroller with, I think, her baby in it next to a cafe while she was getting takeaway coffee.
Speaker 2 And she was arrested for child neglect. Well, in Denmark, where she's from, you know, that's like entirely normal to do.
Speaker 2 I mean, that's life. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 6 I I think
Speaker 6 what I'm struggling with is I grew up in a very like communal culture. So there was a lot of trust with like
Speaker 6
leaving your baby at people's houses, and you're like, I have to work. I do the night shift.
I'm going to come pick up my kid when I can. Like, it's that type of culture.
Speaker 6 And I think, in like this hyper-capitalist, weird world where there are no communal bonds, like you don't even know the names of your neighbors.
Speaker 6 It becomes really hard to be like, well, your neighbor is probably trustworthy and kind
Speaker 6 and somebody that is as valuable as yourself. Do you know, like, I think that our atomization is contributing to like this very real fear of other people and people just hoarding their resources.
Speaker 6 Like, so I it kind of becomes like this self-fulfilling prophecy in a way, but the way we live our lives, I think, informs it a lot.
Speaker 2 Yeah. And important
Speaker 2 that it's in the interest of those in power for us to be cynical about human nature, right? Because that justifies the hierarchy, that justifies all these power differences.
Speaker 2 You know, I was, as I was going on a book tour, making this argument that humans have evolved to work together and that we are the product of survival of the friendliest, what really struck me is that I got most pushback from journalists.
Speaker 2 And I think it's logical. I mean, journalists spent most of their careers, their days,
Speaker 2 writing about what goes wrong, right? So people who actually are more tuned into the news, who are addicted to the news, they're often much more cynical. And I got most praise, actually.
Speaker 2
I received a lot of emails from hitchhikers. There's this one, I forgot his name, this guy who is the professional hitchhiker.
He's been really going everywhere.
Speaker 2
I just like, yeah, that's my experience. You can go everywhere.
You can go to every country. And people are basically friendly to strangers pretty much everywhere.
Speaker 2 And I was like, well, that is the lived experience, right? That is very different from the journalist mindset where you continuously are on the lookout for newsworthy things.
Speaker 2 It's a problem with the goodness, right? As Trevor said,
Speaker 2
it's the water we swim in. It's very easy to miss because you're just used to it.
Yes. And by the way, one final thing.
I had a pretty different experience actually moving to New York. So,
Speaker 2 I mean, I like my neighbors in the Netherlands, but in the Netherlands, right, our social circle is much more closed off. But
Speaker 2
I moved here to Brooklyn and everyone's so friendly. Everyone's so kind.
Everyone's like, Mel, welcome you to the neighborhood.
Speaker 2 Like, like, like my neighbor literally said, yeah, you can have have sleepovers. You invite people, you know, in my apartment, it's all fine.
Speaker 2 So, I don't know, maybe that's just Brooklyn, but my experience was pretty different.
Speaker 6 Yeah, I think your experience is also like informed by the body you're in, you know?
Speaker 6 So, my experience as a black woman when I go to Nigeria and they kind of clock me as a Westerner means they're like, We can get
Speaker 6 money out of this one,
Speaker 6 you know, may vary in certain parts of Los Angeles. And, you know, so maybe lots of people in the world are like, you know what? When I come into a space, people aren't welcoming.
Speaker 6 And then that reinforces this idea of that.
Speaker 5 Oh, yeah, then that makes you feel like,
Speaker 6 are humans really kind? Are groups really kind? And as you said, it benefits these billionaires.
Speaker 2 Sometimes I get this question. Maybe you get that as well, Trevor, but maybe it's particularly true for me.
Speaker 2 People ask me.
Speaker 2 So, Rutger, do you get any abuse on Twitter or, you know, on socials? And I'm like,
Speaker 2
not really. I mean, not really anything that hurts.
I'm white. I'm heterosexual.
Speaker 2 I'm a man.
Speaker 2 So that's my advice. If you don't want to get abused online, you know,
Speaker 2
be a man, be heterosexual. It works incredibly well.
So, yeah, you're absolutely, you're absolutely right.
Speaker 2 And part of me wonders this as well as I...
Speaker 2 Think about this book I wrote, Humankind.
Speaker 2 Is this just one big expression of privilege? You know, is it a telling fact that I wrote that book probably
Speaker 5 but i you know can i can i interject with one thought here
Speaker 5 you you actually are the person who made me realize this one day
Speaker 5 you said to me oh trevor of course you think that that's possible because of you know how you see the world or how the world treats you
Speaker 5 and it's funny right christiana and i always have this back and forth and i will say yes i am the way i am because of how the world treats me but i'm also the way i am, or the world is the way it is to me because of how I treat it.
Speaker 5 And I don't know when the cycle begins, to be honest with you, right?
Speaker 5 I think it is easier to be optimistic when things have gone right or when you remember things going right. Because sometimes I think it's more about your perception than the reality, right?
Speaker 5 And so even when I think about jogging or not jogging, I don't have kids, but the one thing I will say is,
Speaker 5 I think of how many parents, let's say in America, are terrified at the idea of their child being kidnapped when the data does not support it. It just does not.
Speaker 5 And I think it's very difficult in life, but we are oftentimes
Speaker 5 at the mercy of the things that have happened to us. And so
Speaker 5
that becomes part of how we see the world. I think very exceptional individuals are able to see the world beyond how it happened to them.
and rather how they wish it to be.
Speaker 5 But most of us, most of us, you get robbed on a certain street, you probably will never walk on that street ever again.
Speaker 5
The chances of you getting robbed there again are probably zero, depending on where you are. But you just go like, you know what, I'm not going to do that.
That street is where people get robbed.
Speaker 5 And so
Speaker 5 I hear what you're saying, but I sometimes think if every law or if every idea we make is based on the worst instance of what happened, planes wouldn't fly.
Speaker 5 cars wouldn't drive, children wouldn't run and play outside.
Speaker 6
I want to preface this. I'm actually an abolitionist.
You know, I'm not. I don't even believe in police.
But I guess what I'm trying to say is that, like,
Speaker 6 the way my perception is shaped as a woman is that, like, the violence that you, it's not, I'm not, I'm afraid of straight, you know, I don't like men in general.
Speaker 5 No, no, completely.
Speaker 2 That's why the table is like this size.
Speaker 5 I mean, we just.
Speaker 6 But
Speaker 6 it's often, it's, it's not just strange men, it's familiar men, right? And so it's just like, I think for some groups, it's really, I find tremendous safety in other women.
Speaker 6 Now, if it was a world where it's just like my community of women and my friends around me, they're who I lean on the most. And I'm like, oh, well, if the world was them, I'd feel differently.
Speaker 6 And I say that as someone that's like generally very optimistic about myself, I wouldn't have moved to America if I wasn't an optimistic person.
Speaker 6
But I've had these like core experiences that have shown me that, I guess it was a lot of racism. People are wicked.
And it was a, it was just a racism I received as like a child in the classroom.
Speaker 6 I'm raising my children to be like, it's a world out there, and I have a son, and I'm like at a certain age, your boyhood ends much earlier than a kid with blonde hair and blue eyes.
Speaker 6 So there's certain things, you know, you can't do in public. Like you can't throw a tantrum past 10 because someone may call law enforcement.
Speaker 6 So I think like that the idealized worldview often comes, can come when you're kind of like a person who is automatically given the benefit of the doubt.
Speaker 6 And I think for people like myself and people that are like in far worse positions, that doesn't happen. And so you don't necessarily experience the kind world, even if you put kindness out there.
Speaker 2 Absolutely. Yeah, I agree with all of that.
Speaker 2 Wait, with all of it? Yeah, absolutely. Wait, what?
Speaker 2 No,
Speaker 2 don't come here.
Speaker 2 No, no, no, don't do that.
Speaker 5 No, no, no, no, no.
Speaker 2 All of it.
Speaker 6 But you know what? This is what I do think.
Speaker 2 Can I say all of it?
Speaker 6 I think the light bearers, like Rutger, the nice white people, should go out there and do this type of work. I think what he's doing is very important because he's the type of person people listen to.
Speaker 6 Um, you can have the ear of an entrepreneur and an activist because of your position, you're listened to and respected, and you're using your white privilege, male privilege for good.
Speaker 6 I think it's like this is actually the ideal, this is what you should use it for. That I agree with, you know, I mean, and I agree with, you know, I don't look.
Speaker 5 We, this is Rutger, I forgive you. You've stepped into a this is a
Speaker 2 fundamental 10-year fucking history of
Speaker 2 us. This is us, you know, And it's good.
Speaker 5 We keep each other on.
Speaker 6 I say Trevor's optimistic because he's like the chosen one, like Obama of South Africa.
Speaker 2
Everything's gone right for him. Everything is gone.
You were born right at the perfect.
Speaker 6 He's like mixed with
Speaker 6 apartheid falls. He's, you know,
Speaker 2 funny, good looking.
Speaker 6
Jon Stewart quicks. He's full.
Like, I just feel like he's got this good karma.
Speaker 2 Yes.
Speaker 6 You know what I mean? So I'd be optimistic about Trevor. I'd love the world.
Speaker 5
But this is the thing. This is the thing that I believe.
Yeah. Everything you are saying is true.
Speaker 5 However, every negative thing I've also experienced. Do you understand what I'm saying?
Speaker 5
So I grew up in a house with domestic abuse. I grew up in a country where my people couldn't work or do anything.
My mother herself wasn't allowed to go. My grandmother.
Speaker 5 So like,
Speaker 5 do you know how you've, what kind of life you've lived when a flushing toilet was like a thing you were excited for? That's the kind of life I lived.
Speaker 5
And I'm not even saying this like a woe is me thing. No, no.
I'm just like, I remember being like, yeah, flushing toilet today. Ah, no flushing toilet this month.
Speaker 5
And then flushing toilet another time. And then, like, you have your techniques, you start learning which newspapers you prefer to wipe your ass with.
This is life, right?
Speaker 5 So, I'm not, I never say this to diminish another person's experience. I really don't.
Speaker 5 No, I don't think you do, but I, but I, but I think, and you know, it's some of what you say in your book, Rodger, and when you speak, I think some of the time, it's so hard, but some of the time, the way we are perceiving something
Speaker 5 affects our ability
Speaker 5 to not live live in that world because we are perceiving it as being that way.
Speaker 2 Right.
Speaker 5 And so, I mean, I've even learned this in therapy. I think we sometimes think, and maybe that's because I wasn't raised this way.
Speaker 5 We sometimes think it's happening to us and us alone, and we're the victims, and we're the only ones. And that's why I genuinely have never worn it.
Speaker 5 I don't wear it as a cape of anything because I go, my friends had parents, mothers who were abused.
Speaker 5 So in our community, this was a thing that was normal. And over time in in South Africa, we fought against gender-based violence and we continue to.
Speaker 5 But I, because I was never taught that, no, Trevor, this is happening to you, I then didn't think that it's happening to the world. And I didn't think that I was like suffering because of it.
Speaker 5 You know what I mean? So that's where I come back to the car analogy of it all. The reason I say I don't agree with you on all of it, but you know, I agree with you on most of it, is I go,
Speaker 5 there are still
Speaker 5
hundreds of thousands of women who do run at 5 a.m. There are still hundreds of thousands of women who do run.
You know, they have a lot of money.
Speaker 2 I know know I carry a box cutter in my handbag. Yes,
Speaker 5
no, I understand this, but this is what I mean. This is like one of the hardest things.
In fact, you know what?
Speaker 5 Let's take it away from a personal injury in that way and let's think of it through the lens of crime. Because in South Africa, we deal with this.
Speaker 5 South Africa has one of the highest crime rates in the world, right?
Speaker 5 But.
Speaker 5 It is not happening to most of the people most of the time. And most people have not been affected by that crime, but they do get affected by it.
Speaker 5 And if it does actually happen to you, it is the only thing that is true in your world.
Speaker 5 And I cannot say to anybody who has been affected, ah, no, it's not as bad as you think, because to them, it is the full version of what they think.
Speaker 5 Do you know what I'm saying?
Speaker 5 So what I'm always trying to do, and this is why I fight with my friend, because I go, I don't ever want us to live in a world where we think, like you said, you can only hold one thought.
Speaker 5
Some people will say, my parents didn't love me. They were abusive.
I'm like, or your parents grew up in a world where they beat you and all kids were beaten.
Speaker 5 And yeah, now we don't believe that that's the right thing. And now they think it's like timeouts and conversations.
Speaker 5 But to Rutger's point, maybe in like 15 years, maybe in 20 years, they'll be like, hey, actually, timeouts are worse on a child's mental health.
Speaker 2
That's already happening. Oh, well, there you go.
Anti-timeout. Well, there you go.
Speaker 5 Do you know what I mean? So I think
Speaker 5 there's a difficulty in processing how kind humans are
Speaker 5 versus how bad human beings individually can be and how much, how much harm they can do, versus the, you know what I mean?
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 5
One person can kill many people, and now all of us feel like the world is full of killers. But we forget that, like, when one person was shooting in a crowd, everyone was running.
Yeah.
Speaker 5 So there's more runners than there are shooters.
Speaker 6 I know, I do believe, listen, I want to be clear so everyone doesn't think like I'm complete pessimist. No, no, I don't think you are.
Speaker 5 I think you're a secret optimist. I think you challenge us.
Speaker 6 I'm optimistic about myself. I keep telling you guys, but everyone, I just,
Speaker 6 I,
Speaker 6 because, you know, I, I, there's so many people in my life I love because of their kindness, right? So it'd be like ridiculous for me to say.
Speaker 6
It's just, I struggle with the idea of humanity as kind, um, because of the way, where we are right now. But that can change.
I'm open to my mind being changed.
Speaker 5 So, Rodger, what if you had to throw a Hail Mary?
Speaker 5 What is one thing?
Speaker 5 One, like, I know it's hard, but just like one example, story, study, data, anything where you would go, this is how you can believe that humankind is kind.
Speaker 2 My favorite story in the book is about this moment in 1965 when six boys shipwrecked on an island near Tonga.
Speaker 2
I had asked myself the question if there had ever been a real Lord of the Flies. And it turns out there was.
Six boys were at this boarding school in Nuku'alofa, the capital of Tonga.
Speaker 2 They were really frustrated. They thought school was boring and they were like, let's go on an adventure.
Speaker 2 They borrowed a boat from a local fisherman and then ended up in a storm on the very first night.
Speaker 2 They drifted for eight days, incredibly hungry, incredibly thirsty, but miraculously survived and then washed up on this island that was, you know, totally forgotten, uninhabited.
Speaker 2 And they survived there for 15 months.
Speaker 2 And it's a real example of survival of the friendliest because if they were really like nasty and not working together, well, we wouldn't be here able to tell their story.
Speaker 2 Now, what's happening there? I think it's really a combination of things. Obviously, it's Tongun culture, right?
Speaker 2 Which is a very cooperative culture with very essential skills where kids learn to swim, you know, basically in their first year already. So that's obviously essential.
Speaker 2 I also think, though, that it is a part of human nature, what we see expressed there. As I said, survival of the friendliest.
Speaker 2 It's kids working together and exhibiting traits that are also very much part of who we are as a species.
Speaker 2 So, you know, to Trevor's point again, this is one of those things where you can hold two seemingly contradictory thoughts in your mind at the same time. Yes, we're incredibly selfish, cruel.
Speaker 2 We're also one of the most cooperative and altruistic species in the animal kingdom.
Speaker 5 I think I realized because of your work, the Lord of the Flies has had more impact on how we see humankind
Speaker 5 than the real story, which it wasn't based on, obviously, But I'm saying the Lord of the Flies is how people, people think it's a real thing. They're like, well, I guess this is Lord of the Flies.
Speaker 5 And you're like, that's a fiction. We have based our reality on a fiction, and yet the realities never seem to be able to create the fictions that we want to live in or want to create.
Speaker 2
Yeah. And this is particularly the case when you look at natural disasters.
So look at how disasters are portrayed in series and movies. And it's the same thing all the time.
Speaker 2
Civilization is a thin veneer, and people very quickly turn into animals, beasts, barbarians. They start raping, looting, plundering.
And that's also how the press often behaves.
Speaker 2 You know, the most famous case here is Katrina, 2005, the terrible flooding. And the press was full of these horrible stories of people getting shot, of the looting and the plundering.
Speaker 2 Well, actually, we have got 60, 70 years of empirical evidence of anthropologists, sociologists going into these places and actually interviewing people, doing the rigorous empirical research.
Speaker 2 And time and time again, they found that disasters actually bring out the best in people.
Speaker 2 So every single time, doesn't matter where it happens, whether it's Japan or the US or South Africa, you get an explosion of altruism.
Speaker 2 Because once things really get serious like that, people are like, okay, we've got to stick together. We've got to survive together.
Speaker 2 Sure, there are always some examples that then will get magnified in the press. But like the big headline story should be, oh, people are working together once again.
Speaker 5
Yeah. And I think a lot of that becomes how we see the world.
If we are told the world is a way, then it does become that way. Yeah.
You know? So
Speaker 5 that's why I appreciate, honestly, I love what you do. Like I say, you don't tell us the world is perfect, but you tell us that humankind is inherently kind.
Speaker 5 We're going to continue this conversation right after this short break.
Speaker 5 So actually, Raka, let me ask you this.
Speaker 5 As a historian, you look at the world differently because you have to.
Speaker 5 Are things better or worse?
Speaker 5 Because I have people phoning me and texting me now, and they'll say to me, they'll lead every conversation with, hi, Trevor, hope you're well, all things considered.
Speaker 5 Or they'll be like, hi, Trevor, hope everything's going good, considering the world we're in right now.
Speaker 5 And I understand where they're coming from, but then there's a part of me that goes, but when was it not bad in some way?
Speaker 2 I would say the answer is pretty simple. In the past, everything was worse.
Speaker 2 If you zoom out far enough, at least.
Speaker 2
You know, we've seen incredible progress in the fight against poverty, for example. It's just like in 1980, 50% of the world population lived in extreme poverty.
Now that's less than 10%. 50%.
Speaker 2
Yeah, it's really extraordinary. Child mortality has been declining massively.
On the other hand, though, I also understand why people are really scared. In many respects, I'm pretty terrified.
Speaker 2 Do you guys know this website called Our World in Data? It's my favorite website.
Speaker 5 Our world in data.
Speaker 2 Yeah. No, no, no.
Speaker 5 Tell us about it. What is it?
Speaker 2 It's really a great website with the has the best collection of data on what's going on in the world.
Speaker 2
And the guy who founded that is a statistician called Max Roser. And he always says that there are three statements that are true at the same time.
So the first statement is the world is bad.
Speaker 2
I mean, that is true. There are millions of kids dying from easily preventable diseases every single day.
There are billions of animals being tortured in factory farms right now.
Speaker 2 Autocracy is on the rise. So there are lots of bad things.
Speaker 2 The second statement is also true, that the world is much better. We have made extraordinary progress.
Speaker 2 And you won't see that if you just follow the news because the news is about what happens today instead of what happens every single day.
Speaker 2 It doesn't teach you all that much about the big structural trends.
Speaker 2 And the third statement is also true, which is we could do so much better.
Speaker 2 You know, if you take a look at the resources we have, how many talent we have, how much capital we have, we should already have abolished poverty around the globe.
Speaker 2
You know, we should already have abolished most terrible diseases. Like the fact that malaria still exists, that tuberculosis still exists.
I mean, that's just an outrage. So, yeah,
Speaker 2 as you can see, I've got mixed feelings about this.
Speaker 5 So, when you look at the world we're in now,
Speaker 5 how do you think the historian version of you in 200 years will look at you/slash us?
Speaker 5 This is something I always think about when I think of the time I'm living in or even everything that happens, right? An election comes, and then people are like, oh, this is the worst result.
Speaker 5
I can't believe it. But then, literally, half of the country, let's say, in America, are like, oh, thank God, reprieve.
We are now finally on the right track.
Speaker 5 And in moments where there's no chaos, I just sit there and I go,
Speaker 5 How do we know which one actually is?
Speaker 5 And how do you know how the future will view us in this? Are we the good guys of this time?
Speaker 2 I think it's one of the most fascinating questions you can basically ask about history.
Speaker 2 So
Speaker 2 if you look at all these civilizations we've seen, whether it's the Romans or the Aztecs or people in the Middle Ages, people throughout history have believed that they are the most civilized, right?
Speaker 2
Yeah. That they are on the right side of history.
So the Romans, for example, thought that they were so civilized because they didn't sacrifice children for the gods.
Speaker 5 That's a good move.
Speaker 2 Then they did have the Colosseum, you know, and they did throw naked women for the lions, et cetera. But that was just good entertainment during lunchtime.
Speaker 5 Not a good
Speaker 2 so today, we like to see ourselves as really civilized because we've, you know, officially abolished slavery and the slave trade. We've got, you know, universal suffrage.
Speaker 2 In many countries, we now have gay marriage. So surely we got to be the most civilized, right?
Speaker 2 Well, that would be very coincidental if
Speaker 2 we turn out to be that one civilization who got it all figured out. I think it's quite likely that the historians of the future will look back at us.
Speaker 2 And I'm not just saying like, oh, the MAGA Republicans. No, I'm talking like about me, like
Speaker 2
about you. Like we're probably doing some things that are terrible, like moral catastrophes.
And today, you know, we have lots of...
Speaker 2 progressives and liberals who care deeply about human rights and about all the injustices, but keep eating factory farm meat of animals that have been horribly abused.
Speaker 2 So that for me is one of those examples where the historians of the future could be like, they're going to look at us.
Speaker 5 What the hell?
Speaker 2 Yeah, what the hell were these people thinking? How could they unthinkingly keep participating in that incredibly cruel system?
Speaker 5 They're going to be on the news with their co-host, who's a cow, because animals will be talking in the future. Let's be clear on this, everybody.
Speaker 2
They are already talking. And then, yeah, literally.
They're going to understand them.
Speaker 5 Yeah, and then they're going to ask the cow, they'll be like, what do you think?
Speaker 2 And be like, whoa, man, the things you people, you humans used to.
Speaker 5
And the human will be like, I wasn't around back then. Those are my grandparents.
You can't judge me for their actions. So are you a vegan?
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 2 Oh, okay.
Speaker 5 Have you always been a vegan?
Speaker 2 No, no, no.
Speaker 2 I was a quite fanatic carnivore.
Speaker 5 Yeah, well, then what changed?
Speaker 2 I guess reading.
Speaker 2 So I think the final nudge came from Yuval Noah Harari. You had him on a show on the show as well, right?
Speaker 2 So he wrote this book called Sapience about, you know, the big picture, right? The history of humanity of the last hundreds of thousands of years.
Speaker 2 And in that book, he like doesn't make any moral judgment whatsoever. So, he talks about the Nazis, and he's like, I don't know, describing it as
Speaker 2 you know, yes, just another culture, right? Just another way of
Speaker 2 the way humans can behave.
Speaker 2 And then, at the end of the book, he talks about the way we treat animals, and he has this offhand remark where he says, Well, this is probably the biggest crime in all of human history.
Speaker 2 And I thought that was very convincing just by looking at the numbers. Because,
Speaker 2 like,
Speaker 2 the total number of people who ever lived is estimated at 117 billion. The total number of animals that we slaughter every year is 80 billion.
Speaker 2 So it takes us just a year and a half to slaughter as many animals as the amount of people that ever lived.
Speaker 2 And then if you look at the latest science, like every other week there's a new paper coming out about how sentient, how sensitive, how intelligent chickens are, cows are.
Speaker 2
And I also felt so ignorant once I started digging into it. Like, for example, the fact that cows cows give milk.
I was like, yeah, cows give milk. That's what they do.
Well, actually,
Speaker 2
they have to be pregnant every year. They have to be pregnant, basically.
And then we take away all these calves, which is like
Speaker 2 a product that we very often can't use. So
Speaker 2 we abuse those calves in a terrible way as well. Yeah.
Speaker 6 I actually love veganism as a way of life. It's just like,
Speaker 6
I think it's crazy. I like Chennai.
I think it's crazy.
Speaker 5 I'll be on the record and say this. I think it's crazy.
Speaker 5 I think I have fights with my friends about this all the time.
Speaker 5
So actually, Raka, let me ask you this. For a few reasons.
One, the way we inflict pain on them is unnecessary oftentimes. And we waste.
Speaker 5 We throw away so many of the animals that we've killed that I'm like, people, what are we doing here? Do you know what I mean?
Speaker 5
If you're going to inflict pain on somebody, at least like use it, eat it. Do you know what I mean? Like, if you're going to kill me and my family, eat us is how I think, even as a human.
Yeah.
Speaker 5 And I'm not a pig or a cow, but I don't like
Speaker 5 that.
Speaker 5
Yeah, and I'm guilty of it too. Please don't get me wrong.
I don't like the intelligence argument at all.
Speaker 5 I don't like that at all because I find myself going, if people are telling us that we should not be eating animals because they are sentient and they think and they feel, I'm like, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
Speaker 5
So now we're making this a moral thing. So we should or shouldn't eat things that are closest to us as humans.
And then the things that are not, we shouldn't treat accordingly.
Speaker 5 I don't want to live in a world where we are making that type of judgment based on what we think or how close we think something is to us.
Speaker 5 Because that's also the argument we use to inflict pain and suffering on other people. Do you know what I mean? So we'll be like, oh no, they're not as intelligent as we, therefore they can be slaves.
Speaker 5
Therefore, they can be punished and beaten and put in prison. And I think that's like the same argument just the other way around.
So I go, if you're going to eat something, eat it with respect.
Speaker 5
Do you know what I mean? Be like, yeah, yeah. Like, I don't think a lion looks down on a zebra.
You know what I mean? I don't think a lion's like this stupid zebra. That's why I'm eating it.
Speaker 2 It's just like, no, no, no, this is how I live. And I caught you and I eat you.
Speaker 5 Some of the indigenous cultures I've bumped into traveling around the world, they have a very respectful thing, even in South African culture.
Speaker 5 You know, a lot of it, when you slaughter a sheep or a cow, and it's meant to be an auspicious occasion, by the way, because you know, there's this misconception people have about Africans and eating meat.
Speaker 5
And the truth is, Africans didn't used to eat that much meat. You would only slaughter an animal for a big occasion.
It was like you were giving away your daughter to another tribe.
Speaker 5
What a loss of life. What a loss of a future.
And so you would have this moment. And in that, they would teach you when you're slaughtering the animal, you'd first go and speak to it.
Speaker 5
You'd say thank you. You would have this acknowledgement.
And so I genuinely, I don't mind like vegan or not. I think everyone should be able to do what they can.
Speaker 5
But I don't like it when we make it about intelligence or not. It's like, no.
So we're saying like dumb things deserve to be killed.
Speaker 2
So there's a famous philosopher, Jeremy Bentham, in the late 18th century, who already made the point. It's not about how smart animals are.
It's not about can they talk, can they reason?
Speaker 2 It's about can they suffer.
Speaker 2
I like that. That's the essential point.
There was a recent
Speaker 2 scientific committee who published this big report about when you cook
Speaker 2 crabs alive, well,
Speaker 2
they suffer immensely, right? I think that matters. Look, I'm not fundamentally against eating meat, not at all.
What I'm against is factory farming. And I think it's really important to acknowledge
Speaker 2 as a consumer in the world today is that, what is it, 95, 98% of all meat comes from factory farms.
Speaker 2 So if you say, well, I'm radically going to cut down the amount of meat I eat, you know, I'm just going to eat meat that was hunted or something like that or that was really raised in an ethical way.
Speaker 2
I mean, that's fine. But then please also acknowledge that you will have to eat 5% as much or something.
Yeah,
Speaker 5
which I think is necessary. I think we have too much of it.
I want to know what you think about it through the lens of, let's say, capitalism.
Speaker 5 When I told some of my friends you were coming on the podcast, the first thing some of them said was, oh, it's the guy who hates capitalism. I love him.
Speaker 5 You know, they were like, he hates, he hates business and he hates capital. I love him.
Speaker 2 Then I was like, I don't know.
Speaker 5 Does he think of himself that way? And I wondered, and I still do, do you think there's such a thing as good capitalism? Do you think companies can do good?
Speaker 5 You know, you talk about humans being kind, but in your research and in your work, do you think that can be extended to companies?
Speaker 2 Oh, absolutely. You know, I'm a pretty old-fashioned European social democrat.
Speaker 2 So I think that sometimes some tasks are best done by the government, sometimes by civil society, and sometimes by markets, right?
Speaker 2
I wouldn't want the government to try and invent an iPhone and to market it to customers. You know, they're probably going to be really bad at it.
Just look at the Soviet Union.
Speaker 2 So actually, one thing I like about having moved to the United States is that, yeah, some cliches are really true. There's a much more entrepreneurial culture here.
Speaker 2 So, a couple of my friends launched this journalism platform in Amsterdam a decade ago, and they had this night where they presented the plan, right?
Speaker 2 We want to revolutionize journalism, we want to really change it, not focus on all the bad news, but focus on the structural important things.
Speaker 2 And what happens in the Netherlands, if you pitch something new like that, you know, like 90% of the people there will say, ah, is that going to work? Ah, probably don't bother.
Speaker 2 And then if it doesn't work, then they're like, yes, he told you so. I recently had a dinner like that here in New York
Speaker 2 where
Speaker 2 someone invited me to talk to a bunch of journalists and entrepreneurs and blah, blah, blah.
Speaker 2 I say, well, I have this idea for starting an organization that helps as many talented people as possible to work on the most pressing issues of our time. And I was like, yeah, absolutely.
Speaker 2
That's going to work. Yeah, you're going to build this huge global movement of ambitious idealists.
And I can't see why it's not going to work. Go you.
Speaker 2 And actually, if you're building something new, if you're trying something new, that is really what you want.
Speaker 5
So, um, yeah, you want you want you want that push in the back. That's what you want.
Exactly.
Speaker 2
So, no, I'm not like this whole debate about socialism versus capitalism, it's like a dichotomy that doesn't exist. Sweden is a capitalist country, right? Denmark is capitalist.
It's like
Speaker 2 you can be a pluralist.
Speaker 2 You can have rules. You can have a flourishing economy where billionaires actually pay their taxes.
Speaker 2 And the fact that we think we have to choose between either or, that it's either, you know, Elon Musk paying very little in taxes, taking over the government, or, you know, the Netherlands or Denmark where you can fall asleep on the street and it's very hard to be an entrepreneur.
Speaker 2 There's something in the middle, probably.
Speaker 5
Yeah, I think we are living in a world where everything's being distilled. You and I talk about this a lot.
It's like,
Speaker 5 it feels like the world is becoming less and less tolerant. of people holding multiple ideas, even if those ideas aren't in conflict.
Speaker 5
Like people will say to you, no, you can't think that. And you're like, but why can I not think that? Because you think something else.
And I'm like, Yes, but these two things are not separate.
Speaker 5 They're not even in conflict with one another. And I think if we lose that as people, we then become one-dimensional in our thinking, in our problem solving.
Speaker 5 And then we, I think we experienced fractures in society that aren't necessarily real. Does that make sense?
Speaker 6 Yeah, but I guess my thing is on the billionaire front, I think the fact that these billionaires exist seems like a profound failure.
Speaker 2 I agree.
Speaker 2 But I agree. No, no, no.
Speaker 5 I agree with that.
Speaker 6 I'm just like, to accumulate a billion of a thing is a lot.
Speaker 5
It's just like one billion. I think a billionaire.
Like, how did we get here?
Speaker 2 That's my question.
Speaker 6 In any system, because we know that there are, you know, under socialism, there are people that hoard and steal and also have a billion.
Speaker 6 So I'm like, shouldn't we be in a world where we're like, do we want billionaires? Like, forget them paying more taxes. Like,
Speaker 6 I'm even like to the left of you. I'm like, I just don't think they should exist.
Speaker 5 But you don't mean the people. We are going to state that for the record.
Speaker 2 She just means that
Speaker 2 the financial
Speaker 6 I love all the founders. Yes, yeah.
Speaker 2 She doesn't mean she just means the people.
Speaker 6 No, but I just honestly believe that like that's an expression. Like you know how you say intensive farming.
Speaker 2 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 6 Okay, so it's a failure of your imagination. I believe like the fact that we're like, but let me throw this at you.
Speaker 5 What if I told you you can live in a world where there's billionaires and the issue isn't that there are aren't billionaires. The issue is where the water level is at the bottom.
Speaker 5 I think that it's more important to think about where a person who is never going to be a billionaire sits.
Speaker 5 So if somebody has a good education and Rodger, you speak about this with like, let's say, just income and basic income and a guaranteed income.
Speaker 5 Like, I think if we lived in a world where we're focusing on making sure that everyone at the bottom has a good time, the top doesn't really bother us that much.
Speaker 5 And it's like, all right, there's always going to be somebody at the top. But the question is, where are you in relation to them? Does that make sense?
Speaker 6 Yeah, I just think with to be a billionaire you have to hoard and i don't believe in wealth hoarding i think it's because like to you speaking about occupy world shoot the thing that bothered people is that like the gap between the have and the have nots has widened so much and it's been at the benefit of this billionaire class so i can't i can't just imagine any world where we're like we're okay with having that if somebody makes five or seven thousand dollars more a year like so i'm basically telling you next time you go to davos you should be like he's never going back forget paying more taxes
Speaker 2 You guys need to give all your men's money. He's never going back.
Speaker 5 Unless you've got a billion, you're not going anywhere.
Speaker 2 Okay, let me try and find a way to get back to Davos because I'm actually going to say something nice about billionaires. Oh, here we go.
Speaker 2
Here we go. I don't know if I've ever done that on a podcast, but here I go.
So, I was studying the history of malaria. As you may have known, may know we recently developed these amazing vaccines.
Speaker 2
Like, for the first time in history, we've got them. This has been one of the most deadliest diseases in all world history.
And it took us decades and decades to finally get the vaccine.
Speaker 2 And I was wondering, like, why did it take so long? Turns out that actually in the early 80s, scientists already understood that we could very, yeah, we could develop a vaccine.
Speaker 2 The problem was that it was mostly poor people in poor countries who were dying from it and a lot.
Speaker 2 So between 1980 and 2020, around 40 million people died from malaria, which is about as much as how many people died in Europe during the Second World War.
Speaker 2 And for HIV AIDS, there was a massive movement in wealthy countries because also wealthy people were dying from HIV-AIDS. So we developed amazing medicines against that, but not for malaria.
Speaker 2 The tragic thing and the embarrassing thing is that it took a tech billionaire, in this case, Bill Gates, in the year 2000, to say, okay, well, let's actually finance the research that is necessary.
Speaker 2 That governments are not doing it.
Speaker 2
And also not like the liberal governments, like socialist government Denmark wasn't doing it. The Netherlands wasn't doing it.
And
Speaker 2 I think that is
Speaker 2 something where sometimes philanthropy can play a role to do that stuff that is so neglected because it's so unpopular to do.
Speaker 2
And yeah, I think like someone like Bill Gates deserves an enormous amount of credit for it. He really changed the course of history in that respect.
So, okay, that's it. That's the
Speaker 5 one nice thing I've got a pro-billionaire statement out of Ruck. I mean, this is
Speaker 5 massive.
Speaker 5 Don't go anywhere because we got more. What now after this?
Speaker 6 Rugga, I'm really curious for people at home who have some sort of moral ambition but don't know how to channel it and they don't necessarily want to go vegan, what can you do in your little patch of the world to make it better?
Speaker 2 So I guess one of the problems with progressive these days is that they have all these rules of life that are about
Speaker 2 basically about how you live your own personal life so you're not supposed to fly you're not supposed to eat meat you're not supposed to have kids you're not supposed to use plastic straws um and yeah to really limit your environmental footprint i think the problem with that kind of reasoning is that in the best possible scenario if you've done everything right then you have a environmental footprint of zero and you might as well not have have existed right so then death is the highest ideal.
Speaker 2 You might just might as well just kill yourself.
Speaker 2 I think we got to talk much more about the actual positive things we can do to make this world a much better place.
Speaker 2 And what history teaches me is that that always starts with groups coming together.
Speaker 2 There's this beautiful quote from Margaret Mead, the anthropologist, who said that we should never doubt the power of small groups of thoughtful, committed citizens to change the world.
Speaker 2 In fact, it's the only thing that ever has.
Speaker 2 So, I guess we need safe spaces for do-gooders who come together, places where you don't have to be embarrassed that you actually believe that some things could be radically improved.
Speaker 2 So, that's, I guess, my most important advice. Find those bubbles, those cults, maybe,
Speaker 2
of people who are actually like, yeah, we're not cynical. We're actually going to do something.
We're actually going to build something.
Speaker 5 Tell us a little bit about your, you know,
Speaker 5 it sounds like you're assembling like a suicide squad of experts to change the world, which
Speaker 5
I love this idea. And I think I've loved it because I think of it through a different lens.
So
Speaker 5 I've felt, I think for most of my adult life, that it's sad that we funnel people into parts of life where they will have the most income, but not the most impact.
Speaker 5 Or the impact that they'll have won't affect or impact the most people positively, right? And it's not even because of them. It's just what we do.
Speaker 5 Rodka, you're going for like everyone, just like the math geniuses, the statisticians, all these people. Like, what are you aiming for? And what do you hope to achieve?
Speaker 2
Well, take a look at all these Ivy League universities. Read the college essays of the students when they come in.
And it's all about the big problems they want to solve.
Speaker 2
You know, they want to work at the UN, solving world hunger. They want to fight the next pandemic.
They want to fight the tobacco industry, create...
Speaker 2 beautiful new innovations that make this world a much better place.
Speaker 2 And then the years go by and McKinsey knocks on their door and they end up, you know, being a strategy consultant or a corporate lawyer or a banker and something is lost along the way.
Speaker 2 And I think that waste of talent is really one of the greatest wastes of our time.
Speaker 2 I would love to live in a society where the most ambitious, talented, driven people who've been given a lot also work on the most pressing and important issues. So
Speaker 2
that's actually why I've moved to New York. We were kick-starting the U.S.
chapter of the School for Moral Ambition. That's what my next book is called.
Speaker 2
So moral ambition is the combination of the idealism of an activist plus the ambition of an entrepreneur. Moral ambition.
And
Speaker 2 we basically want to help as many people as possible to quit those soul-crunching, not super socially useful jobs and to work on something that actually matters.
Speaker 2 I think we got to redefine what it means to be successful. Successful is not about having that corner office or having that fancy LinkedIn resume.
Speaker 2
It's about making an actual difference and make future historians proud. That's what being successful really should be about.
Hmm.
Speaker 5
Make future historians proud. That seems like a hat for some reason.
It seems like a hat. And I don't know what color it would be, but it's, but it, but it seems like one.
Speaker 5 I know this is going to sound like a weird question, but should we care about what the future would think of us? And what I mean by that is
Speaker 5 we don't know how we will be perceived by the future.
Speaker 5 We look back on many great people now and we're like, nope, they're terrible.
Speaker 6 Gandhi.
Speaker 5
Yeah, yeah. And for many different reasons, for me, you know what I mean? But we do it.
We just do it, right? Rightly or wrongly, we do it.
Speaker 5 And so I sometimes wonder, I go, should we even care about the historians of the future? Or should we just be like, we're just trying to do what's good for now?
Speaker 5 And then, hey, man, you future people will judge us all you want, but we're not here.
Speaker 5 What do you think?
Speaker 2 Well, I think that meaning is created by humans. And
Speaker 2 I guess one of our messages to all these, you know, privileged and wealthy people, some of them, you know, who get so rich that they can buy a building on Harvard and have it named after them. Yeah.
Speaker 2
The message is like, no one's going to remember you for that. No one's going to give a shit 100 years from now that your name is on it.
They'll have to ask Chet GPT, if that still exists.
Speaker 2 Like, who the fuck is this guy?
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 2
we talked earlier about the British abolitionists. One thing that struck me is that the British Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade was founded by 12 individuals.
One of them was a writer.
Speaker 2
So there is a place for someone like me. One of them was a lawyer.
So they can be useful as well. But 10 out of 12 were entrepreneurs.
Speaker 2 People who had built their own companies, people who had scaled their own companies, who may have been in the Forbes 400, if that would have existed at the time.
Speaker 2 But at some point, they thought, you know what?
Speaker 2 I'm going to build a legacy that actually matters. If they
Speaker 2 just have been rich or like successful entrepreneurs, no one would have remembered them.
Speaker 2 It's because they took up the fight against the greatest moral atrocity of their time. That's why we remember them today.
Speaker 5 So essentially, you're appealing to the ego.
Speaker 2 It's a mixture. I think it's fine that people are motivated by, again,
Speaker 2 multiple things.
Speaker 2 It can be a little bit of vanity. I mean,
Speaker 2 if you look back, you know, one of your shows on Netflix, some part of you must think like, oh, this is pretty cool, right?
Speaker 2
When I have, you know, my new book in my hands, like, oh, this is awesome. Yeah.
That's fine. That's a completely natural motivation.
Speaker 2 At the same time, yeah, I do also genuinely care about the suffering of those who are oppressed, of the animals, all the things that we've talked about.
Speaker 2 I think it's fine to be motivated by multiple things at the same time.
Speaker 5 I want to have a conversation with you after you've lived in New York for a year or two.
Speaker 5
I don't wish this on you. Please let me be clear.
I really don't. But I think like the amateur scientist in me does.
Speaker 5 And I would love to see how much your worldview is going to be shifted or how I know it will be, but I'd love to know how it will be shifted by you existing in a place that is going to push every theory that you have.
Speaker 5 You come from a place where people are looked after.
Speaker 5 You know, you come from a place where healthcare and, you know, people think about how much time you work and how much maternity leave, paternity leave, schools, what's in your food.
Speaker 5 And I would love to speak to you in like a year or two and just see, like, have you become more hopeful, more curmudgeony?
Speaker 5 Have you lost hope or are you just like now Rutger Bregman, the billionaire, just being like, let me just get a billion and then we'll continue this journey?
Speaker 5 Do you think, how resilient do you think you are to the press that comes from living in a place that sort of hasn't fostered your ideas?
Speaker 2 So I think the way to be morally resilient is to make commitments in public. I mean, that's the point of things like marriage, for example, right? You say in public, you know,
Speaker 2 I'm marrying this person.
Speaker 2 And the same is true for things like, I don't know, sticking to veganism. I just said on this podcast, right? Yeah, I'm a vegan.
Speaker 2 So I guess that makes it much more difficult now for me to not be a vegan in public.
Speaker 2 I think we could do the same for similar things.
Speaker 2 Also with our wealth, for example, one thing I've experienced is that it's much easier to give money away if you don't have it. So for this new book, I actually thought, okay,
Speaker 2 that's like a great resource that we can use to build this movement. You know what?
Speaker 2 I'm giving all of it away in advance because it's so much more difficult once you have the actual money in your bank. I like that.
Speaker 5 So you're pre-giving the money away.
Speaker 2 Yes, yes, yes. And it's.
Speaker 5 You know what this actually makes me think of?
Speaker 5
We have a friend, a mutual friend in common we've worked with, but you know. from South Africa.
His name's David Kibuka. And David would always say the same thing to us.
Speaker 5 He'd always go, he'd always be like, I don't understand why America gives you your money and then asks you for it back.
Speaker 2 He's like, that's why people hate taxes.
Speaker 5
They don't hate taxes because they're paying taxes. They're paying taxes because they just take the money from me.
You know what the tax is supposed to be. Just don't make me give it to you twice.
Speaker 6 He's also a guy that gives away tons of money all the time without even thinking about it.
Speaker 2 Yeah, no, no, he gives everyone money.
Speaker 5 Maybe that's, do you think this would work in our society? Like, so
Speaker 5 David's side of it, I actually agree with. I think sometimes people just are reticent to the idea of giving the money, but if it was taken before they knew, they'd be like, whatever.
Speaker 5 Even the idea of tax.
Speaker 5 I know that you say taxes, taxes, taxes, and people must pay more taxes.
Speaker 5 But a lot of people will say, yeah, you know what, Radka, I pay my taxes and then the government doesn't use the tax correctly. And I don't see the roads improving.
Speaker 5
And I don't see the schools improving. Oh, but you know what I see improving? I see bombs.
I see more bombs. I see more fighter jets.
Wow, Rutger, you're telling me to pay more tax.
Speaker 5
And the more tax I pay, the more missiles are made. And I think a lot of people are struggling with.
Now, obviously, some people just want to keep their money. Don't get me wrong.
Speaker 5
But there are many people who feel like they're funding the worst, but not the best. And this is moving, by the way, across political lines.
This is not like a Republican or Democrat thing.
Speaker 5 This is just people across the line saying, why do we have money for a bomb, but we don't have money for a road or a school? How do you, like, how do you respond to that?
Speaker 5 Because it seems like you're sort of telling people to do something that has caused a lot of the problems as opposed to the solutions.
Speaker 2
Yeah. It's another good example where you can believe two two things at the same time.
So, on the one hand, it's important to emphasize that I'm talking about taxing the rich.
Speaker 2 And in the US, for the first time in history, billionaires now have a lower effective tax rate than working-class people.
Speaker 2 So, that's if you look at all taxes combined, it's actually lower than working-class people. Seems pretty unfair to me.
Speaker 2 At the same time, Republicans are correct in their assessment that government is just not delivering, and especially so in blue states and in blue cities.
Speaker 2 I think one of the most embarrassing things for Democrats right now is that, I mean, Texas, it takes a day in Texas to deploy as much solar energy as it would take a year in California.
Speaker 2 Yeah, there's a lot of
Speaker 2 blue states. Yeah, so many, like the not-in-my-backyard attitude is everywhere there.
Speaker 2 So this is another example of, you know, what we talked about at the beginning of the show, this progressive hypocrisy where you occupy the moral high ground, but you don't actually deliver.
Speaker 2 So I totally understand that.
Speaker 2 when a government doesn't deliver, it does make people more skeptical of paying their taxes. On the other hand, why has government been you know not been as effective as it used to be?
Speaker 2 Well, also because it's funding constraint, so it's like this-you get into it's the cycle that goes on.
Speaker 2 Yeah,
Speaker 5 I think, I think we should use what you spoke about with universities. This might be a solution, okay.
Speaker 5 Moral ambition, right?
Speaker 5 Somebody's hunger, whether it's ego-based or whether it's, you know, eternity, whatever it might be.
Speaker 5 What I think we should do is we take people's taxes
Speaker 5 and the more tax you pay, the more things get named after you.
Speaker 5
Because nobody likes it. I love that.
Yeah, nobody likes things being, like, everybody loves it.
Speaker 6 You get a bench in the.
Speaker 5 No, no, no, no. Benches is nothing.
Speaker 5 That's like if you paid a little bit of tax.
Speaker 5
I'm talking like highways. Oh.
Like you paid the most tax this year. We are now driving on the Jeff Bezos Highway.
Speaker 5 But, but, but it must be, it must be, it's not about like the money because that's where the trick comes in.
Speaker 5 It must be about the percentage of your income that you paid because that's where the trick is, right?
Speaker 5 Yeah, and so you go, an average working person, and they you find their tax rates or what 20-something percent.
Speaker 5 That person, we go, okay, Jonathan Maids, there's your road, and then we just get like digital billboards, we switch the things up.
Speaker 2
I think it could work. I really like the idea.
One, one other thing that might be easier to implement and to actually do. I don't do easy, I just do good.
Speaker 2 But maybe, maybe some magazine could have like the Forbes 400 version of doing good,
Speaker 2 right? Where like the
Speaker 2 entrepreneurs who, yeah, really improve the most people's lives that year.
Speaker 2
Because we know that many of these billionaires and entrepreneurs, they are ego-driven. You know, they're driven by that vanity.
So can't we use that energy and that fact of human nature for good?
Speaker 2 I would really love to see that because I think it would really drive some of those billionaires out there.
Speaker 2 It would really drive them nuts if they would be very low on the list and they'd be like, oh, next year I want to get married.
Speaker 5 The secret is the club. I secretly believe that most of the world is just governed by how well people are treated in club environments.
Speaker 5
And if you just go like this way, Mr. Bezos, then he's like, oh, I'm doing something right.
But if you're like, sorry, Jeff, you're not getting in. Why? Yeah, your tax rate, buddy.
Speaker 5 You know, and then just be like, oh, Mrs. Chawalski, come on in.
Speaker 5 I think we could switch something up. We could make it really really interesting.
Speaker 2
This is like the most fundamental currency of society. It's not money, but it is status.
It's like, how do you earn respect in a society?
Speaker 2 One thing that I found out once I was studying these British abolitionists is that they were actually part of a broader cultural shift. So the main...
Speaker 2 British abolitionist was a guy called William Wilberforce, one of those evangelicals. And he actually said that it was his life's mission to make doing good more fashionable.
Speaker 2 On his deathbed, when he was being asked, like, what are you most proud of? He didn't talk about his leading role in abolishing the slave trade.
Speaker 2
He said, he talked about his missionary activities in India. For him, abolitionism was just a part of something bigger, you know? Yeah.
And I think, honestly, that's what we need today.
Speaker 2 We've got to redefine what it means to be successful. And it's fine if people then do it for, yeah,
Speaker 2 a yearning for a certain kind of status. But yeah, the way we define success today, I think it's ruining us.
Speaker 5 I like this. So
Speaker 5
you're starting a new journey. We know what you're going to be doing.
We know what your what now is.
Speaker 5 I would love to issue out a challenge to you, just for you, to yourself. What do you think we should check back in on with you in a year to see if it's changed or shifted?
Speaker 5 What's the most shaky thing in your life right now where you're like, oh man,
Speaker 5 this might shift?
Speaker 2
In my personal life. Yeah.
Well, apart from just becoming a father again. Yeah, so I've spent 10 years in what I like to call the awareness business.
Speaker 2 You know, you write books, you write articles, you stand on stages in Davos or in Vancouver at a tech conference, and then you just hope that some other people will do the actual work of making the world a better place.
Speaker 2 And after 10 years of doing that, I became quite fed up with myself. I experienced this emotion, you could call it moral envy.
Speaker 2
You know, you study some of those pioneers doing their great work today or some of them in the past. Yeah.
And you're like, God, I wish I was like them, right?
Speaker 2 I wish I was also actually having some skin in the game and actually taking a risk and not just being on the sidelines
Speaker 2 giving my opinion. There's this beautiful quote from Theodore Roosevelt
Speaker 2 about, you know, that it's, it's, it's, it's really about the people who are in the arena, you know, not about the people who stand on the sidelines and just share their opinions.
Speaker 2
So, yeah, that's, that's the journey I'm on right now. I've basically quit my career as a writer, I guess.
It will take a long time to write another book.
Speaker 2 And I'm now, you know, trying to kickstart this organization and to really turn it into a global movement, to help as many people as possible to join the fight against the next pandemic, against the breakdown of democracy, against the tobacco industry, you name it.
Speaker 2 So a year from now, I hope to have actually achieved something there that is not just about spreading awareness and being on a podcast that a lot of
Speaker 2 people listen to, but maybe actually
Speaker 2
improving people's lives in a tangible way. That'd be great.
Oh, I like that for you.
Speaker 5 Well, you know what? I will still hopefully be in the business of bringing awareness to people who are bringing awareness, I hope.
Speaker 2
And a good laugh. I mean, life is about many things.
It's not just about doing good things. Definitely.
It's about. Yeah, man, I agree with that.
Speaker 5
But thank you, Rodka. Thanks.
Thanks for joining us. And good luck.
Speaker 5 I think one of the things I've always loved about talking to you is you present like a... It's a very sober view of what we're actually trying to do.
Speaker 5 So some people have an idea of you that's based on clips, which is the world we live in.
Speaker 5 So they think you are the guy who hates billionaires, or they think you're the guy who hates capitalism, or they think you are the guy who thinks everything is fixable tomorrow.
Speaker 5 But what I like about sitting down with you, reading your books, whatever it is, is that
Speaker 5
it's a really sober look at what we could and should do in the world, you know, to try and make it a better place for everyone. So thank you again.
Good luck with
Speaker 5
the baby life. We appreciate you.
Thanks, man. Thank you.
Speaker 2 Thank you. Thanks for having me.
Speaker 5 What Now with Trevor Noah is produced by Spotify Studios in partnership with Day Zero Productions. The show is executive produced by Trevor Noah, Sanaz Yamin, and Jody Avigan.
Speaker 5
Our senior producer is Jess Hackle. Claire Slaughter is our producer.
Music, Mixing and Mastering by Hannes Brown. Thank you so much for listening.
Speaker 5 Join me next Thursday for another episode of What Now?