Philosopher spells out how populists defeated liberal democracy | John Gray interview

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  • Опубликовано: 16 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 880

  • @whisperwednesday1
    @whisperwednesday1 Год назад +55

    Ollie is absolutely right to let him talk, just as Aaron was. He has a fascinating mind but we don't have to agree with it all.

    • @qeitkas594
      @qeitkas594 Год назад +4

      What is exactly so brilliant then about what he said?

    • @aristocraticrebel
      @aristocraticrebel Год назад +4

      What do you disagree with?

    • @bogdiworksV2
      @bogdiworksV2 Год назад +2

      He does understand the reasons that lead to populism.

    • @gmw3083
      @gmw3083 Год назад +7

      ​@@aristocraticrebelHe's wrong about putin and Russia. For that, listen to Scott Ritter, John Mearsheimer, Douglas MacGregor and Jeffrey Sachs.

    • @minimalist279
      @minimalist279 Год назад +1

      Gray needs a heavy weight to interview him. Bastani did a good job.
      Foundation of Eurocentric thought, everything it seems needs a label . IMHO the entire world going ' right'? You have approximately 20-30 percent of people in your midst who miss the good old days ... for the last three decades they have been organising behind the scenes ... this is their decade. 😮 However they know the arc of the universe bends towards fairness 😊 . ...hate cannot be sustained .

  • @enemyofthestatewearein7945
    @enemyofthestatewearein7945 Год назад +58

    Interesting points, some of which I agree with and some I don't. What I do disagree with is the root of populism. In my view it's not fundamentally ideological, it is merely a symptom of something wider. Ideological populism is something that's emerged on both left and right as a consequence of the failure of the neoliberal economic consensus to deliver improving (or even stable) living standards for the majority. Widespread public discontent provides a a political opportunity for demagogues, and in such periods they inevitably emerge from the fringes. When we look at history, there are a great many examples where sustained economic dislocation was the catalyst for reactionary political periods.
    Essentially it's a manifestation of government failure to deliver economic stability for the many, resulting in blame games and radicalization of the electorate. It's a phenomena that the Chinese government understands all too well, hence their relentless focus on growing the economy to becalm the populous. It's therefore unlikely in my view that western populism will subside, until a new economic consensus, that demonstrably benefits the majority, becomes firmly established. And this will be very difficult to deliver when various tyrants are deliberately stoking global economic upsets e.g. in the energy markets.

    • @MrMarinus18
      @MrMarinus18 11 месяцев назад +3

      I do not think "cancel culture" actually exists. Social norms have always existed and I don't feel they are more strict now than before.
      I think the major change is the pacification of socialists after the fall of the USSR and the reforms in China. Many socialists no longer feel they can blame capitalists directly or speak to people's anger which gives fascists a monopoly on that. I think a big reason why Bernie Sanders has been so successful is because he rejected that notion and his book that he's promoting about rejecting the notion that anger is bad.

    • @MrMarinus18
      @MrMarinus18 11 месяцев назад

      There is no radical left. That collapsed in the 1990's and it's not really found it's footing and many still live in the past before the fall of the USSR. Like I said Bernie Sanders is a very notable exception and I think something leftists around the world should learn from.

    • @wasdwasdedsf
      @wasdwasdedsf 11 месяцев назад

      various tyrants stoking global economic upsets in the energy markets... you mean like the authoritarian governments in the west, for instance germany who bans russian gas as well as their own nuclear power to see their populaces electricity costs go up tenfold?

    • @wasdwasdedsf
      @wasdwasdedsf 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@MrMarinus18 "I do not think "cancel culture" actually exists. Social norms have always existed and I don't feel they are more strict now than before."
      did people usually get 22 years for isnurrection despite not even being near the capitol that day or even had ANY evidence against them for any kidn of plot?
      did people usually get a year in prison over memes on twitter, when a person on the left who did the IDENTICAL meme in reverse, nobody even batted an eye over?

    • @MrMarinus18
      @MrMarinus18 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@wasdwasdedsf
      The first one is yes, American communists have been jailed on false insurrection charges for a long time.
      The evidence was very strong and the US justice system has been bogus for a long time. Blacks and socialists have experienced this for a very long time. January 6th is unusual cause it's a time the police state was turned against the people it usually serves.
      So what you describe does happen. The aftermath of January 6 was not unusually harsh, just unusual who it targeted.
      And I have no idea who you are referring to here. Though considering that corporations are naturally inclined to be right wing and the vast, vast majority of terror attacks are by right wing people I'm going to assume you're thinking of a false equivelance.
      You have protected people in the US and making death threats against those is punished harsher than making death threats to people without that protected status.

  • @LS-xs7sg
    @LS-xs7sg Год назад +85

    If you ignore a majority population on the issues of mass immigration and selling off national assets for 40+ years you can’t complain when people become disenchanted with the mainstream

    • @brainbane8550
      @brainbane8550 Год назад

      Do you think Great Britain should send people back where they came from along with the wealth we stole from them? I do, but it would break this country, because we're such a bunch of useless bootlickers we squandered all that wealth we created from empire and slavery by letting the landlords take it all.

    • @matthewwilliams7335
      @matthewwilliams7335 Год назад +11

      Bingo

    • @hovefactually7505
      @hovefactually7505 Год назад +7

      Who do the two different 'you's in this sentence refer to?

    • @AG-ni8jm
      @AG-ni8jm Год назад

      They can get over immigration and suck it up. As for privatisation, the public voted for it when they elected Thatcher, Reagan, etc

    • @LS-xs7sg
      @LS-xs7sg Год назад +1

      @@hovefactually7505 Those liberal metropolitan types who complain about western populations turning to anti-immigration and pro-nationalisation movements. i.e. UKIP & Corbyn

  • @jameswebb4593
    @jameswebb4593 Год назад +32

    I am not a philosopher , nor a political student . What I am is an average English senior citizen. But I can only agree to a small amount of whats being said. .
    Since WW2 the sole American Foreign policy has focused upon regime change . Unless nations copy the American political structure , its worthless . Europe 1947/8 they brought in the Marshall Plan , its aim was to stop the spread of communism across Europe , mainly France , Italy and Germany . NATO was a natural offspring .
    China , American supported Chiang Kai-Shek , its recorded that Roosevelt wanted him to control French Indo China post war.
    Greece America meddled in their civil war 1947-1950 . Supplying vast amount of military and economic aid to the national government.
    Iran , after putting the Shah into power , they hatched to dispose of him . Outcome Khamenei became president in 1981.
    Latin America from Cuba to Chile . The American government has overthrown legitimately elected leaders , because they have been bad for American business . It would be easier to name those countries that the USA hasn't used the CIA to influence coup d'etat's . Unofficial name . the Banana Wars.
    My list of South American Countries that the USA has NOT been subvertly involved with.

    • @rationalactor
      @rationalactor Год назад

      Yes, I think you're right. Somoza , Pinochet, Marcos, it's a long list... ...and many who are incumbent as I write this who are propped up by the Yankee dollar.
      But don't forget that in every one of the places you list there were matching communist insurgencies - People's Liberation Army of fill-in-the-blank - all over the globe. (You forgot to mention Africa?)
      [We still have the PKP in Turkey, something of a living fossil.]
      So whilst I am no great fan of American global capitalism and it's tawdry culture (I know it well, having lived in the USA for 20 years, until GW Bush did it for me) I'd rather put up with it than be ruled by the demagogues, dictators or despots on offer elsewhere.
      But it's not an easy choice.

    • @Gatman900FTW
      @Gatman900FTW 10 месяцев назад

      You are absolutely right. I feel like John Gray glosses over the overt and extremely aggressive foreign meddling of the US in this interview.

    • @anguscampbell3020
      @anguscampbell3020 10 месяцев назад +1

      Every single country on the planet enganges in these same practices. The US is not some great puppet master, many many other actors from local regional powers to superpowers also act to project their power as well. The question you want to ask is do you want these other powers to push their view as well. The Iraq invasion was a terrible thing, but America was not the only power invovled. Turkey and Iran both funded proxies and committed jsut as heinous war crimes to ensure Iraq would never be a stable democracy. Russia collapsed into facism nealry a decade ago and no one but the eastern european countries noticed untill 2022. And russia has a very specific imperialist ambition for the globe. AMerica is not uniquely evil, if anythin ti defends a world order which is the only pollitical system that allows criticism of itself. This world view you espouse is an argument called appeasement, and it never worked. Look at pictures of Nevill Chaimberlain waving a paper napkin and you can decide for yourself how we can choose to engage with authoritarian governments.

    • @jameswebb4593
      @jameswebb4593 10 месяцев назад

      @@anguscampbell3020 The Marshall Plan , no such thing , he was designated to augment it . Truman Plan , his idea but the nuts and bolts were the work of the Think Tank at the Council of Foreign Relations , they actually wrote Marshall's addressing speech. Do you know who are the CFR . Its like the Freemasons only a hundred times more powerful. The truth about that club was removed from utube years ago.

    • @mikesanders8621
      @mikesanders8621 10 месяцев назад

      Angus, you really need to brush up on your US history. They have been, since their inception, the single most militarily aggressive and have taken every single opportunity to kill off any sort of left wing government to so much as consider denying them unlimited access to their land and resources. They are a nation based entirely on war, espionage, and resource extraction.

  • @maxheadrom3088
    @maxheadrom3088 Год назад +12

    Isiah Berlim said on his last interview that to impose Liberal Democracy upon others is an Ileberal action.

  • @davethewave7248
    @davethewave7248 Год назад +29

    The irony of Hobbes sweeping away the classical writers 'for treating words as realities instead of constructs', is that today the ideologues treat their won words seriously as realities [or constructing reality if not representing it]. I think the classical writers were right, in not treating language so literally, but making use of symbolic and figurative language in order to frame our sense of reality. Art not 'science'.

    • @alexgrimsson6143
      @alexgrimsson6143 10 месяцев назад

      the process of the flowing of human history that mr. gray grasps to pinpoint can't be really 'pinpointed' perhaps because he cognizes said history as an endlessly fixed-but-moving 'flow' --- much in the manner of Heraclitus's fixed but always flowing stream....apparently also subject to parallel sub process of Enantiodromia.....
      FWIW: I see Mr. Gray as a far deeper meta thinker than many of his seeming critics, iike Mr. Fukuyama......

    • @DigitalGnosis
      @DigitalGnosis 10 месяцев назад

      Check out Rortys work

    • @davethewave7248
      @davethewave7248 10 месяцев назад

      @@DigitalGnosis Sure, but he is not helpful, for he's on this side of that post modern divide.

  • @geoffreynhill2833
    @geoffreynhill2833 Год назад +9

    A brilliant analysis of the snakes & ladders of political economy past & present that deserves millions of viewers. 🤔

  • @merdiolu
    @merdiolu Год назад +38

    Great interview. As a non Briton even as a non Westerner I learned a lot about those perspectives. The past decades of easy times of 1990'ies or even before that neo liberal experimentation that became a sopcio/economic/political religion for elites in west and became a trend (like Ancien Regime before French Revolution) is the source of our current troubles and maybe would be doom us , inevitibbility of history due to decisions taken long before we had a say about them.

    • @darrenwithers3628
      @darrenwithers3628 11 месяцев назад +6

      There isn't a backlash to neo liberalism though. It's pretty much standard. The backlash is to progressive social ideas they don't understand.

    • @andrewrobinson2565
      @andrewrobinson2565 11 месяцев назад

      Don't confuse ECONOMIC liberalism and POLITICAL liberalism. They are almost the OPPOSITE of each other.

    • @bereal6590
      @bereal6590 11 месяцев назад

      They go hand in hand in a negative way when it tips the point that those who wish to be so liberal that they care nothing for others, will then weaponise and/or manufacture falsehoods within society. In this way they get the 'herd' to look the wrong way, enabling them to grab total power and total resources with impunity in the eyes of the herd (who are now blaming every underdog going).

    • @redwine2664
      @redwine2664 11 месяцев назад

      I am still waiting for a Bonaparte after all this? Who is it going to be Trump, Geert, Victor Orban, a new Putin, president Xi? I do not see none coming from the UK, because the British have proved the true bankruptcy of the Western Intellect and neo liberal ideal.

    • @darktagmaster1861
      @darktagmaster1861 11 месяцев назад +5

      No, it’s neoliberalism.

  • @andywomack3414
    @andywomack3414 Год назад +22

    So its populism, not corporate lobbyists and campaign donations that is ending our pretense at democracy.

    • @chrisfreebairn870
      @chrisfreebairn870 Год назад +1

      You appear to misunderstand .. he defines such forces as causing populism, tho he does not mention them specifically ..

    • @the-quintessenz
      @the-quintessenz Год назад +2

      Thought so too. It's good they put it into the trailer: Useless drivel ahead.

    • @andywomack3414
      @andywomack3414 Год назад

      @@chrisfreebairn870 The headline must be misleading then. Specifically says populists defeated liberal democracy. In fact it has been too many elites with too much wealth and power that has defeated liberal democracy.

    • @andywomack3414
      @andywomack3414 Год назад +3

      @@chrisfreebairn870 Could it be that "liberal democracy" is code for "capitalism?"

    • @Go2daFuture
      @Go2daFuture Год назад

      here Gray seems to be talking to liberals about why their politics failed abroad and domestically. Lobbying and campaign donations always existed, I would see them as necessary conditions for sustaining the appearance of liberal democracy rather than ending it: what's threatening the old regime is their revelation to the public, which the social media helped to make a near common-sense especially among the younger generations. to me Gray seems clear-headed enough, you might find his interview with Novara more interesting

  • @LeftLib
    @LeftLib Год назад +19

    I am pleased to see John Gray being interviewed here. Whether you agree with him or not I really hope that this conversation encourages people to think more deeply about populism, Brexit and free speech. The kinds of comments I see on Twitter and other social media from the left are very simplistic.

    • @smolderingtitan
      @smolderingtitan Год назад +7

      the kinds of comments from both left and right tend to be very simplistic on social media.

    • @brownbattler
      @brownbattler 10 месяцев назад

      @@smolderingtitanI disagree, Jordan Peterson, Joe rogan, Ben Shapiro are intellectual powerhouses that the left has no rival to.
      All I get from arguing a leftist is CNN sources that don’t survive the most basic research.

    • @brownbattler
      @brownbattler 10 месяцев назад

      @@smolderingtitanI disagree, Jordan Peterson, Joe rogan, Ben Shapiro are intellectual powerhouses that the left has no rival to.
      All I get from arguing a leftist is CNN sources that don’t survive the most basic research.

    • @he1ar1
      @he1ar1 10 месяцев назад

      The online left circa 2014/5 which was around post GFC but pre-brexit was pro-populism. This left has been completely defeated and doesn't exist anymore as a social force. The online left that has replaced it come from identity politics and various social justice movements. No. This type of left is not open to such self criticism. I place no hope in them what so ever.

    • @dontcallthemliberals3316
      @dontcallthemliberals3316 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@Dionysos640 Yeah its funny, my social science professor wrote a book on why kids should vote and it completely convinced me that there is no such thing legitimate governance and that populism is actually the ideal result of a functioning democracy.
      And yes, he drew heavily Rousseau... the nonce..

  • @robertdlucas7418
    @robertdlucas7418 Год назад +6

    Where is the Russian barbarism? I started listening but after hearing his exposition on Russia,I ceased.He should talk about western barbarism with the invasion of: Serbia,Iraq,Syria,Afghanistan,Libya,Vietnam and Panama. He disappoints as a former lecturer of history.

    • @Ggaia-d9z
      @Ggaia-d9z Год назад

      Everywhere. To begin with they caused the world wars by fabricating the protocol of the elders which in turn caused zionism.

    • @dixieericson3824
      @dixieericson3824 Месяц назад

      Poi att de

    • @stefanoparlatore7141
      @stefanoparlatore7141 16 дней назад

      Where is the Russian barbarism? In Syria, in many countries in Africa, and in Ukraine, at the moment, plus they are involved in Libya, and before they invaded Georgia, and before there was Chechnya, and before there was Afghanistan. Are you blind?

  • @brettlemoine1002
    @brettlemoine1002 11 месяцев назад +13

    I wonder how things might have been different if the DNC in the US hadn't torpedoed Bernie in the 2016 Democratic primary. Bernie spoke to a lot of the same angst at the status quo that Trump did, but with a less destructive path to resolution. Could we have seen sufficient reversal of neoliberal policies and a return to the sorts of economic stewardship of the 50s and 60s to have prevented (or at least reduced the impact of) the various demagogues rising to power now.

    • @PazLeBon
      @PazLeBon 11 месяцев назад +2

      corbyn in uk too, the media paint the pictures they want to

    • @oldishandwoke-ish1181
      @oldishandwoke-ish1181 11 месяцев назад

      @@PazLeBon And of course the mainstream media are owned by the neoliberals!

    • @Jorbz150
      @Jorbz150 5 месяцев назад

      But don't you see, if Bernie had succeeded then he would be a "populist destroying democracy."

  • @tommynocash2419
    @tommynocash2419 Год назад +11

    Interesting conversation, on some of the broad comments i was in agreement on others i was in hard disagreement but clearly an important and reasonable thinker, on corbyn he was off the mark and with russia ukraine he was off the mark on some matters pertaining to that issue he were correct on others his framing was off, regardless Interesting and worthwhile discussion

  • @fredwelf8650
    @fredwelf8650 Год назад +9

    John Gray should know that in addition to the causes of populism that he mentions, I.e. globalization, wage stagnation and housing shortage/exploitation with a potent dash of property tax, the populists are reacting to immigration. Brexit was basically a reaction to immigration, the FN and the AfD are protesting immigration. In the US where legal immigrants total well over 1M year in year out via a corporate recruiting and vetting process show up in the US as upper middle class and wealthy, whereas the corporations also pull in illegal immigrants for their low wage and subcontracting work. Where are the immigrants coming from? From nations with autocratic governments or weak states that coerce people to take flight, from war torn nations like Iraq, Afghanistan and especially Syria, several African nations and Latin/South American countries to the tune of 10’s of millions a year. In general, a South to North shift of population affected by global warming as well. Populism is a reaction to this demographic shift which is being accommodated by government policies and has fueled a frenzy of gun ownership.

    • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
      @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 Год назад

      In the late 1800s one THIRD of the population in the U.S. were foreign born immigrants - it's just that they were Western European immigrants and thus privy to Platonic "sovereignty" colonial development scams as "civilization."

    • @mikesanders8621
      @mikesanders8621 10 месяцев назад

      Who do you think put the autocrats in charge of those nations? Who funded their political campaigns? Who sold them their weapons? Who trained their soldiers? You wrote such a spiel about immigrants when you literally don't realise the US and UK installed and supported the leaders who started the wars those immigrants are fleeing. You, sir, are ignorant.

    • @fredwelf8650
      @fredwelf8650 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@mikesanders8621 You are trying to say that the US started the war in Iraq, Afghanistan, Ukraine, the civil war in Syria, Gaza, etc., which they did not, instead, the US intervened because these nations either supported terror or were allies requesting support.
      The larger context is that the US accepts more immigrants than any other country in the world. So take your ad hominem style somewhere else!

    • @mikesanders8621
      @mikesanders8621 10 месяцев назад

      @@fredwelf8650 you've bought into the propaganda well.

    • @fredwelf8650
      @fredwelf8650 10 месяцев назад

      @@mikesanders8621 No, you have. You fail to examine the quantity of terrorism, homicide and criminal activity in each nation. Then, you call it propaganda! You are the propaganda.

  • @andyreznick
    @andyreznick Год назад +6

    "The axiom, fear; the method, logic; the conclusion, despotism." - H. Trevor-Roper

  • @awuma
    @awuma Год назад +32

    22:58 The friction between Poland and Ukraine was largely invented for electoral purposes by the ruling PiS party, which lost the election to the democratic opposition. Expect Poland to become more supportive again in the coming months. The Polish election of Oct. 15 must be considered a major defeat for national populism. 23:47 It's becoming clear that Crimea is untenable by the Russians in the way that Kherson became untenable. John Gray does not seem to recognise that Crimea is more vulnerable as Russian-held territory than, say, the eastern Donbass, and of greater existential importance to Ukraine. The Russian population in Crimea can be used as hostages for the return of the Ukrainians held in Russia, with mutual deportation in the way such deportations were done after WWII in this part of the world. 27:47 What is so frustrating is that the West, if united, has all the means to dominate the 21st century. Both Russia and China are weakened by despotic rule, while major countries such as Japan, India and Brazil probably recognise the West as being closer to their national aspirations and offering a better deal for achieving prosperity. The defeat of the Russian-Iranian-N.Korean axis and containment of China are the route to achieving this new Euro-American peace. Unfortunately, the West seems fragmented for seemingly parochial, irrational reasons.

    • @stig44
      @stig44 Год назад

      Yeah, pro-german parties probably will form the government, so it is rather expected to totally withdrawn aid to Ukraine, or lower it to a German level ("just for show" level).

    • @Go2daFuture
      @Go2daFuture Год назад +5

      one question and one objection:
      question) "Crimea is more vulnerable as Russian-held territory than, say, the eastern Donbass, and of greater existential importance to Ukraine." -> how do you substantiate that? I heard from a few people, not particularly with more credentials, that Crimea had been the Russian territory and the majority of the locals support the Russian ruling. I also heard the Ukrainian government is misconceived to be an example of the Western style liberal democracy, but in fact had had a worse authoritarian government in the past.
      objection) "the West, if united, has all the means to dominate the 21st century." -> falls exactly into what Mr. Gray in the video criticizes as the pitfall of nostalgism, fantasizing that if one condition was met the prosperity of the 90s will be restored. I find this argument the least convincing, considering there are underlying causes which are often ignored. The collapse of the universal regime of ethics or values, or in other words the reason that people seem less supportive of the liberal narrative in international relations is not because the liberal politicians have been complacent or playing silly games against each other but their competitors, conservatives, Marxists, nationalists, anarchists and so on are gaining better means to voice their interests unlike in the 90s and 00s. The "means for the West to dominate" were military might, cultural superiority, international institutions, and the educational institutions which the elites of the Third World would subscribe and find references in, not anymore since it is less and less the demand for them to attain a Western style modernity, liberal democracy, ethics or even aesthetics, and I think a lot of the liberals don't get that they simply fall short of the new demand. It is true that the authoritarian government in China is a weakness in particular senses, but it also works as a strength if you consider how the government is able to regulate finance, big banks, and tech corporations with a snap if need be. Neither US nor Germany are capable of this, if Europe had a competitive digital platform or fintech to match the US or China at all.
      Japan, India, and Brazil are also not to be reduced to the easy allies of the West. Politically speaking, yes, Japan and India will most definitely stand on the US side to deal with China in their respective regions, but the degree to which they rely their economic prosperity on Chinese capital is massive, no less than Europe or Australia find it vital to rely on China both as the main source of supply and of demand. Lastly, I think there is hardly any South American governments apart from Chile that feels about the West the way you described it. They are not even in any security threats apart from those posed by the West itself, particularly the United States--geographically too far from China to want military protection offered by the US.

    • @Kannot2023
      @Kannot2023 Год назад +5

      ​@@Go2daFutureCrimeea belonged to tatars before Russia, so it wasn't always Russian, the supply of Crimea is done through a narrow istmus, which closed will make life harder. Donbas has a huge land link.

    • @Kannot2023
      @Kannot2023 Год назад

      Also Western Roman empire had potential when it fell, but it had incompetent and corrupt leaders. All over the world I see incompetence. The only difference is that in west incompetents don't have the same power as tyrants from East.

    • @robertmusilbronson3118
      @robertmusilbronson3118 Год назад +4

      ​@@Kannot2023u serious? Crimea was russian longer than N America was american. So unless u wanna rewrite the borders of basically all the nation states in the world, u shd drop this line of thought

  • @rathstar
    @rathstar Год назад +16

    Love these longer deep dives into topics. Something really missed for the standard news. Thanks.

    • @merilynpa
      @merilynpa 11 месяцев назад +1

      I absolutely agree.

    • @mybrainhurts3727
      @mybrainhurts3727 8 месяцев назад

      Probably because this doesn't qualify as news. Do you know what else the news misses?... Creative writing lessons.

  • @hanson666999
    @hanson666999 11 месяцев назад +7

    A fascinating interview. Thanks for this Joe and John.

  • @johnwilsonwsws
    @johnwilsonwsws Год назад +16

    at 19:10 the US/British invasion of Iraq is described as a "folly". That's a novel way to apologise for the war crimes committed and to deflect from the material interests behind the invasion. The notion that the invasion was justified because of the crimes of the Hussein regime doesn't withstand even cursory scrutiny. If the Nuremburg Trials standard was applied the invasion, a war of aggression, those who organised it would be convicted of war crimes.
    The discussion just shows liberals have made their peace with imperialist war. (I can't find any video on this channel addressing the persecution of Julian Assange. Is that right? Is Wikileaks exposure of US war crimes in Iraq of no interest? Were those war crimes a "folly"?)
    We are facing WW3. The material interests of US banks, finance houses and corporations requires the use of the US war machine to maintain US hegemony over the world economy. This is why the US provoked the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Putin's criminal invasion sought to defend the interests of the Russian oligarchy). This is also why the US is preparing for war with China. The other imperialist powers are preparing to fight to defend their interests with Germany and Japan rearming.
    The capitalist class have a "solution" to the present crisis: 1. war (make their rivals and other pay), 2. austerity (make the working class pay) and 3. dictatorship (suppress and crush the threat of revolution.) Anyone interested in an alternative should read the World Socialist Web Site (wsws. org)

    • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
      @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 Год назад

      Sadam Hussein was a CIA asset!! Just like Noriega - Hussein did not BEHAVE!! Corruption had been completely fortified by the CIA in both cases - chemical weapons and drug smuggling. It's hilarious how the corporate-state media can't discuss the most basic facets of reality. Noam Chomsky predicted the US would invade Iraq again - in 1998 - I know since I wrote a graduate paper on it. I got arrested twice protesting the genocidal US-led sanctions on Iraq and I passed out copies of my graduate paper while protesting, etc. By the time the "mass" protests happened it was WAY too late!! People are too indoctrinated.

    • @alexrothwell2053
      @alexrothwell2053 10 месяцев назад

      Of course the invasion of Iraq was "folly"! They expected it to be an easy ride that would produce good results, but all it did was unleash untold chaos. There was no good material interest for America and Britain - it cost us billions and delivered nothing. My objection to the war is precisely the fact that it wasn't in our material interest!

  • @mzncjdkslakpd
    @mzncjdkslakpd 11 месяцев назад +3

    Gray has swallowed some of the anti-Russian agitprop. He needs to catch up with Geoffrey Roberts, John Mearsheimer, the late Stephen Cohen, Jack Matlock (and I'm not naming less exalted but insightful people Gray may have no tome for)

    • @brunischling9680
      @brunischling9680 9 месяцев назад +1

      I agree with him falling for the anti Russian propaganda, but I would expect that he is familiar with Mearsheimers views. No respectable academic can ignore Mearsheimer. IF Gray doesn't mention him, it is deliberate. Apart from this blindspot, I think he is brilliant

    • @michaelmckay2046
      @michaelmckay2046 7 месяцев назад

      This is the same Mearsheimer who is close to Orban and members of the AfD in Germany? I'd suggest you need to understand Russian imperialism and pay attention to Putin saying Lenin invented Ukraine, while Medvedev says he wants Ukraine in the Russian federation.

    • @McRich.
      @McRich. 4 месяца назад

      ​@@michaelmckay2046 He's a Realist, he talks to anyone who will listen.

  • @andrewburgess2482
    @andrewburgess2482 Год назад +22

    The mot important things to take away from Gray are around Brexit. Brexit hasn't caused all the problems te country is experiencing it was the result of all the problems the UK has been experiencing.

    • @pnutz_2
      @pnutz_2 Год назад

      like trump, a product of the system

    • @rayt8633
      @rayt8633 Год назад +8

      Andrew, I think you are misunderstanding what he was saying. Yes, brexit was a result of large swathes of the country feeling left behind but it is also the reason why Britain is now doing worse, economically speaking, than ALL other western countries. There is a reason why the UK is at the bottom of the G7,G8 & G20 economic tables and that is because we are dealing with EXACTLY the same things everybody else is dealing with BUT we have the problems of brexit too! Brexit was a protest vote treated much the same as a by-election by the electorate in that it gave them the opportunity to give the Govt of the day a poke in the eye. Unfortunately, the nation is now suffering because of it (though 70%+ would vote to remain in the EU if they could turn the clock back according to every poll provider in the country).
      P.s Russia is in the G8 so that tells you just how bad the UK is doing!

    • @johnrmce
      @johnrmce Год назад +2

      @@rayt8633 Worse than which EU countries as recent data suggests the eurozone is going into recession

    • @johnrmce
      @johnrmce Год назад +2

      @@rayt8633 Are you talking about the same polls that predicted Remain would win comfortably in 2016

    • @jjjplane
      @jjjplane Год назад

      @@rayt8633sounding full of shit 👍🏾

  • @aion5837
    @aion5837 Год назад +3

    I've read the leading Anarchist thinkers. Not one advocates for chaos. If they do, then a direct quote would refute that claim. Anarchism is the only political theory that places Power or Authority as a central theme in its thinking.
    Liberal democracy is equivalent to Globalism. Economic liberalism - which is hardly ever debated - reduces everything to a commodity - including human labour. When this is juxtaposed with cultural liberalism its internal absurdities are laid bare.

  • @Coneman3
    @Coneman3 Год назад +12

    It’s the failure of politics that has caused the problem. An out of touch political class, caused by capitalism.

    • @miguelvelez7221
      @miguelvelez7221 Год назад

      You're missing the culpability of the masses themselves. It's our votes that give someone influence, authority and power in government and out.
      With a literal portal to the widest variety of human knowledge now in our pockets so many Choose willful ignorance, bigotry and superstition.
      Stop with the poor put upon citizens act. You don't even have to go far. George W. didn't "lie" and then people died, his administration lied and then despite all the counter narratives and information widely and easily available most in the country backed the invasion of Iraq. Even AFTER the full extent of our incompetent handling of everything became clear the citizens of the U.S. had a chance to course correct... And then handed W. Bush a landside victory.
      It's not about oppression in Western Democracies, it's about choices and we collectively keep making bad ones.

  • @peterbranagan1010
    @peterbranagan1010 11 месяцев назад +6

    For such an erudite and knowledgeable man, Gray's ignorance of the causes of the situation in Ukraine is truly frightening.
    We really are doomed when our brightest and best are so divorced from reality.

    • @ralphvandereb66
      @ralphvandereb66 11 месяцев назад

      Totally agree

    • @Adson_von_Melk
      @Adson_von_Melk 11 месяцев назад

      tell us more about your "reality" where causes of the "sutiation in Ukraine" (also known as the fascist invasion by Russia) are different and also your "reality"'s relationship to regular consumption of mushrooms.

  • @Marco-el6wq
    @Marco-el6wq Год назад +36

    Gray is fascinating, but he is an impossible interview. He speaks in chapters and doesn’t seem interested a give and take. Aaron Bastani challenged Gray in different places in the Navarro interview, but he was too besotted to take many risks. Ollie went to sleep. I expected him to perk up when Gray was so dismissive of HS2, but nothing. I’m not arguing Gray is right or wrong, only that he could be asked to wrestle with evidence that doesn’t fit with his views. After watching several interviews with Gray, I’ve lost interest in reading his book.

    • @col.hertford9855
      @col.hertford9855 Год назад +7

      It’s a monologue rather than an interview really isn’t it.

    • @jmolofsson
      @jmolofsson Год назад +7

      Yeah.
      It's *_one_* kind of making interviews, presenting the views of the interviewed rather than trying to create entertainment.
      Gray's personality has its flaws. And they shine through. But he is nevertheless both interesting and relevant.

    • @col.hertford9855
      @col.hertford9855 Год назад +1

      @@jmolofsson his was more a advert for a book, that a journalistic interview. It’s generally considered there is some form of conversation in an interview rather than just long monologues.

    • @Gobble-xh9br
      @Gobble-xh9br Год назад +6

      I agree. The Bastani interview was very disappointing. I would say he didn't actually challenge Gray much, when he did try to get a word in, Gray would just talk over him. Just starting this one and wondering if it will be the same, sounds like it will be. Gray's an interesting thinker, no question, but everything in his worldview is very black and white, which is no doubt why it appeals to so many people. There's little complexity or nuance in his broad brush strokes, and an awful lot of hyperbole. And for a philosopher, there's a LOT of assertion and not much argument. For this reason, in particular, it suits him to be interviewed by journalists rather than philosophers.

    • @mick947
      @mick947 Год назад +4

      I saw the same interview! If it wasn’t for the fact he seems a genuinely nice person, I’d of thought the way he kept interrupting Aaron was just plain rude.

  • @johnbee7729
    @johnbee7729 10 месяцев назад +5

    A wonderful 'fireside' chat. Thank you to both. As a Canadian it is interesting to have a seat and see the discussion occuring, referencing Canada's two best friends. Our next election will ljkely see a transition from hyper-liberalism to populism. And for me, it is because of what occurred early on in this discussion - conflict. Our current government does not like conflict but have been so adverse to stamping any conflict out, that those with opposing views on a topic are feeling bullied and are seeking their new saviour. I believe conflict should be embraced in order to get through the tough decisions. Going to be a rough ride.

  • @pastyman001
    @pastyman001 Год назад +31

    Gray speaks in a folksy matter of fact, down to earth way and has some interesting observations. However, while there is some interest in populists in the UK and Europe, or USA, it is easy to over exaggerate it's support, which is never in a majority ( except Hungary). Mostly it is not the largest minority. The few in power in Europe, notably Italy, are in coalitions that limit what they can do and moderate them. Nor is populism increasing. These are the ones voted out mostly after 1 term: Bolsonaro (Brazil), Trump (USA), PiS /Law & Justice (Poland) and soon in the UK. They are well beaten in France, Netherlands, Greece and Germany.

    • @davidbates3057
      @davidbates3057 Год назад +12

      I'm inclined to agree with this. It does annoy me how people equate Progressivism as Populism.
      There is a stark contrast with right-wing populism, which essentially piggy backs of already established mainstream propaganda to distract from the negatives of the establishment policy by redirecting anger onto some scapegoat, whether that be foreigners, minority identities, or even the poor in some cases, as opposed to left wing populism which is often just asking for policy agenda that, while deemed radical because it takes power away from the wealthy, much of which was already implemented a century ago with the American New Deal or the rebuilding efforts after the WW2, but has been rolled back en mass in the decades that followed in order to funnel back up to the wealthy.
      This is in large part why Right Wing populists often find office -- they are not a threat to the establishment, see nowhere near the same attacks from the mainstream media as a result, and are often exploited when they're governing continues the worst policy of the status quo to then equate left wing populism as no different when voters inevitably kick them to the kerb.

    • @aristocraticrebel
      @aristocraticrebel Год назад

      This is just Marxist drivel.@@davidbates3057

    • @aristocraticrebel
      @aristocraticrebel Год назад +10

      Majorities all over Europe agree with several main themes of populism. Immigration being the most important of them. Supermajorities in lots of European countries want less -- or even zero -- extra-European immigration. And electoral support for these parties has steadily increased over the last 20 years.

    • @seancidy6008
      @seancidy6008 Год назад

      @@davidbates3057 He is talking about trends that will take a generation to work out. Yes, the anti populists have won every battle but the war keeps going on. By the way, Netherlands and Germany are now the only net contributors to the EU.

    • @vaultsjan
      @vaultsjan Год назад +1

      Lula is not a populist at all.

  • @TheTobs50
    @TheTobs50 Год назад +28

    Really enjoyable and insightful discussion from the angle of having revalued some of Thomas Hobbes's core ideas. Very few Westerners can or want to understand Hobbes's concept of conflict as part and parcel of the human condition.

    • @isaiahrowley9830
      @isaiahrowley9830 Год назад

      Your phrasing definitely has a bit of a superior tone to it, doesn't it? Hobbes's ideas are complex, sure, but they're not beyond the grasp of anyone who takes the time to study and think about them. Frankly, you sound xenophobic.

    • @TheTobs50
      @TheTobs50 Год назад +4

      @@isaiahrowley9830 Are you now talking up to me? Must be my fault for making you feel non-superior. So I'll end with saying "just joking and I hope you feel much better".

    • @michaelle-baigue2751
      @michaelle-baigue2751 Год назад +3

      Hobbes and Rousseau end at the same point. David Graeber abd David Wengrow in their book Dawn of Everything a New History of Humanity go beyond that debate of are we born sick or made ill. Always learning

    • @p382742937423y4
      @p382742937423y4 Год назад +1

      Its true. Yet, it is easy to find dictatorships these days, in which people are fairly happy and they do choose what they have over anarchy.

    • @JoePalau
      @JoePalau Год назад

      It's helpful to read the accounts of the British Civil War by eyewitnesses to understand the horrors and bloodshed of social chaos and political anarchy. Locke offered a humane state of nature as a thought experiment on the necessary givens, a preternatural moral foundation for civil order and society. Hobbes gives us the bloody realities of continuous warring among British Religious Sects and aligned political powers. Best if we pay attention to those whose prime motivation is the punishment and incarceration of political opponents. That declaration of a war of retribution is a call for war against any and every civil order - anarchy by any other name. Hobbes lived it. Not a theoretical construct. But in an existential reality - we are playing with fire. It's a grim reality but no less real because of its grimness.

  • @thisismetoday
    @thisismetoday 11 месяцев назад +3

    “Fled to Europe”? You’d think an intelligent man like this would get it right that Britain is in fact part of Europe, but nope.

    • @jimbocho660
      @jimbocho660 5 месяцев назад

      And Europe is a part of Asia.

  • @Ricks_Shorts
    @Ricks_Shorts Год назад +14

    Ziszek, Gray - kudos for interviewing such legends.

  • @fishesphoto
    @fishesphoto 11 месяцев назад +4

    Fascinating interview. Being an American Liberal, I caught a bias against liberalism and a misunderstanding of America’s 1990’s. Much of what occurred in the 1990’s was put in motion by our conservative Presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush. They pushed free trade and NAFTA. This was opposed by American labor. It was not opposed or exposed enough by Democrats since it was an era of globalization. Yet, metaphorically all boats did not rise many sunk. This created today’s disenchanted workers ripe and ready for a populist president. Add the 2008 financial crisis and the Nation’s first black President and you have recipe for Trump. This is not hyper-liberalism, it’s the past practices of hyper conservative free market capitalism. Our wealth divide has never been greater. Now dissatisfied low paid workers and small business owners are being misinformed daily by the far right media.

  • @williamhuband7913
    @williamhuband7913 8 месяцев назад +1

    Grim, but riveting interview. Thank you for this accessible interview - Well done!

  • @domm1341
    @domm1341 Год назад +43

    Some years ago, I read John Gray’s book “Straw Dogs - Thoughts on Humans and other animals”. It changed my life.
    His new book that he’s talking about here is excellent.

    • @qeitkas594
      @qeitkas594 Год назад +4

      In what way? Can you be more specific?

    • @jonking5797
      @jonking5797 Год назад +6

      That book changed my life, too.

    • @kurisensei
      @kurisensei Год назад +5

      Same here. It was almost depressing at first, as so many illusions I relied on were wiped away. Then I came back to it again and again and it became like a balm

    • @tobylerone4285
      @tobylerone4285 Год назад +3

      I read it earlier this year and I haven’t stopped thinking about it. It will be remembered

    • @tobylerone4285
      @tobylerone4285 Год назад

      @@qeitkas594read it mate, that sort of revelation cannot be distilled

  • @Pobotrol
    @Pobotrol Год назад +16

    Thanks for some grand overview theorising, this was fascinating, very real and all rather depressing.

  • @cliffordmorris6091
    @cliffordmorris6091 Год назад +2

    Did this guy not see the interference of the US in toppling the elected president and the cruel nature of its treatment of those in the Donbas together with NATO expansion and refusing to stick to their agreements provoked this response from Putin which America stupidly believed it could win.

    • @ianbardon8581
      @ianbardon8581 11 месяцев назад

      It's the same MO where they go, but the gravy train is coming to halt.

  • @breft3416
    @breft3416 Год назад +20

    It's hilarious to me that a fella like Gray doesn't seem to follow the money and how it fools so many people.

    • @toby9999
      @toby9999 Год назад +4

      Maybe you've been fooled?

    • @First_Principals
      @First_Principals Год назад

      That would show the contradictions in what he is saying.

    • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
      @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 Год назад +1

      being an academic IS following the money - I mean he's a brown-no$er.

    • @CryWillus
      @CryWillus 11 месяцев назад

      China makes the best sex dolls

    • @jamieisausername
      @jamieisausername 11 месяцев назад

      When you follow the money it ends up in billioniares banks. Then what?

  • @gingi453
    @gingi453 Год назад +3

    life is not that difficult..the power has to be in the hands of people (Switzerland..)..not run by aristocrats, political parties or any other selfappointed parasites..people in the 2Age of Knowledge/Information" cannot be fooled as before..it is that simple..history does not always repeat itself..even if humanity does not live in the same Ages..we are still very different genetically, IQ, infrastructure, etc.

  • @RegCostello
    @RegCostello 11 месяцев назад +3

    Brilliant man! But something I would have liked to have asked him is "Is the purveying and believing of outright lies more prevalent now, what is its effect and what can be done about it?"

    • @brownbattler
      @brownbattler 10 месяцев назад

      What lies?
      Like covid being deadly?
      The biggest liar by far, is the state.
      They are attacking individual citizens for speaking the truth because it hurts their precious narratives that don’t survive a week of open sunlight.

  • @stpancraschapel2136
    @stpancraschapel2136 Год назад +16

    It’s possible I haven’t understood the argument properly, but I’m struggling to understand the distinction between “populist” and “winning at democracy” political parties. Do people tend to vote for parties they don’t like?

    • @ironmantooltime
      @ironmantooltime Год назад

      There's winning by telling the truth and winning by lying. Populism is lying to win. Given the average person's attention span, social media has industrialised populism. This is no different to propaganda and after a time will hopefully become just as obvious, even to the plebs.

    • @chrisfreebairn870
      @chrisfreebairn870 Год назад +24

      Populism is not the same as popular; the former is defined by offering simple (unrealistic but appealing to popular misconceptions) solutions to complex problems, creating myths of a glorious past (to be returned to), exaggerating or worsening current problems to justify authoritarian policies or leaders etc.
      Google it.

    • @lesb-fe2jf
      @lesb-fe2jf Год назад +1

      @@chrisfreebairn870 nah populism is what liberals brand anti-eliteism, fomented as the natural result of rubbish liberal policies.

    • @jeffreyscott4997
      @jeffreyscott4997 Год назад +7

      ​@@chrisfreebairn870Sounds like, when people who don't believe in the speaker's notions of what the problems and solutions are ... wins at democracy, they call those people "Populist".
      Who decides? That is the question. It's all well and good to invey invectives against your politic enemies, but they are doing the same. Lack of asymmetry in favor of the academic, that's what Populism seems like to me.

    • @chrisfreebairn870
      @chrisfreebairn870 Год назад +19

      No, you are at crossed purposes; popular & populism are different things, you can't have a sensible discussion if you refuse to accept the basic definitions of words; populism is the political exploitation of the disgruntled, by offering candy floss simplicity disguised as serious solutions to complex problems; this is the definition of the word.
      It is not a way of cheating ppl out of what they want, it's a way of using their dissatisfaction to deceive them, regardless of the reasonableness of that dissatisfaction.
      Gray is saying that dissatisfaction with liberal policies has created a mass of ppl unhappy bc they've been left out; reasonable better policies would be popular with them, but instead their anger is used by political opportunists, who deceive them by offering unattainable dreams that appeal to those emotions, rather than achievable outcomes.
      All politicians play to dreams & emotions at some level; what distinguishes populism is its cynical manipulation of ppls fears & ignorance.

  • @mmaximk
    @mmaximk 9 месяцев назад +2

    John Gray is a fascinating thinker and always interesting to listen to.
    I do disagree with him over Putin's decision to invade Ukraine.
    I recently listened to a Kyiv official who in April 2022, shortly after Russia's invasion, negotiated a peace treaty (which Putin signed and Ukraine initialled) before Boris Johnson flew to Kyiv and wrecked the agreement.
    According to this Ukrainian negotiator, Putin recognised that invading Ukraine was a mistake and sincerely wanted an agreement.
    The trope that Putin wanted an expanded Russian homeland is belied by his clear statement that Russia was big enough and not in need of any additional territory. The real reasons for invading Ukraine are similar to America's motivation in the Cuban missile: preventing a hostile military from establishing a forward base of attack (especially with nuclear missiles - which the US declared they would station in Ukraine) immediately adjacent to the core Russian homeland.
    It puzzles me that serious thinkers feel the need to posit additional nefarious motivations for the invasion.
    We have Bill Burns' (current head of the CIA and former US ambassador to Moscow's) leaked memo to Condaleezza Rice from 2008 where he reports that opposition to NATO inducting Ukraine faces unanimous opposition from all Russian power factions, even pro-western groups.

    • @hkuiper100
      @hkuiper100 9 месяцев назад +1

      You need to watch Putin's long rambling video that he made when he invaded Ukraine. He wants to recreate the Soviet Union and how dare Ukraine have independence because Ukraine is his. Plus a lot of Nazis there. All nonsense of course.

  • @JaseboMonkeyRex
    @JaseboMonkeyRex 8 месяцев назад

    It's rare you hear people with such refined sketicism of the human animal... It gives his views wisdom... On top of this, his ability to communicate these insights with some semblance of clarity fills me with gratitude.
    We need more quality conversations like this ...

  • @carolsmall992
    @carolsmall992 11 месяцев назад +2

    A great interview, but it’s a shame that Gray has swallowed wholesale the neocon view on Ukraine.

  • @tonylong147
    @tonylong147 Год назад +4

    The state of quiescence that existed in Colonial Southern Africa has collapsed into a state of ‘Capitalistic Anarchy’ since the fall of the Colonials.
    I say ‘Capitalistic’ because the new leaders have generally dedicated themselves to the accumulation of capital to themselves.

    • @chrisfreebairn870
      @chrisfreebairn870 Год назад

      As per Russia, which is why Putin was a winner - the strong man controlling those predatory capitalistic forces; unfortunately it's just a bigger con, but society is more stable at least.

    • @mikeoglen6848
      @mikeoglen6848 10 месяцев назад

      How did Put. control 'predatory capitalistic forces@ when we have scores of russian billionaires splashing their cash in western Europe when most russians don't even have a flush toilet?@@chrisfreebairn870

  • @maxheadrom3088
    @maxheadrom3088 Год назад +3

    40:15 That is an excellent point! Bernie Sanders and the late Prof. Stephen Cohen also agree.

  • @marktaylor6491
    @marktaylor6491 Год назад +11

    It's interesting that he's this anti-Liberal/post-Liberal iconoclast until the subject of the former Labour leadership is brought up. Then it's BS Liberal Talking Point A and BS Liberal Talking Point B. Because in this place, and with the rules that our Lords and Master have laid down. Even iconoclasm has its limits.

    • @jmolofsson
      @jmolofsson Год назад +1

      Gray's usage of the term liberalism is surprising for a professor (em.) on *_European_* Thought.

    • @marktaylor6491
      @marktaylor6491 Год назад +2

      @@jmolofsson Because there needs to be this discussion. Why has Liberalism in the UK become so intellectually, ideologically, politically, and morally bankrupt?
      My view is Thatcherism corrupted it until there was nothing left but economic self-interest. But you could argue that it has always been like this and the period 1945-75 was nothing but a blip.

    • @mick947
      @mick947 Год назад

      I got the impression he reined himself in. We live in an age where it doesn’t do to be too outspoken.

    • @marktaylor6491
      @marktaylor6491 Год назад

      @@mick947 'too' is doing quite a bit of heavy lifting there. In every other thing he's said, he couldn't have cared less what he said.
      But that topic, that single topic. This is why people get 'made an example of'. To warn others of what happens when they break official establishment narratives.

    • @jmolofsson
      @jmolofsson Год назад +2

      @@marktaylor6491 In my view, Thatcher had been a one-term PM, if it hadn't been for the Falklands War.
      The Thatcher-era "liberalism" was bad for the British nations, in virtually every aspect including souring the already sensitive relations between Scotland and England (plus between center and periphery within England).
      But it didn't have much influence outside of Britain (with exception for some _individuals,_ e.g. Donald Tusk). When the Soviet Union had imploded, similar views got traction also outside of the Anglosphere. But AFAIU rather on a direct route from the United States, and coloring "everyone's policies, including the Labour party's and Social Democrats'. . Estonia is maybe the most illustrative example - and probably the most successful.
      (I agree witj Gray, btw, in that the growth/popularity of populist parties has its root there.)
      But

  • @afbtube
    @afbtube 11 месяцев назад +2

    The idea that the US has moved left is ridiculous. Reagan and Nixon could never get elected as conservatives today

  • @SueLyons1
    @SueLyons1 Год назад +2

    Thatcher: The end of history? The beginning of nonsense 👏 👏 👏

  • @hanskloss7726
    @hanskloss7726 Год назад +2

    I disagree about Ukraine and this independently of the Putin's essay. As for obductions and deportations I would suggest to look on what both sides do.
    Also what Trum did the first time around that was so terrible (around 27:40').

  • @3506Dodge
    @3506Dodge 11 месяцев назад +2

    There is an fatalistic/deterministic tone to Gray's views. I wonder if he realizes that.

  • @LimeyRedneck
    @LimeyRedneck Год назад +5

    Apart from the Corbyn antisemitism comment, great interview 🤠💜

    • @mick947
      @mick947 Год назад +2

      I think he was sticking to the play book there. I wouldn’t of thought he could of been so easily fooled.

    • @LimeyRedneck
      @LimeyRedneck Год назад +1

      @@mick947 It seemed out of place to me for that reason, but then I don't know a great deal about Gray and being intelligent doesn't always mean we avoid falling for such smears.

  • @harveytheparaglidingchaser7039
    @harveytheparaglidingchaser7039 Год назад +3

    I'm nostalgic. If only the 3 trillion dollars for the Iraq war had been invested in renewable energy we would have a chance. Now not so sure

    • @wasdwasdedsf
      @wasdwasdedsf 11 месяцев назад

      theres no climtae change

  • @SammyInnit
    @SammyInnit Год назад +14

    Except it hasnt. In the UK for example, the majority still vote for left or centre left parties. The only reason the tories do so well is because they do deals with the right wing vote so they come out on top in the first past the post system. If labour could unify more left votes, it wouldnt be in question.

    • @TheYopogo
      @TheYopogo Год назад

      That's not liberalism.

    • @BigHenFor
      @BigHenFor Год назад

      People do that because its the only thing on the menu in the only place to eat if you have to eat out. Not because its the best solution to their problem. It isnt. This café is dilapidated, infested by vermin, and out of touch. And it needs cleaning up, repairing, and better management, and it needs more oversight by its customers. Its always been the irony that Britain gave the Germans after World War II, a new constitution that devolved power to the regions, and had proportional representation for its democratic elections. And guess what we need now in the UK? We took too much for granted, and we thought it couldnt happen here, but it has, and right now we're in a bind. and the café right now only can only be changed by still going there, with the intent to address the weaknesses.

    • @Pobotrol
      @Pobotrol Год назад

      @@TheYopogo Since when would Centrists and Leftists work together?

    • @SammyInnit
      @SammyInnit Год назад +1

      ​@@TheYopogoI'm referring to the claim that populism has taken over. It hasn't.

    • @TheYopogo
      @TheYopogo Год назад +1

      @@SammyInnit Yes it has, they're in government.
      Taken over =/= popular

  • @thisismetoday
    @thisismetoday 11 месяцев назад +1

    There “will be grid lock in Washington”? I would argue, there already has been massive grid lock in Washington. Also I also disagree on another point: America has always been preoccupied with their internal politics. It’s their national past time. And Trump will be in prison by then, so it may actually be a very different climate. Also, Joe Biden wouldn’t be a one-term president. It’d be his second term….

  • @mickhills6288
    @mickhills6288 Год назад +9

    He dismisses the advancement of NATO on to the borders of Russia. He dismisses the Americans walking away from the nuclear agreement in Europe and threatening Russia with sudden annihilation. Just another gob for the American domination of Europe and Russia.

    • @stephenhill545
      @stephenhill545 Год назад +4

      Did you ever wonder why everyone wants to be in NATO?

    • @hmq9052
      @hmq9052 Год назад

      He didn't dismiss it. He dismissed it as the sole reason for Putin's attempt at genocide. By pointing to Putin's own broadcasts and essays.

  • @S41GON
    @S41GON Год назад +3

    It's true that Putin prefered a Russian realm that also included Ukraine, however he would have prefered it without war, war was not his first choice which is proven by hard evidence: the number of the Russian invasion army of 190,000 at the beginning which clearly isn't enough for occupying a vast country like Ukraine. For comparison, the invading force Germany sent to conquer Poland in WW2 was 1.5 million and that was only for the Western part of Poland. So Putin used the invasion, termed 'special military operation' as a tool of pressure to force Ukraine to the negotiation table and was willing to broker a peace agreement before Boris flew in and strong-armed Zelensky into trashing the possibility of any kind of peace deal.
    Retrospectively it would have been better for Ukraine to accept that deal and swallow the bitter pill of losing Crimea and maybe the de facto independance of the Donbass region under some kind of autonomy than all the bloodshed and devastation that followed while ending up basically at the same place. But now the dice is cast, the Russian war machine is amped up, switching into a higher gear and winter is coming, while Western patience and money is running out. Shouldn't have believed in the syren voices offering EU and NATO membership, the propaganda machine painting a picture of Ukraine capable of defeating Russia and the Western miracle weapons, they were always fairy tales. But now it's too late. The next act will be a tragicomedy of rats fleeing the sinking ship, expect something along the lines of Afghanistan after the US troops left. Ukrainians will be lucky if they can retain any kind of statehood when all the dust settles.

  • @mick947
    @mick947 Год назад +2

    Fascinating and wonderful to listen to, but it can turn into a rambling monologue. A bit of the old tangentiality. It’s nice in a conversation to involve 2 people.

  • @nkenchington6575
    @nkenchington6575 Год назад +11

    John Gray obviously hasn't read 'The Dawn Of Everything,' or perhaps he has, but is somehow still in thrall to Hobbes, despite Graeber and Wengrow's methodical dismantling.

    • @chrismann5070
      @chrismann5070 Год назад +13

      Not me I’m still struggling with the Hobbit

    • @Pobotrol
      @Pobotrol Год назад +9

      @@chrismann5070 It gets better after they leave Rivendell.

    • @dewievans01
      @dewievans01 Год назад +7

      He reviewed it in the New Statesman...

    • @chrismann5070
      @chrismann5070 Год назад +1

      @@Pobotrol few thanks don’t tell me the ending 👍👍

    • @nkenchington6575
      @nkenchington6575 Год назад +1

      @@dewievans01 ah, interesting, thanks

  • @cosmaracorosu
    @cosmaracorosu 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you, interesting, well measured and balanced talk. definitely not the type of opinion one hears often on TV

  • @vebdaklu
    @vebdaklu 11 месяцев назад +2

    I wondered why there aren't capitalist philosophers, and here I got my answer - because they would sound deluded. Imagibe thinking that the problems in Iraq were caused by Iraq sonehow choosing to become an anarchy out of spite to the West, rather than the devastating war waged against them by the biggest police state of modern times, under false pretenses. It's like he accepts uncritically the premise that US/western military interventions are by definition good and shouldn't be questioned, regardless of how many deaths and destruction they cause, or he regards them as some form of special occurences that are unable to exert real-world consequences.
    Oy! The people are pissed because they have been sold a lie! They are constantly sold lies! The american dream, the western "liberal" values, human rights, freedom, women rights, "spreading democracy", that the free markets will solve all problems - those are all LIES!

  • @Shocking603
    @Shocking603 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you for letting John talk. It is very frustrating to hear an interviewer constantly interrupting a guest. Very interesting.

  • @Irene-im8xi
    @Irene-im8xi 11 месяцев назад +1

    Please Mr Gray don't give us Scots the responsibility of giving England enough seats for a Labour government which you admit is so centrist that it's indistinguishable from the tories. Scotland hasn't voted for a tory government since the 1950s but nonetheless we have had tory governments imposed on us because we are only 8% of the UK population. No! If England wants a Labour government it's the English people's responsibility to get it for themselves. The SNP's policies are far more socialist than anything beong offered by Starmer.
    Excuse my ignorance but what did Corbyn do that was actually as anti-Semitic? Was it that he spoke up for the Palestinians? He stood up for underdogs who have been enduring 75 years of genocide by the Zionists. Is that his great crime?

    • @stephenemm3829
      @stephenemm3829 11 месяцев назад

      Why would anyone vote for the anti-western Corbyn? Why would I want someone who despises his country and western civilization to lead my country. I'm sure plenty of people agreed with his economic policies, but why the 1970s, cold-war ideology?

  • @chrisyates2591
    @chrisyates2591 Год назад +24

    Always great to hear and learn from you Prof John

  • @BCSTS
    @BCSTS Год назад +2

    Those of us who are not British.....could use brief explanation of certain terms...eg. Truss experiment, HS2......

    • @Grichal1981
      @Grichal1981 Год назад +2

      Look up Liz Truss and High Speed 2

  • @4terrascorned
    @4terrascorned Год назад +4

    I love that as soon as he says the words "neo liberal economic policies" and "market liberalization" oops over out of time.
    From the deep red hinterlands of Richistan, formerly known as the United States, I can safely say it is stupidity. Because in the game of chicken vs egg the desperation is built upon the stupidity. Generations of it. addled like addicts might be a more accurate description. Mesmerized by a subjective reality TV gameshow infomercial thats sold as political theater and sports spectacular. A combination of mass psychosis and daily manufactured moral panics and hysteria. An inability to separate tabloid fantasies from news snd information. Constructing a reward system that operates like a pyrimid scheme based on the most currupt and deceitful ideologies while maintaining a level of denial that must be unsurpassed in the history of the world.
    America has a system that would be the envy of some of the greatest tyrants in history. Nobody, especially us, can see it for what it is.
    I lean towards the idea of continuing and complete dysfuction but also believe it will only be an outward facing facade for something darker and more insidious.
    The fact that we even have to talk about Trump should be testimony to the hollowing out of American institutions and democracy. Not the start of it. The culmination of decades of it.

  • @begrackled
    @begrackled 11 месяцев назад +1

    "What liberals call populism" is one *hell* of a caveat. Conflating Thomas Frank's populism or Eugene Debs' populism with Trump's or Orban's is willful ignorance.

  • @merilynpa
    @merilynpa 11 месяцев назад +4

    What a brilliant interview. A fascinating traverse through economic and political history and thoughts for the future. I need to listen again and reflect on what the implications are for us.

  • @peterharrison5342
    @peterharrison5342 Год назад +6

    It's interesting that Gray seemed prepared to discount the Corbyn project on the grounds that he (Corbyn) failed to acknowledge the scale of a 'problem' for which nothing but the flimsiest whiff of 'evidence' has ever been presented. Disappointing, given how on the money he can be on other, not all, issues.

    • @davidbates3057
      @davidbates3057 Год назад +3

      Yeah, I find him a mixed bag. On one hand, he has a very good understanding of the major issues with the economy and the way things have been run for the past 30-40 years. On the other, he made a number of claims that felt like he was just buying into mainstream establishment talking points.
      I can't speak on his concern with Corbyn's comments on Russia, and I might even agree with him on those, but the anti-semitism comment did rile me up a bit. Similarly, he tends to give a lot of credence to Trump as being some political mastermind, when Trump, terrible as an individual person as he is, was very a puppet President and would be again, because the guy's a complete idiot.
      I was also skeptical on his defeatism about the ability to achieve popular Progressive policy. Admittedly, I'm not an expert on how the system works, but even though I don't doubt that there have been many efforts to write into law/give the courts powers to block movements of taking away the gravy train gifts to the private sector, I don't see how a government couldn't reverse those just as easily, yet not in a way like a moron such as Truss then crashes the economy. The issue is that such a thing would take political will of an actual government on the same page, and unfortunately, even ignoring the cockblock that is Starmer, we don't have that regardless since I'd say 80%+ of Labour MPs right now would bend hell and high waters to protect the super wealthy.

  • @DrBretPalmer
    @DrBretPalmer 11 месяцев назад +1

    Completely agree, we have an absence of political thinking and ideas. Good podcast.

    • @seanmoran2743
      @seanmoran2743 11 месяцев назад +1

      The opposite is the case
      We have far to many ideas and most of them don’t work

    • @JoQeZzZ
      @JoQeZzZ 4 месяца назад

      The irony of saying "completely agree" to a 1 hour interview on various topics, and then going on to lament an absence of political thinking is so funny.

  • @mnjraman
    @mnjraman Год назад +1

    A cursory listening to the Hobbs-ian thought made me think that he (or John Gray or either) is a secret "student" of the most famous philosopher from India: Adi Sankara!

  • @ehudshapira2745
    @ehudshapira2745 10 месяцев назад

    Very intersting. I'd love to see a discussion between gray and john meatsheimer.

  • @ramatgan1
    @ramatgan1 2 месяца назад

    He listed the 'crimes' of the 20th century without mentioning the US dropping of the atomic bomb on Japan, its war crimes in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia not mention its murder of tens of millions around the world.

  • @tinynijman9077
    @tinynijman9077 11 месяцев назад

    That was very interesting to listen too 👍

  • @chrisdoss3428
    @chrisdoss3428 Год назад +7

    It is depressing that he seems to know nothing about Ukraine at all. Well, one person can't know everything.

    • @jmolofsson
      @jmolofsson Год назад +1

      Virtually no-one of his generation knows anything at all about the different republics of the former Soviet Union. Moscow's views on its empire permeated and permeates.

  • @markacohen1
    @markacohen1 3 месяца назад

    Lots of wisdom, much that is arguable, but a good place to start. I'd like to hear Gray in debate. He is peremptory and sage-like, often deluded that he was the only one who had doubts at the time about many things, and he quotes almost nobody else or any other realms of study, which is concerning.

  • @willsetchell4222
    @willsetchell4222 Год назад +23

    As an anarchist, its incredibly irritating to keep hearing the collapse of states referred to as anarchy, particularly from a political philosopher who namechecks it at the start when he recaps alternative political models.
    An anarchist state is one in which power is evenly distributed and hierarchy is abolished- similar to communism without the dictatorship. What he's referring to is more a pre-state situation in which power-hungry groups compete for control - anarchism as a philosophy is engaged with attempting to prevent such struggles ever arising.

    • @1mlister
      @1mlister Год назад +10

      He's not made any mistake. Anarchy has two meanings, just like "liberal". I'd suggest your cause needs a rebrand, as it is a pretty confusing name. "Distributed Power" would be an improvement.

    • @valk5045
      @valk5045 Год назад +9

      The funiest thing about anarchists is that they are all anarchistic on a shared practical definition on what anarchism trully means.

    • @selfpreservationsociety
      @selfpreservationsociety Год назад

      How middle clas and BORING you lot live in a dream

    • @liarbrice4772
      @liarbrice4772 Год назад

      @@valk5045 That's literally how words work though.

    • @RedSntDK
      @RedSntDK Год назад +3

      I noticed it too. He was very, excuse the pun, liberal with the use of the word. Barbarism or tribalism might've fit better. ISIS followed a book after all, but can't speak for Syria.

  • @christopherwb1
    @christopherwb1 Год назад +1

    But conflict is not "the state of nature." Take a walk in the woods, John, or a hike in the mountains: you will not find perpetual anarchy and conflict. On the contrary, you will find a remarkable peacefulness to the point of monotony. It is civilization that is in a state of perpetual anarchy and conflict, war, ruthless competition, pointless cruelty, selfishness and brutality. There is no greater predator than civilized man - and the emphasis here is on "civilized."

  • @paulgibbons2320
    @paulgibbons2320 Год назад +16

    If it was a democracy. We would have to call a vote to end it 😂

  • @SuspendedLogic
    @SuspendedLogic 9 месяцев назад

    "what liberals call populism, is the political backlash against the social disruption produced by their policies" God I love this

  • @col.hertford9855
    @col.hertford9855 Год назад +13

    Generally a long meandering journey on one’s own opinion with zero challenge or rebuttal by the interviewer. One of the few points agreed with is the fact Brexit voters we’re not racist, they were in my experience totally clueless as to what they voted for or against, and were generally quite xenophobic.

    • @donkeychan491
      @donkeychan491 Год назад

      The main purveyors of deranged xenophobic conspiracy theories during my lifetime have been liberals: namely in respect of China and Russia; and their mendacity is quite likely to result in WWIII.

    • @mick947
      @mick947 Год назад +2

      I take it your career and income wasn’t affected by globalisation. Either a lack of imagination or of compassion.. or you just weren’t listening to what John had to say.

    • @col.hertford9855
      @col.hertford9855 Год назад +2

      @@mick947 literally my whole social group and much of my work social group voted brexit, and not one of them did it for the reasons John postulates. Most brexit voters are middle class which is borne out with statistics not hyperbole.

    • @donaldwebb
      @donaldwebb Год назад

      In my experience it's the other way round, and people like you are totally clueless. Also, completely lacking in curiosity and impervious to any alternative points of view

    • @col.hertford9855
      @col.hertford9855 Год назад

      @@donaldwebb please tell me what I’m clueless at? Thanks in advance.

  • @mattd8725
    @mattd8725 Год назад +4

    It is a darkly comic tragedy. The people who think they are for the highest forms of law, order and common sense bring about the worst, most depraved anarchy. The people who think they are humanitarian and defenders of global unity standing for compassion and care bring about extended careless and thoughtless suffering, condoning autocrats who only want violence and brutal control.

    • @gking407
      @gking407 Год назад

      People carry some fault for the corrosion of their communities, but nowhere near the level their leaders are responsible for. The project of getting people to vote against their own well-being takes a demonic energy found only among sociopaths.

    • @miguelvelez7221
      @miguelvelez7221 Год назад

      Nah... That sounds just like the weak, re-heated "Both Sides" nonsense that is only ever used to absolve the Right.
      "Both Sides" has been long past its sell by date for a very long time now.

  • @cal9784
    @cal9784 11 месяцев назад

    Only a very distant/casual observer would conclude that far right figures have remained unchanged for decades. Of course I agree with the material analysis - I'm reminded of Paul Mason saying he'd never forgive neoliberalism for turning his neighbours into fascists - but it's incomplete without a real understanding of how the far right has morphed over time.

  • @rubenhernandez1608
    @rubenhernandez1608 Год назад +2

    In less academic terms, the cause of the rise of populism is indeed a disaffected and neglected middle class that has been squeezed and hollowed out in the UK and USA. Dr. Gray appears to lean in the direction of inevitability - and doesn’t make a distinction between the rise of populists in the USA and the UK and those in Europe (almost exclusively linked to foreign migration). Some discussion would have also been interesting to hear on the push-back we’re starting to see from the Democrats in America to reanimate the middle class.

  • @3506Dodge
    @3506Dodge 11 месяцев назад

    The connections of the British, French, and German economies in the early 20th century made the outbreak of war MORE likely because there was no other way to break their economic entanglement. The same is true of the US and China today.

  • @jessesewell7922
    @jessesewell7922 11 месяцев назад +1

    Not particularly impressed with this guy. He has reached conclusions based upon several bad assumptions. Key among them is the notion that bigger government is in some way, in any way a solution to the tremendous damage that globalists have done to financial markets and major currencies. In the drive for continuous growth (a fallacy), the globalists convinced the political leadership of all major economies, that aggressive and innovative monetary policy could eliminate downturns and increase mutual prosperity - indefinitely. The result has been massive inflation and tremendous inequalities with respect to wealth creation. The result was a hollowing out of industrial powers in favor of commoditization and consumerism. Good jobs were exported in a relentless drive for profits. Communities were devastated. Government created that problem by creating all the incentives which lead to this social catastrophe. What is needed is a radical diminishment of centralized power. Consolidation of power, governmental and bureaucratic power is the problem. In Europe as well as America and Canada, federal governments need to be aggressively and permanently reduced in size and power. The result will be the unleashing of human potential. At the present we are teetering on the edge of the abyss. If the immense stupidity and arrogance of monetarists succeeds in destroying the dollar, they will with it bring an end to the American Empire. That will create a new era of brutality, war and economic chaos unknown to humanity for centuries.

    • @vebdaklu
      @vebdaklu 11 месяцев назад

      I agree with you, but you left out an important question - and who is going to downsize the huge corporations?

  • @ArtiodactylaSlayer
    @ArtiodactylaSlayer Год назад +3

    I'll tell you who is out of touch...John Gray.

  • @mikeoglen6848
    @mikeoglen6848 10 месяцев назад

    This was a Quite Interesting discussion.

  • @seanmoran2743
    @seanmoran2743 8 месяцев назад

    I do not say that democracy has been more pernicious on the whole, and in the long run, than monarchy or aristocracy. Democracy has never been and never can be so durable as aristocracy or monarchy; but while it lasts, it is more bloody than either. … Remember, democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself. There never was a democracy yet that did not commit suicide. It is in vain to say that democracy is less vain, less proud, less selfish, less ambitious, or less avaricious than aristocracy or monarchy. It is not true, in fact, and nowhere appears in history. Those passions are the same in all men, under all forms of simple government, and when unchecked, produce the same effects of fraud, violence, and cruelty. When clear prospects are opened before vanity, pride, avarice, or ambition, for their easy gratification, it is hard for the most considerate philosophers and the most conscientious moralists to resist the temptation. Individuals have conquered themselves. Nations and large bodies of men, never.
    John Adams

  • @Mark-zr8nr
    @Mark-zr8nr Год назад +1

    Great to hear gray mention mimetic theory, although briefly

  • @oliveoil7642
    @oliveoil7642 6 месяцев назад

    Thankfully America did intercede in Europe with the Marshall Plan to defuse communism or the whole of Europe would have ended up like East Germany/Berlin, Hungary, Czech, Poland (eastern Europe for the most part) in poverty , stagnation, communist terror. Fortunately my grandparents saw what was coming to Eastern Europe and got out to live a prosperous and free existence relatively speaking in the West! 🙏

  • @IM-pm9nz
    @IM-pm9nz 9 месяцев назад

    I don't agree with him, but he is certainly knowledgeable. Whats the state of nature? Most people collaborate first and compete or enter conflict only if their initial attempt at cooperation is unrequited. The core problem is greed driven by a system that espouses a store of value outside humans and our environment, money. Not going to get rid of that anytime soon, but to think the natural order of human life is 'nasty brutish and short' is one surefire way to ensure misery for all concerned as it just engenders suspicion and aggression.

  • @ragingchawk
    @ragingchawk Год назад +5

    Oli putting in a shift to not fully corpse at the drink-stalling "final point" there 56:01

  • @elorateq3672
    @elorateq3672 10 месяцев назад

    Hobbes is only applicable where the rulers have ignored that, unless the lowest level of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs are fulfilled, then humans often do not have the capacity, or desire, to address higher needs. When people have a roof over their head, a full belly and relative security, then his views are less relevant. However, as this video explains, when this low level of needs remains unmet, when the majority of your population consider themselves ignored, poor and treated like dirt, you either end up with change, or revolution.

  • @liamsweeney4754
    @liamsweeney4754 Год назад +2

    What does populism and democracy mean here? Why are they are opposed? The words mean the same thing, perhaps democracy is democracy when I like its fruits, and democracy is dirty populism when I find those fruits sour

    • @darrenwithers3628
      @darrenwithers3628 11 месяцев назад

      Populism is exploitation of the fears of every day people. Usually fears populists incite themselves.

    • @Jorbz150
      @Jorbz150 5 месяцев назад

      This is how many societies go from supposedly democratic to authoritarian. New political parties are quickly eliminated, but only to "save democracy." Of course it's taken as self evident for some reason that the status quo institutions couldn't possibly be a threat to democracy.

  • @bogdanpopescu1401
    @bogdanpopescu1401 Год назад +1

    the managerial class and the dream of technocratic governance killed liberal democracy, the wave of populism was only a late reaction, and not very successful either

  • @WinwoxWon
    @WinwoxWon Год назад +13

    Хороший политический философ. Спасибо за интервью!

  • @LeornianCyng
    @LeornianCyng Год назад +11

    “No hatred, F racists, Blank faces, Time's changin, One nation, Unification, The vibration, Un-F the World” - Prophets of Rage (Rage against the machine, Public Enemy, Cypress Hill)✊

  • @danwylie-sears1134
    @danwylie-sears1134 Год назад +3

    If the US would just do a tenth of what we could in support of Ukraine, instead of capitulating to nuclear blackmail, full Ukrainian sovereignty over all its territory would be restored. It would still be a hard fight, but there would be no doubt of the outcome. It's premature to call next November's election when (at the time of filming) this November hadn't even begun.

    • @TTFMjock
      @TTFMjock Год назад +1

      A Guardian Reader I take it.

  • @michaelashworth4172
    @michaelashworth4172 Год назад +1

    John Gray is always worth listenting but I don't understand his comments at the end about the young in France supporting Le Pen and the Rassemblement National. Well more than twice as many 18-24 year olds voted for the left-wing NUPES coalition as for the Rassemblement National in the Legislative Elections last year. Gray is not the first British commentator to repeat this idea of French youth being atrracted to the far right and I'm not quite sure where they are getting their information.

    • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
      @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 Год назад

      It doesn't matter since both the Left-Right in the West is based on Platonic philosophy with democracy defined by irrational magnitude logarithms (each citizen valued at 9/8 major 2nd music interval cubed to the square root of two as the Tyrant - just read the Pythagorean Plato for details). Democracy was always a scam of exponential wealth growth for the elite and now Nuclear Power is threatened by abrupt global warming droughts in France - meanwhile the uranium miners in Africa keep dying off. Hilarious that people think some Left-Right protests will have any effects while Mother Nature is taking revenge via the 1200 gigatons of pressurized methane in the world's largest ocean shelf (in the Arctic).

  • @mikeoxlong3676
    @mikeoxlong3676 9 месяцев назад

    Thankfully America is a Republic.

  • @ruskinyruskiny1611
    @ruskinyruskiny1611 4 месяца назад

    Progress e.g end of slavery, womens rights, universal healthcare,EU are evident. It ain't gonna stop now.