Christopher Hitchens - For the Sake of Argument (1993)

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  • Опубликовано: 16 янв 2025

Комментарии • 692

  • @charlieevergreen3514
    @charlieevergreen3514 6 лет назад +396

    “How long do you plan to do this?”, asks the interviewer.
    “Til I drop.”, says Hitchens instantly.
    A man of his word.
    Still missing Hitchens...

    • @SandraLovesSun
      @SandraLovesSun 5 лет назад +6

      Same.

    • @dunebillyofswanbeach4294
      @dunebillyofswanbeach4294 4 года назад +6

      Charlie Evergreen-Likewise, myself included. More and more by the day.

    • @jackgriffiths2290
      @jackgriffiths2290 4 года назад

      @@dunebillyofswanbeach4294 lp

    • @rep10101
      @rep10101 4 года назад +1

      most people have never heard of him

    • @seaglider844
      @seaglider844 4 года назад +7

      That hit me too....right up till he physically couldn't anymore. It would really bug him that Kissinger is still sucking air.
      Many people would not have heard of him....but the writers and journalists they read and hear no doubt have. His influence is still widespread.....and we're better off for it.

  • @greenspringvalley
    @greenspringvalley 6 лет назад +178

    The interviewer is excellent. I barely notice him.

    • @jacobb5625
      @jacobb5625 4 года назад +30

      he's Brian Lamb, founder of c-span

    • @harryantino
      @harryantino 4 года назад +19

      Brian Lamb is one of the greats

    • @shawnduffy3380
      @shawnduffy3380 4 года назад +13

      ...as it should be

    • @DmitriPolkovnik
      @DmitriPolkovnik 2 года назад +23

      Brian Lamb is famous for asking brief and sharp questions that give the answer something to work with but space to do it with. I think he displays that here.

    • @chickenringNYC
      @chickenringNYC 2 года назад +7

      He's awesome

  • @aj72922
    @aj72922 4 года назад +60

    I could sit here all day and listen to this man...we all miss you Hitch.

  • @davidstepanczuk
    @davidstepanczuk 2 года назад +150

    Of course, most comments here are about Hitchens and how they miss him; me too. However, I want to say how much I like & appreciate Brian Lamb and his interviewing style: short, blunt questions, no BS, get on with it. He is a great interviewer.

    • @sophocles1198
      @sophocles1198 Год назад +10

      Agree. Not much ego, a good listener, and asks the questions you want answered.

    • @jonnylons1
      @jonnylons1 Год назад +5

      Yes although he seems to know very little about anything, constantly asking who eg Wilfred Owen is or whether Orwell went to Oxford, or what Conde Nast is etc. I’m not sure if it’s a strange but deliberate technique or if he just doesn’t know anything.

    • @sophocles1198
      @sophocles1198 Год назад +18

      @@jonnylons1 He's asking for the listener, whether or not he knows the answer is not the point. You might prefer Charlie Rose, who is constantly showing what he knows.

    • @jonnylons1
      @jonnylons1 Год назад +4

      @@sophocles1198 I thought that must be the reason!

    • @johneyon5257
      @johneyon5257 Год назад +4

      Brian Lamb attempted to show no bias when questioning a controversial guest - he tried to be unemotional when asking his questions - altho occasionally some emotion would creep in hinting at a bias - - and he asked the most basic questions for listeners who might not be in the know - he tried not to assume a high level of discourse the way that most other interviewers do - this also made him seem humble - - for me - his questioning is as interesting as the guest answering

  • @elkhartmartin
    @elkhartmartin 9 лет назад +108

    that voice, and such wonderful evocative language. i could listen to him all day.

    • @VNVgirl
      @VNVgirl 6 лет назад +3

      No doubt! comforting and solid.

    • @commbir5148
      @commbir5148 4 года назад

      @Wes 76 This critique needed to be made. I don't exactly agree with how dismissive you are, but your point stands and is rarely recognized by Hitch's fans.

    • @arriuscalpurniuspiso
      @arriuscalpurniuspiso Год назад

      Only Orson Welles was a better speaker, but Hitch had superior analytical skills.

  • @davepearen8954
    @davepearen8954 2 года назад +42

    Could listen to him all day so intelligent

  • @ANewHuman
    @ANewHuman 6 лет назад +294

    Nobody in the public discourse today can hold a dim candle to Christopher Hitchens.
    Despite my differences with him (and I have many), there's simply no-one I've been exposed to with his erudition, intelligence, education, bravery and sense of justice.
    He defied classification by others, not because he didn't have his allegiances, but because his opinions and positions on all issues and individuals was made on the basis of their merit and the quality of their arguments, regardless of how they identified. He had friends and enemies in all quarters and both sides of the aisle. He cut through all bullshit.
    And now he's gone, when we need him more than ever.
    Rest in peace, Hitch. We miss you. I'll drink some Jack to you tonight.

    • @HisArchness
      @HisArchness 6 лет назад +10

      Quintin Schnehage he would’ve had one of the biggest voices in these crazy times we are in today. Without a doubt.

    • @mhd2241
      @mhd2241 6 лет назад +12

      Well said. Such a genius. So sad he's not here - I can only imagine the dead on scathing articles he would be writing now.

    • @VelMa-opinion
      @VelMa-opinion 6 лет назад +20

      I have wanted to set Jordan Peterson against Hitch. He'd have some glorious Hitch-Slaps for Peterson who speaks about religion with pomposity and reminds me of the saying about empty barrels making the most noise. Which also goes for all spokespeople of the Right. I don't call him a troglodyte, but the *Incels* certainly like him.

    • @leemartin2978
      @leemartin2978 6 лет назад +7

      Johnny Walker black label , I believe , was his medicine of choice

    • @sullivansongz
      @sullivansongz 6 лет назад +5

      Well written - just one thing; his poison of choice was Johnny Walker black label

  • @TY-up1xp
    @TY-up1xp 6 лет назад +88

    We have no idea how harmed we are having lost this man and his discourse. He gave a voice to those who needed one the most, and he called out those who abuse their power, regardless of how they were trying to pass themselves off: religious leaders, political leaders, academics, journalists, etc.

    • @elderyear
      @elderyear 2 года назад +2

      Ffs with the overdone lamentations. I get so embarrassed second-hand when I see these comment sections where people fall over each other trying to sound more beside themselves that a public figure they liked died. I think hitch would find this sort of thing disgusting.

    • @kabeerbashir2797
      @kabeerbashir2797 2 года назад +1

      He turned into a right wing nutter himself in later years. In that context this interview makes him sound like a hypocrite

    • @knowsutrue
      @knowsutrue Год назад +1

      @@elderyearalways- when they write that we don’t know what a loss it is, or someone was so under appreciated. Annoying AF.

  • @zerofox7347
    @zerofox7347 6 лет назад +54

    What a great no bs interview there isn't anyone who would conduct an interview in this way today.

  • @cirithduath7526
    @cirithduath7526 6 лет назад +50

    I'm an adult, I've recently discovered Hitchens and the whole movement. I miss him and I never knew of him during his life.

    • @MichaelJonesC-4-7
      @MichaelJonesC-4-7 5 лет назад +2

      Where the fuck were you?!

    • @lauralynnasteriahathaway6819
      @lauralynnasteriahathaway6819 5 лет назад +7

      CirithDuath
      I recently discovered Hitchens as well. He was quite an intelligent and well spoken man. I wish he were still here so he could comment on the insanity of today, I'd love to hear what he'd have to say.

    • @diggindude1
      @diggindude1 2 года назад +4

      I wonder how many people would feel that… To miss him without ever knowing of him during his life … is there a better compliment?

    • @GungaLaGunga
      @GungaLaGunga Год назад

      @@MichaelJonesC-4-7 heeeey hooooo. easy there. I can't speak for the OP, but I was trapped in a religion from my birth for 25+ years until I started getting tired of all the unanswered questions I had. Give us from-birth victims of religion some credit. I guess you were fortunate to be born without being forced fed the religion god grift from your parents. Too easy man. At least we made it out. Free at last, free at last, thank truth almighty, free at last.

    • @MichaelJonesC-4-7
      @MichaelJonesC-4-7 Год назад

      @@GungaLaGunga
      Nonsense. I was force-fed religion, myself. But I had figured out by age 9 that the stories were bullshit. I have little patience with others because I feel that I am nothing special and if I could have figured it out by the tender age of 9 no one else has any escuse. My apologies for your ignorance. I bet you feel dumb, don't you?
      May god b-less. ; )

  • @mathewfield7671
    @mathewfield7671 2 года назад +48

    Never forget guys. This man was the best of us

    • @DBEdwards
      @DBEdwards 2 года назад +3

      And the worse, too. But always the gladiator.

    • @WhoThisMonkey
      @WhoThisMonkey 2 года назад +2

      Be wary of idolising anything.

    • @sophocles1198
      @sophocles1198 Год назад

      He was a superb public speaker. But not as smooth as usual in this interview.

    • @thesubhumancomedy
      @thesubhumancomedy Год назад

      I remember guys.

  • @michaeldeierhoi4096
    @michaeldeierhoi4096 Год назад +17

    This interview was particularly interesting to me BECAUSE the interviewer asked a lot about Hitchin's life and why he made the choices that he did. The interviewer was unique in asking Hitchins in an abrupt style about asking why he did something by just saying Why! It is really a refreshing change from many interviewers and interviews that I have heard before.

    • @2fast2block
      @2fast2block Год назад

      Hitch was just some clueless being hating to face reality. Nothing more.
      The 1LofT states that energy can't be created or destroyed, it can't happen naturally. One aspect of the 2LofT shows that the universe is winding down, usable energy is becoming less usable. It is clear creation had to be done supernaturally yet it is still denied because people are just too proud to accept that, among other things.

  • @ScottRoberts-el2jn
    @ScottRoberts-el2jn Год назад +6

    Wonderful to find this gem! RIP HITCH!

  • @lucianopavarotti2843
    @lucianopavarotti2843 Год назад +10

    Hitchens and Lamb did a lot of great interviews over the years and its good to see here the mutual respect that made them work. Hitchens dedicated his book on Thomas Jefferson to Lamb.

  • @jm-jx8xt
    @jm-jx8xt 6 лет назад +31

    this guy was the most deeply thoughtful and intelligent , but mostly eloquent man on deeply important topics of our day. I wish there was a person to step into a shoe (never both) of his. i miss him and his intellect and spectacular dissertation

    • @BartAlder
      @BartAlder 6 лет назад +1

      He was our Cicero.

    • @ois999
      @ois999 4 года назад

      Jordan Peterson

    • @2fast2block
      @2fast2block 2 года назад

      He was a dolt.
      Hitch who pretends to know the bible as he screws up on it over and over again including what faith means biblically.
      --"Faith is the surrender of the mind, it's the surrender of reason, it's the surrender of the only thing that makes us different from other animals. It's our need to believe and to surrender our skepticism and our reason, our yearning to discard that and put all our trust or faith in someone or something, that is the sinister thing to me. ... Out of all the virtues, all the supposed virtues, faith must be the most overrated”-- Christopher Hitchens
      Now, look at what biblical faith really means that Hitch the liar didn't even look at:
      Biblically, faith means trust. It's a trust by evidence seen. God asks that we prove things. To reason. To get knowledge. To study. God has nothing to hide. We develop trust from what is seen, and that which is not seen yet is trusted also because of the trust built up from what is seen. It's much like a human relationship. We don't trust much until a person has gained that trust from what is observed. The difference is though, God is not limited to human powers. He created us.
      Romans 1:20 For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities-his eternal power and divine nature-have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse.
      ruclips.net/video/cZGbSrvEQLo/видео.html
      crossexamined.org/biblical-faith-vs-blind-faith/
      www.truthortradition.com/articles/what-does-the-bible-say-about-faith
      www.revisedenglishversion.com/Appendix/16/Faith_is_Trust
      www.truthortradition.com/articles/faith-a-confident-expectation-of-gods-promises-coming-to-pass
      www.truthortradition.com/articles/hebrews-1-11-and-faith
      Hitchens always went into evasive word antics to avoid key questions like how we got the creation of the universe.
      Real science says nothing does nothing. Real science says if there was something there already it must fit with the evidence of what we know. We know the 1LT says there's a conservation of energy. It can change forms and neither can be created or destroyed. Creation cannot happen by natural means. The 2LT has various aspects, one being the universe is winding down, entropy. Usable energy is becoming less usable, so at one point usable energy was at its max. This all points to a supernatural creation, by a supernatural creator at a certain point in which matter, space, and time were created. When I read how it can happen otherwise, ALL the fools resort to science-fiction. Once a supernatural creation is accepted, then the next step is finding proof of what supernatural power did it.
      We can't even get science without God. The laws of nature only can come from a Lawgiver, God.
      Life only comes from life. Law of biogenesis.
      God is the reason for us and all we have.
      ruclips.net/video/JiMqzN_YSXU/видео.html
      The odds are NOT there.
      ruclips.net/video/W1_KEVaCyaA/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/yW9gawzZLsk/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/ddaqSutt5aw/видео.html

    • @FBIopenup2390
      @FBIopenup2390 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@ois999this aged well…

  • @davepearen8954
    @davepearen8954 2 года назад +18

    One of the brilliant writers of our times or anytime

  • @ladakale
    @ladakale 11 лет назад +78

    How we miss Christopher!

  • @stanlee8752
    @stanlee8752 4 года назад +13

    I truly loved this man. RIP...

  • @kenclayton5088
    @kenclayton5088 2 года назад +34

    What a mind...what a voice....the authority...

    • @tscottbaker2980
      @tscottbaker2980 Год назад

      The opposite of what we need and I think Hitch would agree. He has an opinion and not an oracle.

  • @PaulBlankinship1976
    @PaulBlankinship1976 2 года назад +20

    I love this episode. Hitch unloads. I love that he was anti-Clinton and anti-mother Theresa. That took balls back in 93.

  • @cz2165
    @cz2165 Год назад +6

    Brian Lamb would even ask questions he knew the answer to let Hitch provide the answers himself.
    Hitch is intoxicating- I have been binge watching/ listening this whole week and will have withdrawal when I am done. I wish I could have met him or even seen him in person.

    • @2fast2block
      @2fast2block Год назад

      Then you binge on being clueless too. Hitch was nothing much at all. He HATED reality.
      The 1LofT states that energy can't be created or destroyed, it can't happen naturally. One aspect of the 2LofT shows that the universe is winding down, usable energy is becoming less usable. It is clear creation had to be done supernaturally yet it is still denied because people are just too proud to accept that, among other things.

  • @Chardonbois
    @Chardonbois Год назад +7

    How refreshing in this TikTok soundbite age to hear an intellectual conversation.

    • @michaeltowslee4111
      @michaeltowslee4111 2 месяца назад

      We still have intellectual conversations. But, reality shows and talking head to rule the roost.

  • @warrenblain2365
    @warrenblain2365 2 года назад +8

    Great interview. Thanks for posting.

  • @athiestblade
    @athiestblade 9 лет назад +38

    That was an absolute pleasure to watch, thanks for uploading it.

    • @mikerodgers7620
      @mikerodgers7620 4 года назад

      You're a fool. 😅

    • @athiestblade
      @athiestblade 4 года назад +3

      @@mikerodgers7620 4 years later? Oh and I'd rather be a fool than a troll.

    • @mikerodgers7620
      @mikerodgers7620 4 года назад

      @@athiestblade shut the hell up.

    • @athiestblade
      @athiestblade 4 года назад +2

      @@mikerodgers7620 or what troll?

    • @mikerodgers7620
      @mikerodgers7620 4 года назад

      @@athiestblade the troll is yourself. Now go to hell. 😁

  • @paulpavlicsek1452
    @paulpavlicsek1452 Год назад +8

    Wilfred Owen. Not enough people know how immense was his beautifully tragic poetry.

  • @robertblakeman9978
    @robertblakeman9978 2 года назад +12

    Possibly the best Hitch interview ever!

    • @BethCollier31
      @BethCollier31 2 года назад +3

      Agree with you. Brian Lamb is exemplary as an interviewer who allows his guest great latitude to provide complete answers to questions and comments. Of course it is especially wonderful to see Christopher Hitchens as young, beautiful, healthier days. So sadly missed. A unique voice, a unique person. I cannot think of anyone who compares. Perhaps Gore Vidal who CH stated he admires.

    • @michaelwallden7261
      @michaelwallden7261 2 года назад +1

      Why must people write "the best ever" - as it is some sort of competition...enjoy and dont judge

    • @milart12
      @milart12 Год назад

      Who are u to say? You are also judging. Take ur own advice.

  • @johnwetherwaxx9470
    @johnwetherwaxx9470 2 года назад +13

    We need another voice like Hitchens in America today!

    • @liamweinberg4902
      @liamweinberg4902 Год назад

      Douglas Murray comes closest among authors and speakers I follow to evoking the essence of Hitch. While he isn't in the same league as Hitchens, and I believe he'd acknowledge that, Murray is still outstanding. Hitchens possesses the unique skill of making each word compelling, and his extensive grasp of history and politics is expressed with charisma, intrigue, and wit.

  • @ardstrum
    @ardstrum Год назад +3

    Around the 34 or 35 minute mark Hitchens gives a short but poignant master class in writing and journalism when discussing George Will. Literally every second of every answer is dripping with useful information, and there's so much more behind each word whenever the interviewer is smart enough to catch references and respond accordingly. No wonder Hitchens and Amis and the rest of their posse spent endless evenings and early mornings in profound discussion. Just so much to give but taken from us far too early. Of course it also helps if you agree with them, which I did wholeheartedly most of the time.

  • @Dariabar
    @Dariabar 7 лет назад +20

    I have yet to view a better interview of Hitch on one of his books. Thanks for uploading it.

  • @andrewz4105
    @andrewz4105 Год назад +6

    The embodiment of reason, morality and wit. Nobody else has come close and perhaps never will

  • @davebashford3753
    @davebashford3753 6 лет назад +28

    He must've been one of the easiest people ever to interview. The interviewer only had to hint at a question and Hitch would answer in long form without ever droning on. It's a pleasure to watch even if he weren't as interesting as he was.

    • @leemartin2978
      @leemartin2978 6 лет назад +4

      Your absolutely correct, the big difference from today , certainly in the U.K., is that the interview is about the guest , and not the interviewer.

  • @JimPlattes
    @JimPlattes 4 года назад +6

    He is so elegant and loquacious.

    • @2fast2block
      @2fast2block 2 года назад

      And so stoo-pid.
      Hitch who pretends to know the bible as he screws up on it over and over again including what faith means biblically.
      --"Faith is the surrender of the mind, it's the surrender of reason, it's the surrender of the only thing that makes us different from other animals. It's our need to believe and to surrender our skepticism and our reason, our yearning to discard that and put all our trust or faith in someone or something, that is the sinister thing to me. ... Out of all the virtues, all the supposed virtues, faith must be the most overrated”-- Christopher Hitchens
      Now, look at what biblical faith really means that Hitch the liar didn't even look at:
      Biblically, faith means trust. It's a trust by evidence seen. God asks that we prove things. To reason. To get knowledge. To study. God has nothing to hide. We develop trust from what is seen, and that which is not seen yet is trusted also because of the trust built up from what is seen. It's much like a human relationship. We don't trust much until a person has gained that trust from what is observed. The difference is though, God is not limited to human powers. He created us.
      Romans 1:20 For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities-his eternal power and divine nature-have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse.
      ruclips.net/video/cZGbSrvEQLo/видео.html
      crossexamined.org/biblical-faith-vs-blind-faith/
      www.truthortradition.com/articles/what-does-the-bible-say-about-faith
      www.revisedenglishversion.com/Appendix/16/Faith_is_Trust
      www.truthortradition.com/articles/faith-a-confident-expectation-of-gods-promises-coming-to-pass
      www.truthortradition.com/articles/hebrews-1-11-and-faith
      Hitchens always went into evasive word antics to avoid key questions like how we got the creation of the universe.
      Real science says nothing does nothing. Real science says if there was something there already it must fit with the evidence of what we know. We know the 1LT says there's a conservation of energy. It can change forms and neither can be created or destroyed. Creation cannot happen by natural means. The 2LT has various aspects, one being the universe is winding down, entropy. Usable energy is becoming less usable, so at one point usable energy was at its max. This all points to a supernatural creation, by a supernatural creator at a certain point in which matter, space, and time were created. When I read how it can happen otherwise, ALL the fools resort to science-fiction. Once a supernatural creation is accepted, then the next step is finding proof of what supernatural power did it.
      We can't even get science without God. The laws of nature only can come from a Lawgiver, God.
      Life only comes from life. Law of biogenesis.
      God is the reason for us and all we have.
      ruclips.net/video/JiMqzN_YSXU/видео.html
      The odds are NOT there.
      ruclips.net/video/W1_KEVaCyaA/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/yW9gawzZLsk/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/ddaqSutt5aw/видео.html

    • @ysf-psfx
      @ysf-psfx 2 года назад +1

      @@2fast2block Then where did the creator come from? What is your reasoning that it is outside your own requirements?

    • @2fast2block
      @2fast2block 2 года назад

      @@ysf-psfx it's funny how people like you brush off the evidence with such a question, as if the question somehow negates the evidence.
      Tell me how a supernatural creator that created the natural realm is then bound by the laws of nature the supernatural creator created. Your question is not even logical.

    • @j.randle3803
      @j.randle3803 2 года назад

      @@2fast2block This is not a comment but rather a long winded, mean-spirited diatribe

    • @2fast2block
      @2fast2block 2 года назад

      @@j.randle3803 If you're referring to my comment, it had science and evidence to it, you couldn't deal with it so you needed to fill in space lying. You must be so proud of yourself.

  • @seangrant2024
    @seangrant2024 4 года назад +7

    Hitch I miss you, Thank you for giving the rest of us a reason to think outside of the Box.

  • @whaustin
    @whaustin 2 года назад +5

    Who is there to take up the mantle (cudgel?) of this brilliant and lovely man. We are in such need of someone with his insight and elucidation, to fight for or call out those who are abused or abusive in our failing society today.

    • @cleopatra1633
      @cleopatra1633 2 года назад

      @stan Ayaan Hirsi Ali was bullied in the Netherlands in the political parliament by leftist woke nutjobs because she criticized muslims. I always knew she was gonna go far.

  • @rocketsurgeon5758
    @rocketsurgeon5758 10 лет назад +11

    Thank you so much for sharing this rare glimpse of Hitchens when he was close to my age. How I would love to have that drink and smoke about which he remarks he would be much more eloquent.

  • @pedropola882
    @pedropola882 2 года назад +8

    We will never have anyone like Mr Hitchens.

  • @judepower4425
    @judepower4425 6 лет назад +7

    I hadn't seen this interview until now and I know it will become one of my favourites. I love it that the writers who influenced Hitchens are also the writers who influenced me and around the same time (I was born in 46 and he in 49): Orwell, Wilfred Owen, How Green Was My Valley ..... and in my case initially Jack London and later John Steinbeck.

  • @sydneymorey6059
    @sydneymorey6059 2 года назад +3

    Unique in the extreme, one of an extraordinary part of this Universe. Cheers SBM.

  • @marksomers8126
    @marksomers8126 4 года назад +12

    I could watch Bryan and Christopher talk all day long and sometimes do! I wish there were more, I think I've watched them all but I always hold out hope to find something I haven't seen before 🤞🏼

    • @freeshrugs63
      @freeshrugs63 2 года назад

      Who is this interviewer? I think I recognize him. Bryan, you said...?

    • @LawrenceJohmann
      @LawrenceJohmann 2 года назад

      @@freeshrugs63 Brian Lamb ruclips.net/video/ZGHIJT7ndaY/видео.html

    • @freeshrugs63
      @freeshrugs63 2 года назад

      @@LawrenceJohmann . I looked it up. I was too quick to type my question instead of asking Google. Thanks!

  • @NOXFPV
    @NOXFPV Год назад +4

    I miss Chris. What a great writer.

  • @6teezkid
    @6teezkid 6 лет назад +20

    “Who are you particularly pissed off at now?” Hitch: “Janet Reno.” - LMAO! 😂

  • @cato451
    @cato451 2 года назад +3

    Booknotes on CSPAN. Loved that show. Brian Lamb was a fantastic interviewer.

  • @pedropola882
    @pedropola882 2 года назад +6

    There's no journalism like this anymore.

  • @xavierpaquin
    @xavierpaquin Год назад +5

    90s Hitchens is the best

  • @robandrews4815
    @robandrews4815 2 года назад +7

    I rate Hitch right up there with Bertrand Russell and Ibn Warraq. These two are the 3 best people around in discussing the atheist possition.
    I sure do miss him.

  • @norwegianblue2764
    @norwegianblue2764 Год назад +2

    National treasures, both of them, Lamb and Hitch.

  • @hayleyanna2625
    @hayleyanna2625 3 месяца назад

    Superb interview/conversation. Christopher was an exceptional public speaker and the interviewer is very impressive.

  • @Viky.A.V.
    @Viky.A.V. Год назад +1

    "You spent some time in jail" -- lol, finally a joke and smiles in a serious interview. Mr Hitchens answers so quickly, and the interviewer is very good, too. The whole talk looks as if it was directed =D Packed with information, lasting lesser than one hour. Thank you so much for sharing!

  • @OscarWrightZenTANGO
    @OscarWrightZenTANGO 4 года назад +10

    He was truly unique!

  • @milart12
    @milart12 7 лет назад +25

    I always thought that Brian Lamb brought out the best in Hitchens. Interesting, but also a little light hearted.

  • @carnivaltym
    @carnivaltym 4 года назад +5

    Still the very best.

  • @RicardoGarfalo
    @RicardoGarfalo 18 дней назад +1

    32:58 where do you write? At a table in longhand. Always starts in longhand. And writes in bars in the evenings. Doesn't use the "new technology stuff."

  • @brianjacob8728
    @brianjacob8728 Год назад +2

    man this is a great interview.

  • @seanmcghee2373
    @seanmcghee2373 2 года назад +5

    Ridiculously brilliant man. And, gone, as all are, too, too soon.

  • @kakistocracyusa
    @kakistocracyusa 6 лет назад +8

    "the only person I have a deal with is the person who might read this"
    34:23- 36:00 is oratory that is worth replaying.

  • @DBEdwards
    @DBEdwards 2 года назад +10

    Christopher Hitchens at the height of his powers.

  • @BruceCSnow
    @BruceCSnow 10 лет назад +11

    God I miss him.

  • @curiousworldview
    @curiousworldview 2 года назад +5

    one of his greatest clips

    • @2fast2block
      @2fast2block 2 года назад

      He was bad in all of them.
      Hitch who pretends to know the bible as he screws up on it over and over again including what faith means biblically.
      --"Faith is the surrender of the mind, it's the surrender of reason, it's the surrender of the only thing that makes us different from other animals. It's our need to believe and to surrender our skepticism and our reason, our yearning to discard that and put all our trust or faith in someone or something, that is the sinister thing to me. ... Out of all the virtues, all the supposed virtues, faith must be the most overrated”-- Christopher Hitchens
      Now, look at what biblical faith really means that Hitch the liar didn't even look at:
      Biblically, faith means trust. It's a trust by evidence seen. God asks that we prove things. To reason. To get knowledge. To study. God has nothing to hide. We develop trust from what is seen, and that which is not seen yet is trusted also because of the trust built up from what is seen. It's much like a human relationship. We don't trust much until a person has gained that trust from what is observed. The difference is though, God is not limited to human powers. He created us.
      Romans 1:20 For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities-his eternal power and divine nature-have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse.
      ruclips.net/video/cZGbSrvEQLo/видео.html
      crossexamined.org/biblical-faith-vs-blind-faith/
      www.truthortradition.com/articles/what-does-the-bible-say-about-faith
      www.revisedenglishversion.com/Appendix/16/Faith_is_Trust
      www.truthortradition.com/articles/faith-a-confident-expectation-of-gods-promises-coming-to-pass
      www.truthortradition.com/articles/hebrews-1-11-and-faith
      Hitchens always went into evasive word antics to avoid key questions like how we got the creation of the universe.
      Real science says nothing does nothing. Real science says if there was something there already it must fit with the evidence of what we know. We know the 1LT says there's a conservation of energy. It can change forms and neither can be created or destroyed. Creation cannot happen by natural means. The 2LT has various aspects, one being the universe is winding down, entropy. Usable energy is becoming less usable, so at one point usable energy was at its max. This all points to a supernatural creation, by a supernatural creator at a certain point in which matter, space, and time were created. When I read how it can happen otherwise, ALL the fools resort to science-fiction. Once a supernatural creation is accepted, then the next step is finding proof of what supernatural power did it.
      We can't even get science without God. The laws of nature only can come from a Lawgiver, God.
      Life only comes from life. Law of biogenesis.
      God is the reason for us and all we have.
      ruclips.net/video/JiMqzN_YSXU/видео.html
      The odds are NOT there.
      ruclips.net/video/W1_KEVaCyaA/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/yW9gawzZLsk/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/ddaqSutt5aw/видео.html

    • @Redman680
      @Redman680 2 года назад

      @@2fast2block Bore off, Jesus freak. Religion is a man made system of control. Only mindless drones fail to see that. 🤡

  • @lyndapierson6338
    @lyndapierson6338 4 года назад +6

    the man, the voice, the mind damn

  • @TheJapanChannelDcom
    @TheJapanChannelDcom Год назад +1

    A great man brought down by tobacco.

  • @CatnamedMittens
    @CatnamedMittens 6 лет назад +4

    Good interview from the both of them.

  • @gbickell
    @gbickell 4 года назад +5

    Eloquent and coherent - Hitchens

  • @valerieangell7588
    @valerieangell7588 6 лет назад +25

    We keep saying that we miss Hitch...let’s be Hitch!That is what he’d want...

    • @a690ac52ed7
      @a690ac52ed7 6 лет назад

      I had just that very thought ahead of reading your comment.

    • @BartAlder
      @BartAlder 6 лет назад +6

      Most people don't have the brain power or the command of language required to be even half a Hitch. He was absolutely exceptional.

    • @dst_20
      @dst_20 5 лет назад +2

      The hitch like contrarian in me wants to disagree... hence proving your assertion

    • @Malpheron
      @Malpheron 4 года назад

      @@BartAlder But we can all be free thinkers and wary of consensus. Well, some of us can at the very least.

  • @MisterstereoOso
    @MisterstereoOso 6 лет назад +3

    Bloody marvelous .......

  • @lxoxrxexnx
    @lxoxrxexnx 4 года назад +4

    Our world has lost so many wonderful minds to death. He is one of them. That is one of the great injustices of life.

    • @bjkarana
      @bjkarana 2 года назад

      Don't worry, we may very well lose all of them in time. ;-)

  • @SweetJennyFan
    @SweetJennyFan 6 лет назад +8

    1993. Have I really been asleep for 25 years ? Yep.

    • @2fast2block
      @2fast2block 2 года назад

      Hitch who pretends to know the bible as he screws up on it over and over again including what faith means biblically.
      --"Faith is the surrender of the mind, it's the surrender of reason, it's the surrender of the only thing that makes us different from other animals. It's our need to believe and to surrender our skepticism and our reason, our yearning to discard that and put all our trust or faith in someone or something, that is the sinister thing to me. ... Out of all the virtues, all the supposed virtues, faith must be the most overrated”-- Christopher Hitchens
      Now, look at what biblical faith really means that Hitch the liar didn't even look at:
      Biblically, faith means trust. It's a trust by evidence seen. God asks that we prove things. To reason. To get knowledge. To study. God has nothing to hide. We develop trust from what is seen, and that which is not seen yet is trusted also because of the trust built up from what is seen. It's much like a human relationship. We don't trust much until a person has gained that trust from what is observed. The difference is though, God is not limited to human powers. He created us.
      Romans 1:20 For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities-his eternal power and divine nature-have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse.
      ruclips.net/video/cZGbSrvEQLo/видео.html
      crossexamined.org/biblical-faith-vs-blind-faith/
      www.truthortradition.com/articles/what-does-the-bible-say-about-faith
      www.revisedenglishversion.com/Appendix/16/Faith_is_Trust
      www.truthortradition.com/articles/faith-a-confident-expectation-of-gods-promises-coming-to-pass
      www.truthortradition.com/articles/hebrews-1-11-and-faith
      Hitchens always went into evasive word antics to avoid key questions like how we got the creation of the universe.
      Real science says nothing does nothing. Real science says if there was something there already it must fit with the evidence of what we know. We know the 1LT says there's a conservation of energy. It can change forms and neither can be created or destroyed. Creation cannot happen by natural means. The 2LT has various aspects, one being the universe is winding down, entropy. Usable energy is becoming less usable, so at one point usable energy was at its max. This all points to a supernatural creation, by a supernatural creator at a certain point in which matter, space, and time were created. When I read how it can happen otherwise, ALL the fools resort to science-fiction. Once a supernatural creation is accepted, then the next step is finding proof of what supernatural power did it.
      We can't even get science without God. The laws of nature only can come from a Lawgiver, God.
      Life only comes from life. Law of biogenesis.
      God is the reason for us and all we have.
      ruclips.net/video/JiMqzN_YSXU/видео.html
      The odds are NOT there.
      ruclips.net/video/W1_KEVaCyaA/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/yW9gawzZLsk/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/ddaqSutt5aw/видео.html

    • @2SideshowBob
      @2SideshowBob Год назад

      ​@@2fast2block difference being no one will read your boorish garbage and yet many happily devote an hour to watch an interview from 1993 from this great man

  • @OscarWrightZenTANGO
    @OscarWrightZenTANGO 4 года назад +15

    My intellectual hero.!

  • @jmomm
    @jmomm 9 лет назад +20

    I LOVE P.G Wodehouse!!

    • @carlosgaspar8447
      @carlosgaspar8447 6 лет назад +3

      has the interviewer not heard of p.g.wodehouse or is he just trying to make light conversation.

    • @Bucketheadhead
      @Bucketheadhead 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@carlosgaspar8447the latter, an interviewer exists for the benefit of those listening

    • @carlosgaspar8447
      @carlosgaspar8447 8 месяцев назад

      @@Bucketheadhead yes, it's not always obvious.

  • @tylerd994
    @tylerd994 4 года назад +2

    I haven't slogged through all of the comments, but I do want to note that Brian Lamb does a wonderful job here interviewing Christopher.
    Students of Hitch will know this already, and this has to do with his comment on parenting. Stay the fuck out of the way. Mr. Lamb asks smart, direct, intelligent questions and I think he did excellent. He asked, and he stayed the fuck out of the way.
    Further. Students of Christopher also know that they've had loads of interviews and seem to be genuine friends, Mr. Lamb and Mr. Hitchens.
    Brian Lamb does an excellent job interviewing The Hitch. I miss him hard, as many of you seem to also do. What a brilliant star that, sadly, as all stars must do in time, faded away.
    Actually come to think of it most stars don't just die. They basically just run out of energy and sit around like buzzing dwarves that they are. I think it would be more appropriate to call Hitch one of this buzzing, low-energy dwarves that floats in space but it still very much there and with us. I appreciate this man more than words can describe, although I've done my best here.
    Cheers, Hitch fans! You're not alone.
    - Tyler

  • @gazatkinson5288
    @gazatkinson5288 6 лет назад +20

    Does anybody read hitch's books and do it in his voice? Or is just me?

    • @2Sugarbears
      @2Sugarbears 5 лет назад +2

      Me.

    • @hififlipper
      @hififlipper 4 года назад +1

      Yah!

    • @mikerodgers7620
      @mikerodgers7620 4 года назад

      Fuck the heathen ignorant loser.

    • @gazatkinson5288
      @gazatkinson5288 4 года назад +1

      @@mikerodgers7620 You ok mike? Sound like you've got out of the wrong side of the bed mate. Go grab a cup of horlicks and go read a verse of the bible...chill man!

    • @mikerodgers7620
      @mikerodgers7620 4 года назад

      @@gazatkinson5288 a soldier of God almighty never chills.

  • @brianmurray7091
    @brianmurray7091 6 лет назад +3

    Like how he talks about PJ O Rourke and then love how he talks about his brother

  • @Darrence27
    @Darrence27 10 лет назад +41

    How much longer are you going to do this?
    till I drop.

    • @Momchil92
      @Momchil92 7 лет назад +3

      quoting Death's Echo (by W H Auden)

    • @sverre371
      @sverre371 6 лет назад +6

      And he did.

    • @kiwitrainguy
      @kiwitrainguy 3 года назад +1

      In another interview, referring to his writing he said, "It's not what I do, it's what I am."

  • @karaokegal64
    @karaokegal64 4 года назад +7

    I miss Hitchens and I miss Book Notes. Brian mistaking “Aunties” for “ants” is one of my favorite moments ever.

    • @BrianFairweather
      @BrianFairweather 4 года назад +2

      I have only just ordered the book, but I believe he mistook “anti” as in an “anti” looking for a climax...

    • @2fast2block
      @2fast2block 2 года назад

      I don't miss that stooo-pid A$$.
      Hitch who pretends to know the bible as he screws up on it over and over again including what faith means biblically.
      --"Faith is the surrender of the mind, it's the surrender of reason, it's the surrender of the only thing that makes us different from other animals. It's our need to believe and to surrender our skepticism and our reason, our yearning to discard that and put all our trust or faith in someone or something, that is the sinister thing to me. ... Out of all the virtues, all the supposed virtues, faith must be the most overrated”-- Christopher Hitchens
      Now, look at what biblical faith really means that Hitch the liar didn't even look at:
      Biblically, faith means trust. It's a trust by evidence seen. God asks that we prove things. To reason. To get knowledge. To study. God has nothing to hide. We develop trust from what is seen, and that which is not seen yet is trusted also because of the trust built up from what is seen. It's much like a human relationship. We don't trust much until a person has gained that trust from what is observed. The difference is though, God is not limited to human powers. He created us.
      Romans 1:20 For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities-his eternal power and divine nature-have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse.
      ruclips.net/video/cZGbSrvEQLo/видео.html
      crossexamined.org/biblical-faith-vs-blind-faith/
      www.truthortradition.com/articles/what-does-the-bible-say-about-faith
      www.revisedenglishversion.com/Appendix/16/Faith_is_Trust
      www.truthortradition.com/articles/faith-a-confident-expectation-of-gods-promises-coming-to-pass
      www.truthortradition.com/articles/hebrews-1-11-and-faith
      Hitchens always went into evasive word antics to avoid key questions like how we got the creation of the universe.
      Real science says nothing does nothing. Real science says if there was something there already it must fit with the evidence of what we know. We know the 1LT says there's a conservation of energy. It can change forms and neither can be created or destroyed. Creation cannot happen by natural means. The 2LT has various aspects, one being the universe is winding down, entropy. Usable energy is becoming less usable, so at one point usable energy was at its max. This all points to a supernatural creation, by a supernatural creator at a certain point in which matter, space, and time were created. When I read how it can happen otherwise, ALL the fools resort to science-fiction. Once a supernatural creation is accepted, then the next step is finding proof of what supernatural power did it.
      We can't even get science without God. The laws of nature only can come from a Lawgiver, God.
      Life only comes from life. Law of biogenesis.
      God is the reason for us and all we have.
      ruclips.net/video/JiMqzN_YSXU/видео.html
      The odds are NOT there.
      ruclips.net/video/W1_KEVaCyaA/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/yW9gawzZLsk/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/ddaqSutt5aw/видео.html

  • @NDB_O
    @NDB_O 2 года назад +3

    “This must make me sound insufferable. But that’s my ambition anyway.”

  • @rupertbloomsbury9789
    @rupertbloomsbury9789 6 лет назад +10

    Tackle the ball, not the man. My upbringing precisely

    • @natemacbane4640
      @natemacbane4640 6 лет назад +1

      -remembers my coach telling all of us he "didn't care if the guy was already on the ground, tackle him anyway, dog pile"

  • @theknowerandtheknown
    @theknowerandtheknown 4 года назад +7

    I love Hitchens because I don't agree with him all the time but he can argue a great point whether he's a far leftist or a Neo-con, speaking daggers at god or dying from throat cancer. He was a great great mind

    • @Angela-kc5ui
      @Angela-kc5ui 6 месяцев назад

      I’m with you on this

  • @arcanuslosanara2823
    @arcanuslosanara2823 Год назад +3

    It's amazing. This great man died from the side effects of smoking and drinking, yet he is roaming the internet starring in these hour-length videos.

    • @2fast2block
      @2fast2block Год назад

      No great man, just a tiny brain who was too afraid of reality.
      The 1LofT states that energy can't be created or destroyed, it can't happen naturally. One aspect of the 2LofT shows that the universe is winding down, usable energy is becoming less usable. It is clear creation had to be done supernaturally yet it is still denied because people are just too proud to accept that, among other things.

  • @jackjackthompson5771
    @jackjackthompson5771 2 года назад +5

    Man, I wish I was this smart! Unbelievable!

  • @stubrechner590
    @stubrechner590 2 года назад

    we are so much less for having lost this most unique of individuals

  • @discountmontecrisco2151
    @discountmontecrisco2151 6 лет назад +16

    I agree that we are all the worse as a society in not having Professor Hitchens to apply his brilliant mind to the absurdity of American politics of today.

    • @rep10101
      @rep10101 4 года назад

      brillant? I suppose we are all brillant in a few narrow areas

    • @robappleby583
      @robappleby583 4 года назад +4

      Don Bradmen no, we’re not. Hitchens was a brilliant social and political critic and an incisive and ruthless debater. That’s a pretty wide range.

  • @shaneomac7566
    @shaneomac7566 6 лет назад +7

    I love his take on alcohol and smoking and I dont smoke or barely drink!

    • @hooverbaglegs
      @hooverbaglegs Год назад

      It killed him. Very clever but not clever too

  • @stephenjablonsky1941
    @stephenjablonsky1941 Год назад +2

    We don't seem to have a replacement for Chris which is sad because we need one desperately.

  • @josephyoung6749
    @josephyoung6749 5 лет назад +7

    you have the face you deserve at 40... he looks pretty damn good for 40.

  • @e.g.7612
    @e.g.7612 Год назад

    The way he says “Janet Reno” at the end is simply perfect

  • @grahamjohndavis
    @grahamjohndavis 4 года назад +2

    He’s ace. Miss him.

  • @torsion2
    @torsion2 6 лет назад +11

    90s Hitch was by far the best Hitch

    • @MattSingh1
      @MattSingh1 6 лет назад

      Advocating the 2003 liberation of Iraq was mostly likely his high point. His advocacy was simply remarkable, both on the point of fact and philosophically.

    • @Franciscasieri
      @Franciscasieri 11 месяцев назад

      He left humanity with a detailed proof of the non existence of a God...God is not Great...that's the legacy that mankind will read for the next 500 years

  • @klausantitheistbolvig8372
    @klausantitheistbolvig8372 4 года назад +3

    Hitchens stands his Ground . And a man of knoldlege and his intellectuel clever explanation! In my country he’s quite unknown, which Bertrand Russell is. Quite a shame because I think we can learn from these people.

  • @stuarth43
    @stuarth43 Год назад

    oh Dear Chris, if only!! the World needed people such as you, James, Ustinov

  • @leezhao
    @leezhao 8 лет назад +10

    Hitch actually mis-quoted Orwell here. Orwell wrote “At 50, everyone has the face he deserves.” Not at 40, as Hitch said. A detail I guess.

    • @mrglibb
      @mrglibb 8 лет назад

      +Lee Z I think in context he may have been paraphrasing, although maybe not.

    •  8 лет назад +2

      Probably, he was 40 at the time.

    • @ericwolfe2455
      @ericwolfe2455 4 года назад

      Lame

  • @gladbags
    @gladbags 8 лет назад +5

    I just used this video as a reference to update Annie Leibovitz's wikipedia page

    • @brettdalton3760
      @brettdalton3760 4 года назад

      jpgladman here from that reference... thanks!

  • @myyoutube7144
    @myyoutube7144 Год назад +2

    RIP Hitch. ❤

  • @moodiblues2
    @moodiblues2 Год назад +3

    What a shame that Christopher didn’t heed the warnings about over-indulging in smoking and drinking. We lost a brilliant mind when he died.

  • @thedolphin5428
    @thedolphin5428 2 года назад +4

    SO.FUCKING.ERUDITE.ELOQUENT.
    Never a thought, a word, a phrase out of place.

  • @JJWilson-ex6km
    @JJWilson-ex6km Год назад +1

    Will we ever see the likes of this articulate mind again?

  • @h.a.b.arguille1896
    @h.a.b.arguille1896 2 года назад +2

    What else is there to say? I miss you Christopher.

  • @judebogart
    @judebogart 2 года назад +2

    He was fascinating.

  • @ASC63Funky
    @ASC63Funky 14 дней назад

    They say you only know what you had once it gone. I think one could say that with Hitch. how we need him now

  • @johnschlesinger2009
    @johnschlesinger2009 5 лет назад +2

    Correction: I wrote this hurrriedly: Franklin Roosevelt was FDR.

  • @MamaMia84oo7
    @MamaMia84oo7 Год назад

    Legendo ❤

  • @tscottbaker2980
    @tscottbaker2980 Год назад

    Love the sardonic wit and openness. Hitch was a real prize with a crucial flaw, his solutions are hopelessly flawed whenever they appear.