Stay Free - Russel Brand - October 29, 2023


Jordan Peterson On Israel-Palestine Conflict, Symbolism & the Psyche - Stay Free #234


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 11 minutes

Words per Minute

133.26535

Word Count

9,584

Sentence Count

470

Misogynist Sentences

1

Hate Speech Sentences

11


Summary

In this special edition of Stay Free With Russell Brand, Russell Brand sits down with Jordan Peterson to discuss the Israel-Palestine conflict and the legacy of Judaism to the world, and the role of Judaism as a mediator between Christianity and Islam in the Middle East. Jordan Peterson is a clinical psychologist and best-selling author. He is also the founder of ARK, a group that seeks to address the world's most pressing problems and provide a vision for a future that is on the precipice of perpetual crisis, perhaps precisely because of a tendency towards centralisation which we will be discussing at some point. In this episode, we discuss: Why is it that Jews have been targeted by anti-Semitism? What does it mean to be a Jew in the modern world? What role does Judaism play in the world and how does it relate to the conflict between Israel and Palestine? And why is it so important that Jews are targeted by the anti-Semitic narrative that is so prevalent in our culture? All of these questions and more are answered by Jordan Peterson in a conversation with Russell Brand in this episode. Stay Free, Wanna know more about Jordan Peterson? Subscribe to Stay Free? Leave Us a Review On Apple Podcasts! Subscribe, Like, Share and Subscribe to our new podcast, and subscribe to our other podcast, Waving Wonder? We'll See the Future: A Place Where We Can See The Future, where we'll Discuss the Future, Real Talk, Real Stories and Real Stories from the World's Most Influential People Discussing the Real World, Real Life, Real Places, Real Things, Real Experiences, Real Lives, Real Moments, Real Conversations, Real Relationships, Real Real Stories, Real Times, Real Connections, Real Time, Real Problems, Real World Experiences and Real Life Experiences from the People Who Care About the Real Life and Real Lives. , Real Talk Podcast, and Real Talk With Us, we'll Find Out What's Happening in Real Life & Real Talk! , We'll Hear From You, We'll Be Heard by You, The Awakened Wonder! Join Us On This Week's Stay Free with Jordan Brand: , , Subscribe, Subscribe, Share Us On Social Media, Subscribe & Share Us, Subscribe and Share Us on Insta-Upside Down, and Subscribe To Our Podcasts, You'll Be Told What's Going On?


Transcript

00:00:00.000 So, I'm going to go ahead and get started.
00:07:14.000 In this video, you're going to see the future.
00:07:24.000 We've got a live shot there.
00:07:31.000 Hello there, you Awakening Wonders.
00:07:33.000 Thanks for joining me for a very special edition of Stay Free with Russell Brand.
00:07:37.000 We've had a massive, extraordinary, revealing, and deep conversation with Jordan Peterson.
00:07:43.000 It's the first time we've spoken for a long while, or certainly spoken publicly, because Jordan Peterson and I communicate a lot about the culture.
00:07:52.000 I talk to him personally about what I've been through and what I've been going through.
00:07:58.000 He's an extraordinary mind and an extraordinary man and he has an incredible ability to ascertain just what's going on and obviously he ain't afraid to offer his opinion on what's going wrong in the world.
00:08:13.000 Today, because he's over in the UK to talk about ARK, which is his consortium discussing potential solutions for the world, and you should check that out, there's a link in the description if you want to learn more.
00:08:26.000 We talk about, this being Jordan Peterson, is But in particular, the war in the Middle East, a kind of living, vivid symbol of end times.
00:08:37.000 What specifically is the legacy of Judaism to world faith and to world solutions?
00:08:46.000 The debt owed by, in Jordan Pearsons' view, Christianity and Islam to the originator of
00:08:53.000 the monotheistic faiths, the Abrahamic faiths as they're more commonly known.
00:08:57.000 Of course we talk about kindness, of course we talk about ways in which we can change
00:09:03.000 the world.
00:09:04.000 The first 15 minutes will be available wherever you're watching this right now, but then we
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00:09:17.000 It's a necessity now.
00:09:18.000 You know that.
00:09:19.000 Free speech is being closed down.
00:09:22.000 You are not allowed to communicate independently.
00:09:25.000 You are not allowed to think independently.
00:09:27.000 And if you still believe you are able to communicate and think independently, that's because your communication of thought is no threat to the establishment.
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00:09:37.000 If you do that, you can become an Awakened Wonder and get access to all of our content, including live meditations and all sorts of solution-oriented conversation and discourse.
00:09:49.000 The first 50 minutes is available wherever you're watching this.
00:09:52.000 After that, we'll be exclusively available on Rumble.
00:09:56.000 Now we have the great privilege of a conversation with Jordan Peterson, who, if you don't know, is a clinical psychologist.
00:10:03.000 pending, a best-selling author without question. He is of course bringing ARK to the UK to discuss
00:10:11.000 a hopeful vision for a future that appears to be on the precipice of perpetual crisis,
00:10:17.000 perhaps precisely because of a tendency towards centralisation which we will be
00:10:22.000 discussing at some point. Thank you so much for joining us, Jordan.
00:10:26.000 Hey, it's always good to see you.
00:10:30.000 I wanted to ask you, with the current set of crises that are besetting the world,
00:10:36.000 perhaps most notable and extreme at least on first assessment, being the sequence of
00:10:44.000 ongoing wars and of those wars perhaps because of historical and even historic
00:10:50.000 break.
00:10:52.000 freight the Israel-Palestine conflict being the most notable and fraught of them.
00:10:58.000 I wonder how you regard war as a symbolic event, war as a crisis, and is there something particular to be gleaned that this is In particular, a war between Israel and Palestine.
00:11:13.000 Does this war carry freight that other wars do not carry?
00:11:18.000 If not, then why is it that Old Testament prophets use the conflict between Israel and their enemies as the kind of archetypal and defining conflict the conflict that in fact almost could be used to
00:11:35.000 understand what war in itself is. Is it even appropriate in the midst of this conflict to regard it in
00:11:43.000 its symbolic terms? And if it isn't appropriate, why have a symbolic assessment at all? Well,
00:11:50.000 the Jews are always troublesome because they're a successful minority. And so that if you're
00:12:00.000 inclined to view the world through a lens of power and you make the presumption that all you need to
00:12:08.000 explain all of human relations and all of human history is the narrative of oppressor and
00:12:14.000 oppressed, the Jews tend to stick in your throat because minorities should fail if they're oppressed.
00:12:22.000 and And the Jews succeed wherever they are, and there's very complex reasons for that.
00:12:30.000 And then if you're a right-wing ethno-nationalist, well, that's equally annoying.
00:12:36.000 Not because the success of the Jews devastates your oppressor narrative, but because, well, the only reason they could possibly be successful is because they're conspiring behind the scenes.
00:12:47.000 And so, the Jews always get targeted when societies start to destabilize.
00:12:53.000 I actually think they're canaries in the coal mine.
00:12:55.000 You know, when you see anti-Semitism on the rise, you know that your society is starting to shake and tremble.
00:13:01.000 If you can't tolerate the successful minority, then there's something gone deeply wrong with your culture.
00:13:09.000 From a clinical perspective, the idea that a patient's history, from a Jungian perspective in particular, could be regarded as the intercession of God in that patient's life, each crisis perhaps regarded as a collision with the capital S self, between the self and the ego.
00:13:30.000 Do you agree with Erdinger's assessment that all human history is the manifestation of God's relationship with mankind.
00:13:41.000 And if there is something to be gleaned from this very particular analytic,
00:13:45.000 what is this we're experiencing now with this current war, one aspect of which you have touched upon already,
00:13:53.000 and the set of accompanying wars and crises that appear to be constellating around it?
00:14:01.000 Well, it's hard to see how you can be Christian or Muslim without being burdened ethically by the debt that you owe
00:14:17.000 the Jews.
00:14:18.000 I mean, the Jews, the Jews, Old Testament mythology is the starting place for Islam and Christianity, and there are complex reasons for that.
00:14:33.000 I think the Jews did an unbelievably good job of formulating a monotheistic hypothesis and then buttressing that with a plethora of deep stories, but they were also among the first people, if not the first people, Per se, to hypothesize that the relationship with God was contractual and also psychological.
00:14:57.000 So one of the things you see happening in the Old Testament, this happens with the prophet Elijah, is that there's a realization that whatever God is, which is the sum of all that is good, I suppose, that's one way of thinking about it, is also manifest within you, for example, as the voice of conscience.
00:15:16.000 And that that voice is something that you have a relationship with, but that also has a certain kind of independence.
00:15:22.000 Now, it's a very strange hypothesis, but it's worth taking with some degree of seriousness.
00:15:29.000 Freud posited, and people are unconscious Freudians now, that we were religious, we believed in heaven, we believed in God to help us overcome our anxiety of death, right?
00:15:41.000 To give to mortal life significance and eternal significance and depth that it lacked because of its finitude.
00:15:49.000 And so he regarded the religious enterprise as something that was in some ways juvenile and infantile because of that requirement for dependence.
00:15:58.000 There's a variety of serious flaws with that theory.
00:16:01.000 And one is, well, why bother with the notion of hell then?
00:16:05.000 Because you could just dispense with that if all you were trying to do was delude yourself.
00:16:10.000 And the second one is, well, there are some stringent conditions that are laid upon you as an adherent of a religious belief.
00:16:16.000 And you might say, well, you only abide by them because you're looking for eternal heaven.
00:16:23.000 But it's still the case that the religious structures are set up with a fair degree of stricture within them.
00:16:30.000 And if it was a mere matter of immature hedonism, let's say, the desire for eternal gratification, why make the preconditions for membership so stringent?
00:16:43.000 Then there's an additional complication as well, which is that the voice of conscience is Mysterious, because it obviously makes itself manifest within, but it isn't something that you have voluntary control over.
00:16:59.000 And then you might say, well, is it something you have a relationship with?
00:17:02.000 And I would say that's also an accurate way of putting it, because you see this detailed very well in the story of Pinocchio.
00:17:09.000 So when Pinocchio is, of course, attempting to become real instead of being a puppet, being controlled from behind the scenes.
00:17:18.000 And when he first encounters his conscience, this little voice that bugs him, hence the cricket, the conscience is also not very well tuned.
00:17:29.000 Like, Jiminy Cricket is just a tramp who's been everywhere, but he doesn't have a home, and he doesn't really know what he's doing.
00:17:35.000 And it's in the dialogue between the two of them that the ascension to the divine occurs, right?
00:17:42.000 And the full realization of individuality.
00:17:45.000 That, well, that's a good example of how a relationship with what's highest can be personal.
00:17:51.000 Like, modern people have a very difficult time with that idea, right?
00:17:55.000 It's like, most educated people, if they deign to contemplate God at all, it's as some abstract spiritual entity who really has very little to do with existence per se.
00:18:07.000 Kind of the God of Einstein, let's say.
00:18:11.000 When evangelical Protestants, for example, talk about a personal relationship with Jesus, they get pretty damn nervous and want to move out of the room, you know, the intellectual types, but they fail to understand that you have a relationship with a number of manifestations of spirit that aren't clearly yours.
00:18:31.000 So, for example, the voice of conscience, that's a very good one, but the other autonomous spiritual manifestation that affects all of us is the appearance of what compels our interest.
00:18:49.000 You know, there's an autonomy in that too.
00:18:52.000 That's summed up in the notion of a calling.
00:18:56.000 What's interesting beckons to you.
00:18:59.000 It isn't something that's fully under your control, right?
00:19:01.000 You can ignore it.
00:19:02.000 You can follow it.
00:19:03.000 You can pervert it.
00:19:05.000 But you can't fully control it.
00:19:07.000 And you have to enter into a dance with it.
00:19:10.000 You have to make your peace with it.
00:19:11.000 And that speaks of a certain autonomy of both interest and conscience.
00:19:16.000 And that autonomy seems to have a will, and historically speaking, and the Jews were very good at this, that will was associated with the manifestation of the spirit of being itself.
00:19:27.000 And I think that's true.
00:19:30.000 I don't see a more elegant definition.
00:19:34.000 It's not an explanation exactly.
00:19:35.000 So, well, so the Jews are freighted with all that because they were the first people to put those sorts of notions forward.
00:19:45.000 They've changed the world.
00:19:48.000 And so every time the Jews are involved in something, its significance is magnified, which is also, you know, a large part of mystery.
00:20:00.000 So...
00:20:02.000 The relationship between psyche and matter requires symbolism to catharsise it and to provide cartilage that would otherwise be absent, impossible to envisage without that Non-syntactical representation that symbols can provide.
00:20:24.000 If the conscience, Jiminy Cricket, and the being, the entity, the marionette, the puppet, the boy, Pinocchio, to have a relationship at all, there is a kind of a tension in it, there is a polarity in it, and both of them require one another for its realization, and perhaps that's as good an explanation for God creating our kind as any.
00:20:49.000 When you say that monotheism is the great Judaic artifact, do you feel that even in a secularized culture, the paradigm ultimately remains consistent?
00:21:07.000 Even if it's humanist?
00:21:10.000 Even if this alliance is transferred to the state?
00:21:13.000 Even if the pinnacle of authority and power becomes the state?
00:21:18.000 Is the imprature ultimately consistent?
00:21:22.000 Do even those of us, and I wouldn't include myself actually, do even those who consider themselves to live in a post-religious society still will live within this monotheistic template which I suppose if it's anything at all offers us a kind of a centrifugal point rather than a pantheonistic or pervasive or even Or a panoply of potential gods and deities.
00:21:45.000 There is one centralizing entity and we intersect with that reality.
00:21:50.000 I'd like to add to that already rather complex question even by my own standards when I'm dealing with you because I'm a different man when I'm dealing with you, you better believe it.
00:21:58.000 How do we fold into this What advances Christianity offer us on that template, particularly if Isaiah in particular is offering us the messianic event as his key and defining prophecy.
00:22:15.000 What is the function of Christianity as an advance of Judaism and even in a secularized society are we still operating within a kind of monotheistic template With the state, an increasingly authoritarian state, even under a liberal guise as a Canadian, you'll recognize what I'm saying there.
00:22:32.000 Is that still the paradigm we're operating within?
00:22:33.000 So there's two questions there, really.
00:22:35.000 Okay, well, the first one, well, imagine that there's only, well, there's three options.
00:22:42.000 Nothing is of any value.
00:22:44.000 That'd be the first option.
00:22:45.000 That's a real finalized nihilism.
00:22:49.000 Now, the problem with that option is that it's It's not realistic and in any sense, it's not existentially realistic in that it doesn't accord with our experience, but it's also not practically realistic.
00:23:02.000 It doesn't accord with our experience because if you dispense, even if you dispense with all the positive meaning in life as a consequence of being nihilistic, you won't dispense with the pain and the terror.
00:23:15.000 And so what you do if you're nihilistic is reduce life to pain and terror, not to nothing.
00:23:20.000 And so that seems like a really bad deal.
00:23:23.000 And then, because pain and terror are by definition what's negative about life, so you can't elevate them to what's positive.
00:23:31.000 That's not without inverting the very basis for communication itself.
00:23:37.000 Okay, so then we can put that off the table.
00:23:39.000 There's no life has no meaning theory, because you can't get rid of the pain and the terror.
00:23:45.000 So, You could say life has no meaning other than pain and terror, you know.
00:23:50.000 Now that's a pretty damn dismal judgment, and I also think that's not in accord with people's experience, but at least it's more logically coherent.
00:23:58.000 Okay, next.
00:24:00.000 Well, there's either a unity that attempts to make itself manifest, or there isn't.
00:24:06.000 There's a plurality.
00:24:07.000 Okay, now, if there's a plurality, what's the consequence?
00:24:12.000 Well, the consequence is that you're torn apart by inner conflict.
00:24:15.000 That's the psychological consequence, because you're pointing in all sorts of different directions at once.
00:24:22.000 Maybe you're a war of different desires, let's say, a war of different impulses, and that's a state of confusion and chaos, and we know technically that that's associated with both anxiety and hopelessness.
00:24:34.000 And I say we know that technically because the most advanced neuroscientists in the world, Carl Friston among them, foremost perhaps, has already determined that Anxiety indexes entropy, so chaos and confusion.
00:24:48.000 And chaos and confusion demolish hope, because hope is an emotional manifestation that makes itself known in relationship to a defined goal.
00:25:01.000 So you feel hope, and that's positive emotion.
00:25:03.000 That's dopaminergically mediated positive emotion.
00:25:06.000 You only feel that while you see yourself advancing towards a goal.
00:25:11.000 Now, if the goals are diverse and disunified, so no monotheism, let's say, then confusion reigns and so does hopelessness.
00:25:19.000 Now, if the goal is unified, which implies a unity underneath everything, let's say, then another problem arises, which is, well, what should the unity be predicated upon?
00:25:31.000 Now, your observation was, and this is something Nietzsche pointed out back in the late 1900s or 1800s, that It's very easy for the collective or the state or something hedonistic to become the highest unity and for everything to be bent in that direction.
00:25:52.000 Well, when the state becomes This source of unity, you have a Tower of Babel situation where people have built in a Luciferian manner, they have presumed to take on to themselves the value that should only be accorded what is truly transcendent.
00:26:11.000 Then you get the collapse of the religious into the state, the failure to separate Caesar and God, you get the collapse of God into the state, then everything that the state does becomes tinged with religious significance and Well, let's put it this way.
00:26:28.000 That's not good.
00:26:30.000 And so that's how it seems to me.
00:26:33.000 It's like, look, there's either a monotheism or there's a plurality.
00:26:36.000 The cost of plurality is psychologically, it's anxiety and hopelessness.
00:26:41.000 Socially, it's disunity, right?
00:26:43.000 Because if your goal and my goal cannot be unified, then If we're occupying the same territory, we're definitely in conflict.
00:26:52.000 It's the definition of conflict because we're pursuing.
00:26:54.000 Now, you know, we could be walking side by side and at the moment your pursuits and mine have nothing to do with one another.
00:27:01.000 But if there is a point where what you want and I want aren't in concordance, there's either going to be reversion to power.
00:27:10.000 I'll try to dominate you.
00:27:11.000 There's going to be conflict or some sort or one of us is going to give up.
00:27:15.000 The alternative is to unify it.
00:27:16.000 And a society is actually The manifestation of some implicit or transcendent unity.
00:27:24.000 Now, you asked as well, because that wasn't complicated enough, you asked, well, what does Christianity have to offer?
00:27:32.000 Let's say that Judaism didn't offer, and I'm not sure if Christianity offered more than the full realization of what was implicit in Judaism, and that was Christ's claim.
00:27:47.000 He said that he was the fulfillment of the law, so the tradition, let's say, and the prophets, which was the prophetic spirit.
00:27:55.000 He was the manifestation of both of those in the flesh.
00:27:58.000 And I actually think that that's technically true, too, because I think the simplest explanation for what happened in the case of Christ was that he allowed Or invited the full spirit that had been elaborated in the Old Testament books, let's say, and across that vast span of time to take residence within them and to become that.
00:28:26.000 Whatever that might mean, and when I walked through the narrative structure and attempted to analyze what it points at, that seems to me the simplest explanation.
00:28:37.000 Now, you can delve into that more deeply, because one of the things that happens in the Old Testament is there's a constant inquiry into the nature of proper sacrifice.
00:28:48.000 And you might say, well, that's archaic.
00:28:49.000 It has nothing to do with us.
00:28:50.000 And that's not wise.
00:28:53.000 I used to ask my students at the University of Toronto.
00:28:56.000 Many of whom were children of first-generation Asian immigrants.
00:29:00.000 I'd say, well, what did your parents sacrifice so that you could be at university?
00:29:04.000 That's a lot like they didn't know what I was talking about.
00:29:06.000 And it wasn't like their parents hadn't reminded them constantly of what they had sacrificed.
00:29:11.000 And the sacrifice is the foregoing of immediate gratification for medium to long-term sustainability and productivity.
00:29:21.000 And there's no difference between that and maturity.
00:29:21.000 Right?
00:29:24.000 And there's no difference between that and work.
00:29:26.000 Because work is sacrifice.
00:29:28.000 They're identical concepts.
00:29:31.000 And work is also a contract or a covenant because the reason you work is because you assume that you can strike a bargain with existence such that if you give up something of value now, you know, some whim, something you want immediately gratified, you put that on hold.
00:29:47.000 And the reason you do that is because you can make things better, all things considered in the future and for more people by doing so.
00:29:54.000 Okay.
00:29:56.000 So people are wrestling with the notion of what constitutes appropriate sacrifice all through the Old Testament.
00:30:01.000 And the Christian answer to that, I mean, it's developed in the Old Testament, which is why Christ says that He's the manifestation of that Spirit, essentially.
00:30:11.000 The idea is that the ultimate sacrifice is your narrow self.
00:30:17.000 Right?
00:30:18.000 Well, that's what you do.
00:30:20.000 You don't offer up your possessions.
00:30:22.000 You don't offer up other people.
00:30:24.000 You offer up the totality of your existence to death and to hell.
00:30:30.000 And by doing that, you, well, the hypothesis is by doing that, you conquer both.
00:30:35.000 And I actually think that's right, because Russell, it seems practical to me in many ways to assume that you cannot Adapt to what you will not face.
00:30:49.000 Now, we know in the psychotherapeutic world that if you lead people into voluntary confrontation with what terrifies and paralyzes them, their characters develop and they get braver and better.
00:31:02.000 Their vision expands.
00:31:04.000 Their capacity for adaptation increases.
00:31:07.000 And so then you might think, well, let's push that to its logical conclusion.
00:31:11.000 And the logical conclusion would be, Well, you have to face death itself and its full reality and all the torture that goes along with that.
00:31:20.000 And worse, you have to face the full reality of malevolence.
00:31:24.000 And so that's why in the Christian resurrection account, Christ faces death at the hands of a judgmental mob, right, despite being innocent, and then descends to hell itself.
00:31:24.000 That would be hell.
00:31:38.000 And so that is what we're called upon to do.
00:31:40.000 You know, people say to me, you know, do you believe in God?
00:31:44.000 And I would say, well, if you believed in God, no one who hasn't taken on to himself the full burden of Christ can say that he is a believer in God.
00:31:58.000 Not in the final analysis.
00:32:00.000 You know, and you might say, well, God's mercy is such that even if we struggle towards that, we'll find our reward.
00:32:06.000 And I would say there is some moral, there's something morally admirable about progress, but that doesn't eliminate the remaining insufficiency.
00:32:18.000 And I would also say in closing to this question, look, man, it's like, Every bit of responsibility that is rightfully yours that you haven't taken on makes the world a lesser place in a serious manner.
00:32:30.000 And worse than that, it turns you into a slave, and it opens the door to tyrants.
00:32:35.000 And that's always been true, and it's true now, and it will always be true.
00:32:40.000 So, here we are.
00:32:43.000 If you're watching this on YouTube, we're going to have to leave you now.
00:32:46.000 Click the link in the description, join us over on Rumble.
00:32:50.000 We talk about, this is one of my favourite moments in the conversation, I ask Jordan Peterson, when he says that a kind of psychopathic energy is required in order to move out of shame and apathy, that the culture offers you a kind of bizarre Energised, innovated, psychopathy as an alternative to the lethargy, the kind of larvae life that you're being sold.
00:33:14.000 Just sit and look at your screen, eat your pap, when you get diabetic and sick, take your medicine, get on the conveyor belt to the boneyard.
00:33:22.000 He has an incredible take on this.
00:33:24.000 Of course, this being JP, he talks about Heath Ledger's Joker.
00:33:28.000 Of course, he talks about Pinocchio.
00:33:30.000 Of course, he talks about myths of awakening.
00:33:33.000 And these are the times when we must discuss awakening together.
00:33:37.000 Click the link in the description now.
00:33:38.000 Watch the rest of this conversation.
00:33:40.000 You're going to love it.
00:33:41.000 See you over there.
00:33:42.000 Stay free.
00:33:43.000 Of course, my first question was, war is a symbolic event, and if war and this war, these wars, are a symbolic event, then I suppose that would indicate a relationship between psyche and material.
00:33:56.000 It would indicate a potential unifying event.
00:34:01.000 Obviously, much of your genius and its success has, it appears at least from my perspective, to have been built on your ability to map complex ideas onto applicable modalities that a person might deploy in their everyday life.
00:34:19.000 Tidy a damn room, stroke a cat, take responsibility.
00:34:24.000 When we're talking about the function of monotheism and the defining contribution of Judaic culture being the bestowing of monotheism even on the immediate or relatively immediate subsequent cultures of Islam and Christianity, I wonder If we neglect the historical reality that it was a tribalised faith in direct opposition to an oppressor, and when we apply that, as we were talking around a moment ago, the new role of the state as the apex of all values, the arbiter of right and wrong, the punitive patriarch or matriarch, depending on your perspective.
00:35:10.000 I know you've no strong views when it comes to gender on who Who adjudicates?
00:35:16.000 Who decides what's wrong?
00:35:17.000 Who gets to speak?
00:35:17.000 Who goes to prison?
00:35:18.000 Who doesn't get to speak?
00:35:21.000 I wonder.
00:35:23.000 I wonder, Jordan, if it is possible to track from the individual to an entire culture these sets of values, and indeed, if not, why not?
00:35:33.000 And may I add even to that, even though I can see you closing your eyes, as I've observed you do, when you're chewing with your mind, masticating this giant question, trying to get it into sizable chunks of cud, I would say, I would say this.
00:35:55.000 This monotheism ought create unity among people, even if help us to acknowledge the division within the self, perhaps between the ego and the self.
00:36:06.000 I wonder if we have to consider a Schmittian dialectic here, the possibility, as became evident in 5th century Christianity, that there was a kind of utility in Christianity that allowed it and alloyed it to Catholicism and Roman Catholicism, allowing it to become a tool of empire and requiring the exact opposite of a unitive and unitary force, a oppositional force, a religion that in a sense became
00:36:40.000 defined by in-tribes and out-tribes.
00:36:42.000 I wonder if you feel that that was embedded in this original Judaic monotheism and I wonder also
00:36:49.000 if if we're able to track all the way from an individual like what is how do we apply
00:36:55.000 soteriology and sacrifice as individuals?
00:36:57.000 How does a society apply soteriology and sacrifice?
00:37:01.000 And how do we align this complexity of this monotheism that could give us a unitive vision with its application as a tool for conflict, or at least the potential for it to expedite conflict?
00:37:20.000 Okay, so the first thing I would say in relationship to that is the alternative that's been put forward before us with regards to what is the most appropriate central story of history and mankind psychologically and in relationship to marriage and all other forms of social relationship, past and present, is that the human story is by necessity one of power.
00:37:56.000 And this is a very astute alternative hypothesis, because Whenever human relations, psychologically or socially, become corrupt, they do tend to corrupt in the direction of power.
00:38:15.000 Now, there's an alternative contender, which would be that of sex, and that's where the evolutionary biologists go, for example.
00:38:21.000 But let's stick to power for a moment.
00:38:23.000 The accusation, and this primarily comes from the left, is that All you really need to understand human motivation is to understand that all relationships, except those that are strictly egalitarian, are predicated on power.
00:38:40.000 And I don't think there's any evidence that that's true, except in the breach.
00:38:46.000 When a relationship deteriorates, it deteriorates in the direction of power.
00:38:49.000 So, for example, if you're not able to come up with a voluntary agreement with your wife, one or the other of you is going to default to being a tyrant and one or the other to being a slave.
00:39:01.000 But the fact that that necessarily occurs when the negotiation fails doesn't mean that that's the fundamental motivating force that can be used to explain psychology, history or society.
00:39:14.000 Now, why would I say that?
00:39:16.000 And the answer to that is, well...
00:39:18.000 It's actually the case, and I think this has been demonstrated extremely clearly, that power is not a very good basis for the establishment of productive, sustainable social relationships.
00:39:30.000 It's certainly no basis on which to erect an integrated psyche.
00:39:35.000 The psyche is too complex for its integration to be acquired through force.
00:39:42.000 Like, if you tyrannize yourself, well, Freud figured this out very early on, You will be a mess of unconscious contradictions in precise proportion to the degree that you tyrannize yourself.
00:39:55.000 That's what suppression is, or repression.
00:39:58.000 That's how you drive unwanted impulses into the unconscious, where they become positively demonic.
00:40:03.000 You have to come up with a negotiated solution to your own problem of integration.
00:40:10.000 And it has to be voluntary.
00:40:12.000 And the same is true with the relationships that you enter into with other people.
00:40:15.000 I mean, no one who's married, who's the least bit wise, thinks that they can win their marriage by imposing force.
00:40:27.000 At best, you can terrorize the person you're with into complying with you.
00:40:31.000 But if that's your sorry and pathetic substitute for love, then the victory you'll obtain will be indistinguishable from hell for you and for your wife.
00:40:43.000 And so what integrates us, the leftist notion that what integrates us and motivates us is power is, I think, the most bitter possible conclusion from the analysis of human striving that can possibly be derived.
00:40:59.000 Having said that, I understand why it's such a powerful proposition, because when things do corrupt, that is how they corrupt.
00:41:08.000 You know, and people might say, too, well, you know, you think that voluntary organization, agreement between intrinsically valuable citizens is the proper basis for the establishment of the state.
00:41:25.000 But what about all those power-mad, dictatorial, tyrannical capitalist types who thrive?
00:41:32.000 And I would say, The thriving that's consequential to the use of power is illusory.
00:41:41.000 If you're the biggest dictator in the worst tyrannical state, you're the largest devil in hell.
00:41:48.000 But that makes you the biggest loser, not a kind of winner.
00:41:51.000 And, you know, it's Milton's Satan who famously says he'd rather rule in hell than serve in heaven.
00:41:59.000 But, of course, he's Lucifer.
00:42:01.000 And so that is what he would say.
00:42:03.000 And he's king of hell for a reason, right?
00:42:06.000 People have viewed Milton's Satan as a heroic figure of rebellion, failing to note entirely that all he gains for his efforts is captainship of the worst possible place.
00:42:21.000 And so, while so power The power story, this is where the French postmodernists, for all their brilliance, went so spectacularly wrong, is they started to understand that we did look at the world through a story, and that was necessary, and that even the scientific viewpoint was therefore necessarily insufficient, which is absolutely true.
00:42:43.000 But then when push came to shove and they had to face the next question, which was which story does and should motivate us, they defaulted to power because they were all Marxists and that was at hand.
00:42:56.000 And it's just not right.
00:42:59.000 It's not the case.
00:43:00.000 The rest of the people People who use power as their primary motivation are psychopaths.
00:43:07.000 That's what a psychopath is.
00:43:09.000 And you might say, well, what about all the successful psychopaths?
00:43:12.000 But the truth of the matter is that psychopathy is not a successful strategy.
00:43:17.000 It's more successful than nihilistic depression.
00:43:22.000 But that doesn't mean it's an optimized solution.
00:43:25.000 You know, and part of the reason that psychopaths appeal to people who are nihilistically depressed is because they see in that monstrousness of the willingness to use power and dominance a potential way out of their pathetic dependence.
00:43:40.000 And that is partly a realization of the necessity of integrating the shadow, but it's a dismal final vision.
00:43:49.000 You know, the man with the biggest, highest leather boots wins.
00:43:53.000 It's like, well, yeah, but what do you win?
00:43:55.000 You know, you win success in hell.
00:43:58.000 There's nothing in that that's success.
00:44:01.000 It's foolish.
00:44:02.000 Now, it might be better than, you know, suicidal depression.
00:44:08.000 Although, it's harder on other people.
00:44:12.000 I suppose if you extract the sublime, And perhaps more specifically, even, love, if the idea that the nuministic includes within it, as well as, or a type of fear, if it includes a type of love, a type of awareness of a unitive force,
00:44:37.000 Then, and all you're left with is kind of material rationalism, then power to organize this material and rational space does become the only observable metric.
00:44:51.000 You speak a lot, George.
00:44:53.000 That's exactly what happens in the story of Genesis.
00:44:56.000 That's exactly what happens.
00:44:58.000 Well, the people who build the Tower of Babel are basically engineering technocrats who presume that the manipulation of the material world can produce the proper pyramid of power.
00:45:11.000 That's a way of thinking about it.
00:45:13.000 That's what the Tower of Babel is.
00:45:14.000 It's a ziggurat that reaches to the sky.
00:45:17.000 And as you just said, you can understand and you can see You can see why this is an attractive proposition.
00:45:26.000 If we could only master the material world, we would be the masters of the cosmos and our psyches.
00:45:34.000 And the problem with that is that it's simply not true.
00:45:37.000 You know, you can be lost amidst the most glorious toys.
00:45:44.000 And the other problem, of course, with the technological enterprise is that it produces Immense capacity for catastrophe along with all of its abundance.
00:45:53.000 And so if you don't have a wisdom, the wisdom that enables you to utilize your technical technological tools, they'll just destroy you.
00:46:01.000 And that is what happens in the Tower of Babel, because it eventually collapses under its own weight, so to speak, and the people who inhabit it to no longer even communicate with one another, because it's oriented in the wrong direction.
00:46:12.000 Now you You implied what the right direction might be.
00:46:17.000 You know, so I've been writing about the story of Job recently.
00:46:23.000 And Job, the story of Job, is a precursor to the Christian passion because Job is an innocent man who's tortured beyond his capacity to endure.
00:46:33.000 And Job says nonetheless that he is going to regard himself with love and proclaim his innocence Despite his suffering while simultaneously proclaiming the essential goodness of existence itself.
00:46:49.000 And that's a reflection of his belief that the appropriate relationship to establish with existence is something like love.
00:46:58.000 And love is the desire that all things flourish.
00:47:01.000 It's something like that.
00:47:04.000 Look, is this true?
00:47:05.000 Well, let's think about it practically for a minute.
00:47:08.000 So, we know that children, infants will die without love.
00:47:13.000 Now, and I mean this technically, this is well studied.
00:47:16.000 So, a hundred years ago, this is a very interesting story, a hundred years ago, in the typical orphanage, the mortality rate for kids under one was a hundred percent.
00:47:29.000 And this was despite the fact that these orphanages would provide Shelter and food.
00:47:35.000 Let's say that the so-called necessities of life but They all died and no one knew why and and this woman appeared in Germany She worked in a ward where the mortality rate was quite low and a physician from New York got interested in this and went to Germany to see what was going on and there was a nurse there named Fat Anna and Fat Anna would take the orphans out of their cribs which wasn't common practice at the time and just like Pick them up and hold them and pack them around on her hip and, you know, have a relationship with them.
00:48:10.000 Some physical manifestation of love.
00:48:12.000 And those infants didn't die.
00:48:14.000 And then we saw this in Romania, again, when there were orphans there who had the benefits of the state utopia, everything but love.
00:48:24.000 And they were, if they didn't die, they were damaged beyond belief.
00:48:28.000 Without love, children cannot live.
00:48:32.000 Literally.
00:48:33.000 Like, metaphysically, yes.
00:48:35.000 Philosophically, theologically, all that too.
00:48:37.000 But no, just absolutely practically, love is what entices the infant to the adventure of life.
00:48:45.000 That's definitely the case.
00:48:48.000 And so and then you think, well, what on what basis would you want your marriage established?
00:48:53.000 And if it's not the basis of love, well, then it might be on the basis of sex.
00:48:58.000 But sex with love is a lot better than sex without love.
00:49:01.000 So that's a problem.
00:49:02.000 And then There's not going to be much sex for much of any time span if there's no love.
00:49:08.000 And if there's no love, the couple isn't going to be able to negotiate in good faith, and then there's going to be no love for the children.
00:49:16.000 And so to say that love is the ground of being, Well, the evidence for that is crystal clear in the structure of the family.
00:49:25.000 And then I don't think it's unreasonable to assume that the basis for the stable state is kindness.
00:49:31.000 And kindness means to treat others as if they were kin.
00:49:35.000 And that means that love has to be the basis of the stable state.
00:49:40.000 And then you might say, too, well, is love as powerful as power?
00:49:47.000 The difference in power between love and pure power is overwhelming.
00:49:54.000 Love isn't even in the same category as power with regards to its potency.
00:49:59.000 It's way more powerful, incomparably more powerful.
00:50:04.000 And you can say that without being naive.
00:50:07.000 In fact, if you're naive, you think, well, it's love that makes the world go round.
00:50:12.000 But you're not awake.
00:50:14.000 You just deny the existence of evil and the fact that there are forces at work that are extraordinarily dark.
00:50:22.000 But you can wake up and still see that it's love that makes the world go round.
00:50:28.000 And so it is the proper basis for the organization of Society at all levels and for the psyche as well and it's it's it's a strange thing a because once you're a bit awake and you're not naive and you see the reality of Tragedy and the catastrophe of malevolence.
00:50:47.000 It's harder to make the case that The attitude you should have towards this terrible world is still one of love But then I think that requires a kind of courage When I try to understand love in as unflorid and as straightforward a way as I am able to, I consider it to sometimes be the felt experience of unity.
00:51:17.000 That I'm not coming from a position of separateness.
00:51:20.000 I'm not coming from a position of competition.
00:51:24.000 I'm able, even in a most prosaic way, to think this person or situation in front of me warrants love.
00:51:31.000 And if I'm able to locate love within myself and a love that transmits beyond myself, I'm going to be better served when dealing with this situation.
00:51:40.000 I'll get a better outcome, even if I'm not looking at it entirely from a tactical perspective, say, but just like I want to operate on that frequency.
00:51:51.000 And I suppose, Jordan, that's the kind of idea that shows that there is a continuum between the ideas that you discuss and popularise as a clinical psychologist, and now as a highly regarded, if deeply controversial, perhaps even The archetype now of the controversial figure when it comes to discussing world events.
00:52:17.000 A figure of polarity.
00:52:19.000 A figure of polarity with some people almost to the degree of Donald Trump saying that Jordan Peterson, he's the avatar of love that I follow.
00:52:27.000 He's the person that's gotten me out of my slump.
00:52:30.000 I was struck when you were saying about how this psychopathic archetype might only have value as a mobiliser of someone who might otherwise be trapped in basement depression.
00:52:43.000 That some of your detractors, maybe ten controversies back for you, I know you chew through them fast, might have used you almost as an archetype.
00:52:53.000 I'm thinking of that moment, you know, that red skull moment and how you were
00:52:57.000 used in a sort of a film here or there, you know, that they might say, oh well
00:53:01.000 what Jordan Peterson does is he appeals to those sort of adrift and castrated
00:53:06.000 and incel men as a kind of priapic and potent male archetype. It's odd because
00:53:12.000 I recognize from observing you and experience from knowing you that
00:53:18.000 continually you're reverting to integrity and I mean that in sort of in every
00:53:22.000 sense of the word and a kind of optimism and hope.
00:53:27.000 When we're having a conversation as rangy as this, where it seems to me that some of the themes we're discussing is, you know, personal crisis and how you might move through personal crisis, and certainly that's something I'd like to talk to you about more in a moment, and global crisis, a war as global crisis, it seems actually pertinent that you would have figures that are able to talk about archetypal energy, and indeed, if anything's worthy of that name, It would be useful in the life of an individual trying to get you up and at them in a society that's pretty hard to live in sometimes, and it would also be applicable when pontificating on vast geopolitical events.
00:54:03.000 So for me it doesn't seem contradictory, although sometimes it does seem difficult to be a person, and this is something that's emerged, you know, perhaps because of technology.
00:54:10.000 You have people now that are experts in neurology or clinical psychology pontificating on cultural events and Some people don't like that because it brings new voices and brings new potential and brings new ideas into the space.
00:54:22.000 It's challenging to power, I think, to all of a sudden have Jungian archetypes flung about in conversations that were pretty devoid of morality until pretty recently.
00:54:33.000 Morality was by the wayside.
00:54:36.000 Another of the themes we've touched on again and again here is What is the role of God and what is God now?
00:54:42.000 And we've discussed before and you've discussed extensively elsewhere that you are going to have a hierarchy of values.
00:54:48.000 God is going to be something.
00:54:49.000 God is either going to be kindness and love or God is going to be the pursuit of power.
00:54:55.000 So I suppose I wonder now, if you do, when you look at the culture we're living in, and it does appear to be a truly global culture, with a truly unipolar goal, this is one of the things we talk about on our channel all the time, is like, when they're passing these censorship laws in Canada and the UK and Ireland, near simultaneously, with a near identical impact,
00:55:20.000 When you see that the EU want to manage social media spaces and censor some free speech and amplify other speech, do you consider that there is a project towards a global and centralised authoritarian order And if you do think that that is happening, do you think it's just the unconscious convergence of interests, or do you think that there is actually an intention behind it?
00:55:50.000 Because I'm continually trying to provide us a... You go, man, you go.
00:55:55.000 Well, okay, so there's three main questions in that, I would say.
00:55:59.000 The first is, Why, for example, might I have emerged as a controversial figure?
00:56:06.000 And I think that's actually pretty straightforward.
00:56:08.000 I mean, the New York Times did a hit piece on me a while back, written by Nellie Bowles, who later admitted that what Nellie Bowles did for the New York Times was write hit pieces, and that the reason she did that was to further her career.
00:56:23.000 Um, which was, you know, a pretty forthright admission, although whether or not it went deep enough is a matter for speculation.
00:56:30.000 But in any case, they described me as defender of the patriarchy.
00:56:34.000 And I think that's accurate.
00:56:36.000 Now, the problem with that is that if you're If you're dealing with people who've already decided that the central figure behind the patriarchy is Satan, so to speak, right?
00:56:47.000 The avatar of power, right?
00:56:50.000 Of deception and exploitation and deceit, all of that.
00:56:53.000 Then anyone who aligns themselves with tradition is immediately going to be awarded that archetypal stance.
00:57:01.000 And the reason that hasn't really worked, in my case, You know, to take me out permanently is because the idea that the central spirit of the patriarchy is
00:57:14.000 Satan, the demand for power and the willingness to use exploitation is simply false.
00:57:21.000 The patriarchy has a corrupt element, but that's a deviation from the ideal.
00:57:28.000 It's not its most true manifestation, right?
00:57:31.000 And the radical critics of tradition and authority claim Universally that that's all power and part of the problem with that is it's like well, what about you guys?
00:57:47.000 It's not power for you.
00:57:49.000 I Thought there was nothing but power and they might say well, it's there's only the competition between competing interests It's like well if you want to live in that world you go right ahead, but that's certainly not how I see it now We talked a little bit about love Imagine we could conduct the conversation that we're conducting.
00:58:09.000 You and I could play this all sorts of different ways, you know.
00:58:12.000 We don't share everything we believe in common.
00:58:16.000 You know, you're a figure that has been more identified with the left, and I'm a figure that's been more identified with the right.
00:58:23.000 And we could spend our whole time trying to figure out who's right and playing a zero-sum game in that regard.
00:58:30.000 And we could also spend our time trying to score points on each other to see who's smarter, or more charismatic, or more attractive, or God, there's a whole variety of zero-sum games that could be played.
00:58:42.000 Or we could just scrap all that.
00:58:44.000 We could think, look, and you talked about the manifestation of something like an underlying inner unity between people.
00:58:52.000 We could say, no, there's more than enough In front of us for both, and if we conducted ourselves properly, what we would do is take a voyage together that revealed riches that neither of us had realized even existed beforehand.
00:59:06.000 And I think that's the right attitude to take toward the world.
00:59:10.000 The world is an inexhaustible treasure house, and the degree to which we can make that available to us depends on the ethic of our conduct.
00:59:19.000 And this is not the model by which we conceptualize our political and economic structures now, because we tend to default to a greedy zero-sum model and presume there's just not enough for everyone.
00:59:34.000 And I don't believe that.
00:59:35.000 I think there's more than enough for everyone, by any measure, if we only could see it and conduct it ourselves properly.
00:59:44.000 And so, while I'm an archetype of the evil patriarchy and Satan himself, insofar as you think the patriarchy itself, social structure and history, is nothing but the manifestation of oppressive forces, but my God, that's a dismal... it's a dismal view, and it's also... it's simply incorrect.
01:00:02.000 It's way... it's far too much of an oversimplification.
01:00:07.000 No, I mean, we do have an intrinsic impulse to dominate rather than submit.
01:00:15.000 Although that's complicated, because some people would rather submit, you know?
01:00:18.000 So even there it's not universal, but that tendency in and of itself is a fragment of what should be an integrated totality, and it's not the flag under which the unity can make itself manifest.
01:00:33.000 And you know that.
01:00:34.000 All you have to do is look at cultures that organize themselves according to power.
01:00:38.000 Jesus, they're Horrible authoritarian hell holes instantly.
01:00:43.000 And a marriage is like that if you do that to your wife.
01:00:46.000 And you're like that if you do that to yourself.
01:00:48.000 It's not the idea that power rules is wrong.
01:00:53.000 And it's not just wrong.
01:00:54.000 It's also convenient.
01:00:56.000 Because if you think that power rules, then all you're doing is waiting for your turn.
01:01:03.000 And that makes you the very thing whose existence you decry.
01:01:09.000 So, not appropriate.
01:01:11.000 Yeah.
01:01:12.000 Yeah, Jordan.
01:01:14.000 I feel that what it appears is taking place is that there appears to be no reliable coordinates, no reliable principles with which people can align.
01:01:26.000 This total pessimism, this pessimistic take that the power dynamic modality offers, even though I can understand it as a lens because that is one way of observing trends and by the nature of power, power will determine outcomes.
01:01:40.000 That's what power actually is.
01:01:43.000 But you said some stuff earlier about nihilism which when married to this power narrative that we're currently discussing makes a lot of sense because I've seen an absence of values when under attack that I recognize a kind of war against nature A war against any kind of universal principle to which we might align ourselves, with which we might align ourselves.
01:02:08.000 That nothing is constant or consistent.
01:02:10.000 That there is no benign force behind any of these avatars.
01:02:14.000 There's no such thing as the Good Father, except perhaps for a submissive father.
01:02:20.000 There is no complexity afforded in its opposite, if indeed you want to see masculine and feminine as opposites, certainly perhaps we could regard them as pairs, but there is no acknowledgement that there is a clear mandacity taking place in many narratives that I've personally encountered and experienced.
01:02:40.000 Principles like innocent before innocent till proven guilty are just Just cast aside in an instant and I see a sense within this mode an appetite to destroy many components that certainly are within the remit of morality, within the rubric of morality, i.e.
01:03:01.000 sexuality, humor, maleness, femaleness, like all of these, it's almost as if there is a kind of Atomised slaves.
01:03:10.000 attempt to strip us down into molecules in some way, meaningless molecules, which is
01:03:15.000 part of nihilism, to strip away the possibility of benign and loving and successful relationships
01:03:23.000 between men and women, the removal of nuance and complexity, in order to create... you
01:03:30.000 know, certainly what I'm struck by, I don't know in order to create what, but I do recognise...
01:03:34.000 atomised slaves, atomised slaves. Well, so... there's no escaping the drive to unity.
01:03:49.000 The only question is unity under what principle, and if it's not the proper principle, it's the Tower of Babel, and that is a degenerating totalitarianism, or the dynamic between Tyrant and slave.
01:04:04.000 And of course, that begs the question, is there a proper principle?
01:04:08.000 And your point is, we're in an era where even the notion of proper principle itself is under full-out assault.
01:04:08.000 Right?
01:04:15.000 And that's certainly a consequence of the deconstructionist tendency.
01:04:19.000 But it's entirely counterproductive because it does fail to take into account the existence, well, the existence of the very goodness whose absence is the reason for the accusation of tyranny and power to begin with, right?
01:04:36.000 Now, you might say, well, why is that happening?
01:04:39.000 And I would say it's part, it's part the desire to allow It's not a personal wish for superordinate power to reign supreme.
01:04:52.000 It's partly the wish to have no restriction whatsoever on the gratification of hedonistic desire.
01:05:00.000 That's another thing, and I think this is again true of the radical left.
01:05:04.000 The radical left offers endless hedonistic gratification as the potential reward for full subordination to the utopia of the state.
01:05:15.000 And that's an illusory offering, partly because self-serving, hedonistic gratification is actually indistinguishable from the power that is being resisted.
01:05:27.000 Right?
01:05:28.000 We know, we know... I'll leave that, I'll leave that for the time being.
01:05:33.000 Now you asked earlier too, is it that there's a conspiracy that's working behind the scenes?
01:05:39.000 And I would say this is something I learned primarily from reading Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
01:05:45.000 Solzhenitsyn noted that there is the best way to conceptualize the ideas of communism.
01:05:53.000 aren't as ideas.
01:05:54.000 They're not descriptions of the nature of reality.
01:05:57.000 They're not objective scientific theories.
01:06:00.000 They're animating principles.
01:06:02.000 They're more like a spirit.
01:06:04.000 And if you launch a spirit into the world, which is like a principality of ideas, the spirit unfolds in accordance with its nature.
01:06:13.000 And that was Solzhenitsyn's explanation, for example, for why No matter where communism was tried, the same dreadful outcomes occurred.
01:06:25.000 That was in keeping with the nature of that spirit.
01:06:28.000 And so there is a spirit afoot that is attempting to centralize, and it acts as if it's a conspiracy, and there are conspiratorial elements to it.
01:06:41.000 But it's mostly a manifestation of something that's best regarded as Well, look, it's a principality, or you could even think about it as a transcendent spirit.
01:06:53.000 Like, think about the idea of Satan for a minute.
01:06:57.000 You might say, well, is Satan real?
01:06:59.000 And I don't like questions like that, because those questions are always predicated on the assumption that we know what real means.
01:07:07.000 And we don't, right?
01:07:09.000 Because we don't have access to the fundamental The fundamental truths of what is real and what isn't.
01:07:16.000 But I can tell you the ways in which Satan is real.
01:07:19.000 So, imagine the figure of the Joker, who we've seen emerge repeatedly in popular culture in recent years.
01:07:26.000 Well, the Joker is an approximation of the satanic figure.
01:07:30.000 And the best Joker was Heath Ledger, I would say.
01:07:34.000 And he was king of the criminals.
01:07:37.000 And why?
01:07:38.000 Well, the criminals, they weren't entirely criminal.
01:07:41.000 They were mafia types, you know?
01:07:43.000 They still wanted money.
01:07:45.000 They still wanted women.
01:07:47.000 They still wanted power.
01:07:48.000 So they were sort of like you.
01:07:50.000 Now, they'd bend the rules to get it, but they weren't heretical to the point where they would burn a pile of money just to make a point.
01:07:59.000 Right?
01:07:59.000 Whereas the Heath Ledger Joker, it was like nothing's sacred to him.
01:08:04.000 Like nothing.
01:08:05.000 Absolutely.
01:08:06.000 100%.
01:08:06.000 Nothing.
01:08:08.000 Now, is that a real spirit?
01:08:11.000 Well, you know, when you've been pushed past your limit by the suffering in your life, and you believe that you've been put upon to a degree that's 100% untenable, Because of the underlying inadequacy of the cosmic structure, then it could easily be that you will invite the spirit that holds nothing sacred to dwell within you and let its destructive force entirely loose.
01:08:36.000 Now, is that real?
01:08:38.000 I'll tell you, man, it's real enough to entice 17-year-olds to shoot up their high schools.
01:08:45.000 It's plenty real.
01:08:47.000 And you might say, well, is it an external reality?
01:08:50.000 Well, If you decide to take a turn in the abysmal direction, you have plenty of role models.
01:08:59.000 And the archetypal role model of the abyss is Satan.
01:09:03.000 Is that real?
01:09:04.000 You could make a case that that's as real as it gets, buddy.
01:09:09.000 Like, how real is Auschwitz?
01:09:11.000 Like, that's real.
01:09:13.000 Love it.
01:09:14.000 What I love there is your repetition of the refrain, nothing sacred, and of course, that declarative motif within communism that there can be no God, there can be nothing sacred, of course, though, sancrosanct with inversions of it are all sorts of principles of centralization, and even in original Marxism, I would say some of the folk aspects of that, like, you know, you should have a bit of time off now and again.
01:09:39.000 Well, as close to sacred as I dare to say that goes.
01:09:43.000 I love, too, the analysis of the Joker there as a true nihilist, that there is no possibility of anything other than heresy because the Sancre Sancte exists nowhere, not even in Mammon.
01:09:53.000 I love that idea and I'm reminded of a British group stroke artist group called KLF who burned
01:10:02.000 a million pounds once as a sort of like literally piled it up and burned it as a sort of a
01:10:07.000 kind of you know as a installation.
01:10:10.000 So like an interesting moment to sort of like to transcend the values of a pop culture that
01:10:14.000 ultimately does have a kind of embedded nihilism woven through its materialism which I suppose
01:10:21.000 is you know that as you talked about earlier it's not true nihilism materialism tends to
01:10:27.000 emerge from it as well as terror and dread and the shadows of all that are good start
01:10:32.000 to emerge there.
01:10:33.000 We're going to leave our conversation with Jordan Peterson there, but there's more tomorrow and the second half is even better.
01:10:39.000 I loosen up a bit.
01:10:40.000 I use a few less long words and go on a few more jazz-like verbal rants as we move into deep psychic territory and solutions.
01:10:48.000 Also on the show tomorrow, we're talking about Biden's Armageddon.
01:10:52.000 Is Biden right That we're more likely to die as a result of climate change.
01:10:57.000 Press 1 if you think that's likely.
01:10:58.000 Or 2, because he's provoking a man with nuclear weapons into a nuclear war.
01:11:02.000 That man is Vladimir Putin.
01:11:04.000 We're talking about that in depth tomorrow.
01:11:07.000 Coming up on the show soon, we've got Bobby Kennedy joining us and Vandana Shiva.
01:11:12.000 If you click the red button, you sometimes get access to early interviews and you certainly get access to our plans to build this movement into something that can change the world for all of us.
01:11:22.000 I want to thank Everson1, Tad bit.
01:11:24.000 Hero day.
01:11:25.000 These are all people that have joined us recently.
01:11:27.000 Loppy828, you're on board the ARC.
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01:11:32.000 Now, if you want to support Jordan Peterson's ARC project, there's a link in the description telling you how you can support that more.
01:11:38.000 It's going on right now.
01:11:39.000 Join us tomorrow for more Jordan Peterson, a real hot take on Biden's policies and what's going to Kill us all first, as well as your invaluable input.
01:11:49.000 Join us tomorrow, not for more of the same, although it is more of Jordan Peterson, but even deeper, but for more of the different.