In this episode, I speak with Christopher Caldwell, an editor at the Claremont Review of Books and author of the book, The Age of Entitlement, about the immigration crisis in the United States. We discuss the role of the nanny state, the role that the entitlement state plays in our immigration problem, and the role immigration plays in contributing to the problem. We also talk about what it means to be a conservative in the 21st century, and what it might mean for the future direction of the conservative movement and the America First movement in the next four, five, six, seven, eight, or nine years. And, of course, we talk about the Trump administration and its impact on the immigration problem in the U.S., and the potential lessons we can learn from the rise of populist movements across Western Europe and other countries facing similar demographic and political challenges as we are in this country. This is an [Expert] level episode, which means some parts of the conversation may not make sense unless you ve read the title on the cover page. So, if you ve been paying attention to the title in the title, you ll know what to look for in future episodes of the podcast, and if you re interested in learning more about immigration, then you ll want to be sure to check out this one out. I hope you enjoy it out! Thank you so much for listening to this episode of The Weekly Standard, and for supporting the podcast. Subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts! Subscribe on iTunes Learn more about your ad choices. Rate/subscribe to our new sponsor, The Nanny State? Learn about our sponsorships and become a supporter by becoming a supporter of our new podcast Become a supporter and get 20% off the first month free on Audible, Podcoin, and get 10% off your first month only discount when you shop using the promo code CRITICIALIAL! Learn more by clicking here Subscribe and review our new ad-free version of the show, CRITICAL! Subscribe to our newest episode of CRITIQUE and leave us a review on iTunes! and we'll be giving you a chance to win a discount on a future episode of our newest issue of our next month's issue of the newsletter, The New York Times bestselling issue of The New Republic coming out on October 15th, exclusively on the new issue of New York Review of American Thinker.
Transcript
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00:00:00.000We're obviously up against a major election here in the United States of America, both the presidential election on November 5th, but also a series of elections down ballot that will determine the future of the House, the Senate, but also a series of elections down ballot that will determine the future of the House, the Senate, and So in that moment, it's tempting to only focus on the electoral dynamics in our own country.
00:00:27.000But I've actually often found that we can somehow gain greater insight and clarity about what's going on in the United States if, on occasion, we look at Western Europe and other countries that face similar, not the same, but similar challenges, similar demographic changes, similar types of political realignments as are happening in this country.
00:00:49.000To be able to then come back and understand our own political dynamic with even greater clarity.
00:00:56.000Sometimes you see what's happening in the United States more clearly if you're looking at it from the outside in.
00:01:00.000Those of us who are here on the inside may lack that opportunity, but I do think that that's something we're trying to do with today's episode of the podcast with somebody who has taken a careful look at the rise of populist leaders across different Western European democracies.
00:01:16.000has carefully thought about what the heck is going on in Europe right now and maybe even what some of the learnings and implications might be for the United States, not just in the next several days and weeks heading into our own election, but perhaps over the next four to eight years as we think about the future direction of the conservative movement and the future direction of the America First movement and the future direction of the United States of America in the next four, five, six, seven, eight, nine years ahead.
00:01:42.000So for that discussion, I've invited Christopher Caldwell here.
00:01:45.000He is an editor at the Claremont Review of Books, and he is the author of the book Age of Entitlement, a fascinating title.
00:01:52.000Chris, welcome to the podcast, and I'm looking forward to a detailed discussion with you.
00:01:59.000So, you know, I think a word you wanted to maybe kick this off, a topic that's near and dear to both your and my heart, which is The Age of Entitlement, is the title of your book, but it speaks to me.
00:02:13.000Where I do think that the root cause, and I really mean this in sort of a root cause sense, not that it's another thing on the list of priorities, but it's pretty darn close to the existence of the root cause.
00:02:24.000Of so many of our perils right now, and even the immigration crisis, which I think is going to be a centerpiece in our discussion, is the existence of the nanny state in the United States.
00:02:33.000I mean, I think if you dismantled the nanny state You effectively have solved 70 plus percent of the immigration problem in the United States because that's the magnet that draws people over.
00:02:44.000Yet what I've seen in our own conservative movement over the last 10, 20 years is that we've become reluctant to take aim at the entitlement state, but have become more vehement in our responses to the symptoms of the entitlement state.
00:02:59.000Including the immigration crisis, but with a greater unwillingness to go to the root cause.
00:03:03.000So that's my own diagnosis, and if I may even say self-critique of the conservative movement, but I'll use that to maybe open up and give you a chance to not only talk about your book, but to be able to get into some of the topics we had teed up for today.
00:03:18.000And I think there's some corroboration for that viewpoint in the way American immigration differs from European.
00:03:28.000We have our problems with immigration, but there are certain problems that Europe has that we don't have.
00:03:39.000Europeans tend to tell pollsters that they consider migrants lazy or antisocial.
00:03:46.000And I think that even in the United States, when we have a very difficult situation with migrants in certain places like Springfield, Ohio, that is not the critique.
00:03:59.000And part of the reason is that, just as you say, We have a nanny state that is less well developed than Europe does, or to the extent that it is well developed, foreigners, including newly arrived immigrants, have less access to it than they do in Europe.
00:04:19.000So in Europe, every newcomer has a kind of a cushion that allows him or has traditionally had a cushion that allows him to just sort of Follow his instinct where he wants it to go.
00:04:30.000And one of the reasons, for instance, that so many immigrants get into radical Islam is that they're sort of subsidized to do it.
00:04:40.000I remember seeing a statistic a few years ago that two-thirds of the imams in France are on welfare.
00:04:49.000In the United States, I mean, there's nothing wrong with being an imam, but in the United States, you are sort of forced into the workplace, which is where a lot of assimilation happens.
00:05:01.000Yeah, I think that's a different dynamic, and it's not the same story in the US and the EU, but let's maybe talk a little bit more about some of the parallels that we do see and understand.
00:05:14.000To what extent do you believe, first of all, I'd be curious for your assessment of this, in Europe, to what extent, if you eliminated the incentives for illegal mass migration in the EU, like the Raw payments, workforce permits, etc.
00:05:32.000Would you see the decline in mass migration to countries like Sweden or other Western European countries?
00:05:38.000I feel strongly about that in the US, but what's your assessment of the state of affairs in the EU? I think you would see it...
00:05:45.000Only if you banned work for these people, because the labor shortage now in Europe has progressed to such an extent.
00:05:56.000Europe has a, you know, it has a birth dearth, the way we do in the United States, except that it's a generation older.
00:06:05.000I believe that deaths started to exceed births in Germany and Italy in the early 70s.
00:06:12.000Whereas this phenomenon is just getting rolling with us.
00:06:15.000So you have people entering the workforce who are of a small generation, already born of a small generation.
00:06:24.000And the need for labor in Europe is almost boundless.
00:06:29.000And you don't really see it in the tourist centers.
00:06:34.000But if you go any place Agricultural, like Southern Italy or Catalonia.
00:06:42.000You get off in a back road and you go into a farming area and you'll see encampments, villages full of Africans.
00:07:07.000So what is your core assessment of the similarities and dissimilarities between the rise of populist reactions to this mass migration question and maybe the rise of populist reactions more generally in Europe and the United States?
00:07:22.000And maybe you could begin with a definition of what you consider to be modern populism as well, which I think is a word that we often bandy around a little loosely.
00:07:32.000I think that in practice, what populism winds up being is any movement that produces a political outcome that the mainstream media tends not to like.
00:07:48.000I do think that populism is primarily a democracy movement.
00:07:53.000It aims at a, you know, obviously we all in the West, we all live in democracies of some kind of another, okay?
00:08:00.000But I think that there's a, at the heart of populism is a qualitative complaint about democracy, where people say, yes, we vote, but once we vote, there are all sorts of There are all sorts of tricks and ruses to take actual agency away from us.
00:08:25.000And so I think that populism in the United States and in Europe is about that in both places.
00:08:32.000But the ruses are a little bit different.
00:08:35.000Part of the argument of my Age of Entitlement book Is that the civil rights state, the idea that what you vote is valid only so long as it doesn't interfere with some judge's idea of people's rights.
00:08:51.000That has done a lot to, let's say, reduce the actual democratic content of democracy in America.
00:09:01.000I think in Europe, I think that the European Union, which is a different type, it's a transnational grouping of 27 European countries into a trading bloc.
00:09:20.000Basically, you vote for something like, I want fewer immigrants in France, and you're told that you can't have it because the European Court of Justice or the Court of Justice of the European Union, there are two of them, doesn't approve of it.
00:09:38.000It's sort of a parallel that you would draw between what you call, it's an interesting term, the civil rights state in the US versus the ECJ-imposed normative layer on top of self-governance at the national level in each of these countries.
00:09:58.000I want to actually come back to the European point of this because I frankly don't yet understand As much as I probably should about the legalities of what say the ECJ might have over what an individual nation's policies might be with respect to mass migration.
00:10:14.000But on the US point for a second, just to sort of double click on that, how do you draw the distinction between the anti-majoritarian protections built into the constitution Versus the statutory post-Civil Rights Act wave version of that and the jurisprudence that followed that And maybe the expansionism of skepticism of self-governance there.
00:10:48.000We're a constitutional republic, which among other things includes those anti-majoritarian protections that still are affirming of a kind of self-governance imbued with the protection of individual rights, which Can, on occasion, come into tension with one another, versus maybe the bastardization of that that we saw in more recent decades of statutory overreach and regulatory overreach far beyond what the constitutional scope originally was.
00:11:28.000In the book, I say that in a lot of progressives' minds, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 stands as kind of a second constitution, And the understandings of rights in it are often at variance with the first.
00:11:47.000And so I would say that, I mean, my own view of it is that That the 1964 Civil Rights Act basically vindicates the claims of the 14th Amendment, which is sort of equal protection of the laws, at the expense of the First Amendment, which is freedom of association, freedom of expression, freedom of assembly.
00:12:26.000So what do you mean by, in what way, lay out an example in which the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the way it's been interpreted come into conflict with the First Amendment?
00:12:38.000Well, I mean, there's an interpretation of Brown versus Board of Education that sort of lays out these 14th Amendment, First Amendment things.
00:12:48.000There's a guy named, a Harvard Law professor named Herbert Wexler, I believe.
00:12:53.000And he said that, you know, It's not really a very strong freedom of association claim to claim that people have the right to go to any school they want because other people have the right not to...
00:13:07.000On one side are people who want an association, on the other side are people who don't want it.
00:13:13.000And so you wind up making that choice, making what at the time was considered a First Amendment choice for people, because at the time, Freedom of association was considered that that was implied in the First Amendment.
00:13:30.000One of the things my book does is extrapolate forward from the 64 Civil Rights Act through the broadening of the stuff that it covered.
00:13:39.000Now, sex was in the Civil Rights Act, but the But the way people began to enforce equality for women was, I think, something that nobody had envisioned in 1964. And so you get an issue where you say a woman has the right.
00:13:59.000You know, you have very few female executives in this corporation.
00:14:08.000It constitutes a hostile environment, something that came up in the 80s or 90s, for this man to hang a girly picture in his office because he's an executive.
00:14:19.000And so you have a woman's right to work in that In that corporation, compromising the man's right to express himself in the corporation, which, of course, you've written whole books about, so I don't want to bore your readers by telling them stuff they've probably heard here before.
00:14:40.000You know, one of the things I've discovered about books, you've been in the book writing business too, is that very few people relative to the general population actually buy books, and even the percentage of people who buy a book who actually read the whole thing is smaller still.
00:14:55.000I appreciate the fact that you read Woke Inc., which is my first book, and my most recent one is actually Truths, which just came out a couple weeks ago, which actually on the chapter on race in Truths actually hits on some of these very themes.
00:15:09.000And relating to the jurisprudence in the regulatory state's overreach and its interpretation of even what the Civil Rights Act has said.
00:15:18.000Some of the more compelling cases that I've detailed in my books is, you know, Truths just came out so I wouldn't be doing my job if I didn't remind everybody to go get a copy of Truths, which I appreciate.
00:15:30.000But engaging with some of the tougher and more controversial subject matter in this book, it's directly relevant to what you just talked about, which is that The jurisprudence here wasn't just about men hanging up pictures in their offices that made women feel uncomfortable, because some of those you may feel find First Amendment pushback to say that's not the true expression of an opinion.
00:15:53.000But some other more interesting cases actually do involve the true expression of an opinion on the question of potential racial microaggression or hostile work environment on the question of race.
00:16:03.000There's one instance of a woman, she was a grandmother, she would wear a red sweater and To work on Fridays in celebration of veterans.
00:16:12.000And she was, I believe, a mother of a veteran, a young man who had served the country, and there were other people in the office who started doing the same thing.
00:16:20.000And there was a minority employee who said that he found that to be a microaggression, created a hostile work environment, which then caused the employer to tell her that she couldn't do that anymore.
00:16:32.000At which point she stopped wearing the red sweater and they started to stop doing the whole group thing at the office, but she still brought the red sweater on Fridays and at least hung it on the back of her chair.
00:16:42.000So she's sitting at a desk and the sweater would be draped over her chair.
00:16:45.000And that too was deemed by the employer, presumably because of further complaint of the employee, to be insufficient.
00:16:51.000Insufficient to go not far enough to avoid creating a hostile work environment, at which point the employer had to tell her that she too could not, not only on Fridays, create a club that involved an employee affinity group that wore red sweaters in celebration of veterans, but could not even bring that red sweater to work on but could not even bring that red sweater to work on Fridays to hang out in the back of her chair, which does seem to be a patent First Amendment violation derived from the so-called affirmation of the 14th Amendment in the back of jurisprudence that I think far expanded even the scope of what the Civil Rights which does seem
00:17:26.000And so, you know, I think that there's certain different questions there of the leap from the 14th Amendment to what was codified in the Civil Rights Act, but then what the regulatory state through the EEOC and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the three-letter and four-letter agencies have then created that was not even envisaged at the time the act was passed, I think has created a state but then what the regulatory state through the EEOC and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the three-letter and four-letter agencies have then created that And these are uncomfortable topics.
00:17:51.000I mean, these are third rail topics you're not supposed to talk about in modern American politics.
00:17:55.000I know, but conservatives have a great deal of actual difficulty talking about them because the old style Reagan conservatism is about, a lot of it is about business freedom.
00:18:08.000So you say, look, a guy owns a company, he can, you know, he can set a dress code.
00:18:13.000This woman doesn't like to wear anything she wants, but you wind up with a sort of a differential application of that law If one of the employees came in with a rainbow sweater and said that it was for Pride Day, I think he was on much shakier ground telling that employee not to wear it.
00:18:35.000In fact, you see the same legal liability there.
00:18:38.000If a Christian employee said that this makes me uncomfortable and is a microaggression to me and discrimination on the basis of religion and creating a hostile religious work environment, there's no way that that person would be told not to bring a rainbow sweatshirt and hang it on their chair.
00:18:51.000Or even not to create an affinity group at the workplace in today's environment.
00:18:54.000But the woman who wore a red sweater in celebration of veterans, if that made somebody of a different minority status feel uncomfortable, the employer perceived that to actually be what created the litigation risk in that scenario, which is interesting.
00:19:07.000Now, I will say that the business friendliness prong, I think, badly misunderstands what business friendliness actually is because it's the legal conditions that the business is actually responding to.
00:19:20.000So if the EEOC has created the environment for a legal claim against that business, That isn't really the business making that decision.
00:19:28.000That's the government using the appearance of the invisible hand of the market to really accomplish what really was a goal of the invisible fist of the government, not only the government, but the regulatory state itself.
00:19:38.000And I do think it is a shame when conservatives maybe shy away from these issues in a way that don't really have the spine to stand up to the root cause of what's actually going on here, which goes back to that nanny state.
00:19:49.000It's a form of the nanny state to the entitlement state here, the regulatory state that gives us otherwise Puzzling outcomes of a business engaging in speech discrimination, which wasn't actually the business doing it.
00:20:02.000It was the business responding to the legal conditions.
00:20:04.000But it's complex because it's not about regulation, deregulation.
00:20:07.000It's about two different, it's about unequal treatment of two kinds of behavior in the workplace, according to terms that are kind of opaque, are very legalistic and opaque to the average citizen.
00:20:22.000So it leaves the average citizen feeling a lot of fear because what he's allowed to do has to be explained to him by a specialist, you know?
00:20:33.000The only area where I might have a shade of disagreement with you, and I am accused probably to a fault, accurately maybe, of seeing the regulatory state as the prism, as the original sin of nearly every major problem in America, but I continue to believe that it is.
00:20:47.000That is a core thesis of this book as well.
00:20:50.000It's more right than wrong, let's say that.
00:20:53.000But I'll even push, even in this particular instance of why I would put it at the feet of the regulatory state, is a lot of this comes from the EEOC's interpretation.
00:21:04.000The EEOC is the regulatory body, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
00:21:07.000That is part of the regulatory state, the administrative state, the fourth branch, the three- and four-letter agencies whose employees were never elected to their positions, yet, according to historical interpretations of the law, at least cannot even be removed from their positions by the people who were elected to their positions, right?
00:21:22.000That unelected fourth-branch class of bureaucrats.
00:21:25.000Yes, there is some instance in which you could say there are judges that have also come down on interpretations of the Civil Rights Act itself that have found liability for employers in such circumstances.
00:21:36.000And so the employers are responding to those legal conditions.
00:21:40.000But actually, that's generally against the backdrop of the EEOC's interpretation of the Civil Rights Act.
00:21:47.000And then you combine that with Chevron deference, right, which is historically, until this year, really been the law of the land to say that courts have to defer to an agency's opinion of the law.
00:21:59.000So it kind of is the administrative state and the root cause at its core, where you have the administrative state that's empowered with Congress passes this statute, which, you know, we could debate the merits of that statute.
00:22:10.000I think that's a thing you're not supposed to do with modern American...
00:22:14.000You're not supposed to debate certain laws that were passed in the 1960s, but for the sake of discussion, let's just say that's a law that was passed through the front door.
00:22:21.000The law then created the ability to fashion this EEOC, unelected bureaucrats, that then are making quasi-judicial judgments about what the law actually says, which is far more expansive than ever existed or was imagined even at the time the law was passed.
00:22:39.000In fact, the law probably would not have been passed if you had said at the time the Civil Rights Act was passed that this would mean that somebody couldn't wear a red sweater to work in celebration of veterans.
00:22:52.000And none of the people who voted for the Civil Rights Act imagined that's exactly what they were enacting.
00:22:56.000Yet you've got the EEOC, which then says, no, no, this is actually, this is decades later, that's actually what the law says, is this woman can't wear the red sweater because somebody else in the workplace finds that to be microaggression.
00:23:06.000Nobody who passed the Civil Rights Act would have imagined that that's exactly the way it would be interpreted.
00:23:09.000But then you get a judge who says, according to the red sweater rule, this other person is entitled to do something for his office furniture.
00:23:33.000But all of that happened in part in the judicial side of this with the judge doing it because of this doctrine, which, by the way, some conservatives, it's uncomfortable facts, you know, hard truths I talk about in this book, too.
00:23:45.000Scalia was behind the Chevron doctrines.
00:23:49.000But it was probably one of the gravest mistakes that we made was this case Chevron, which held that judges had to at least adopt the posture of deference.
00:24:00.000They had to defer to the agency's interpretation.
00:24:03.000So that created an interpretation of law where the judicial branch actually was subservient to the EEOC and its interpretation of the Civil Rights Act when nobody could either remove the EEOC or vote them out.
00:24:15.000So that created this permanence to this version of the post-Civil Rights Act nanny state, which isn't even in the Civil Rights Act, but isn't the EEOC's interpretation of it.
00:24:24.000But what I will observe, just to give people some sense of hope and way out of this, is that this year, that doctrine was overturned, right?
00:24:32.000Chevron deference was overturned at the Supreme Court this year, which is truly seismic in its scope for what it means for not only the regulatory state, but the entitlement state and the nanny state writ large.
00:24:46.000And so I do think that there's an opportunity to revisit a lot of these previously accepted legal outcomes that aren't necessarily really as codified as you'd think if those federal courts, especially if you bring these cases through the Fifth Circuit or somewhere else, no longer have to defer to three- and four-letter agencies like the EEOC. And I think it's a unique moment.
00:25:09.000It's one of the reasons I wrote my own most recent book.
00:25:15.000This was in 2020. 2020. So your book, Age of Entitlement, was in 2020. The legal landscape between 2022 and 2024 has shifted so dramatically.
00:25:28.000In my book, Truths, we actually lay out what the way forward could be out of that morass, that legal morass that we've historically accepted for the last six decades before that.
00:25:40.000Anyway, that was a rabbit hole worth going down because it's really interesting.
00:25:44.000But to zoom back out to say that, okay, you draw a parallel between what's going on in the United States, between what you would call the post-Civil Rights Act entitlement state and anti-state here, and what the ECJ has to say about self-governance in Europe and what populism represents as a reaction to both, which is really interesting.
00:26:05.000What is an example of where the ECJ Has the legal authority to tell one of those European countries that you can't actually pass a statute relating to mass migration limitations in your own country, France, or pick another one.
00:26:27.000We can actually clarify the distinction between these two courts.
00:26:31.000The ECJ antedates the European Union, and it's not limited to EU countries.
00:26:37.000It's kind of a human rights court that sets standards for the developed world.
00:26:45.000The Court of Justice of the European Union tells the countries what the laws of the European Union are.
00:26:55.000I can give you there was a very interesting case just this week.
00:26:59.000The Court of Justice of the European Union established a right to have your right against dead naming or whatever, a right to have your acquired gender recognized in other European countries.
00:27:16.000There was a case involving, and I don't know which direction this person was going.
00:27:50.000But the court ruled that Romania actually had to, once this sex change was done in another A European country that had to give full faith and credit to it.
00:28:02.000So it is a, I mean, that's a good example.
00:28:04.000And it's legally binding, not overridable by the nation state.
00:28:13.000It's a full faith and credit clause, even though they don't have a full faith and credit clause, but they're acquiring these things through judicial activism.
00:28:22.000See, and I think that that partly explains, I think, the flair of European populism, which in some ways is even more pronounced.
00:28:32.000In its response, then that of what we think about the populist response on the left and the right in the United States to these types of violations of self-governance is, at least in this case, these are states in a union that still represent one nation.
00:28:47.000Whereas here, there's no sense in which anybody thinks of themselves as a citizen of Europe, right?
00:28:56.000But it's the kinds of questions on which they're exercising authority is the kind of question where you think about the consent of the governed being required to actually grant it, right?
00:29:07.000So in the United States, another way of saying this, you vote for your state elections, you vote for the federal elections, but the states are still The states are still bound by the federal constitution and their behaviors because that is the constitutional republic that created the locus of self-governing.
00:29:22.000Yes, but this is what we resolved definitively in the Civil War.
00:29:28.000I think that the trick That the designers of the European Union are trying to pull off is to present the European, there is no European public, but to present European publics with a collection of rights that resemble those of the newly independent United States in the late 18th century.
00:29:50.000But with the assumption that those States' rights are inevitably going to disappear into a federalized, centralized authority.
00:29:59.000And they're just running the machine to claim those rights along the way, and assuming that the people in these countries are not going to notice.
00:30:09.000And for a very long time, they didn't notice, but now they They do.
00:30:14.000But there's another thing that happened is that before our civil war, I think our states were arguably growing together and slavery was an obstacle to their growing together.
00:30:28.000I am not sure the European states are growing together in that way.
00:30:35.000So what do you think that portends for the future of the EU as an alliance, if you're to call it that?
00:30:43.000Well, there's a struggle going on among the people who designed it to Try and build golden manacles for this thing.
00:30:58.000One of them was the currency, the euro.
00:31:00.000If you have a common currency, it's really harder to break up.
00:31:04.000And if you look at the discussion that came about during the euro crisis, which was a couple of years after the finance crisis, when it became obvious that Greece and Germany could not have the same interest rate without breaking the currency apart.
00:31:22.000When that happened, people said, well, you know, it was probably a bad idea that we designed the euro, but it's too late to change it now.
00:31:31.000And there's an attempt to do the same thing with debt now.
00:31:35.000The great priority for Brussels is to create mutualized debt obligations For one, are going to make it hard to disentangle the countries financially, but for another, are a tremendous stick to be waved over the head of governments.
00:31:55.000So during COVID, Brussels created a trillion-dollar COVID recovery plan.
00:32:02.000And basically, it put all these countries on the hook For proportionate to their population, and then paid them the money out to do not whatever plan they chose, but a plan involving green energy.
00:32:18.000Any country could do whatever it wanted in order to build green energy.
00:32:26.000Having control over this, Brussels said, well, look, Poland, we will give you your 60 billion dollars, which is your share of this, but only if you change your way of making court decisions and things.
00:32:41.000So it basically created a bias towards the European centralizing forces.
00:32:48.000You see, it kind of worked the way our Block granted federal funds to states used to work when the federal government was really irresponsible.
00:33:02.000But anyway, there's a grip on the individual countries that Brussels has through money.
00:33:10.000So you think they're using sort of the fiscal weakness of certain of the countries, if not all of the non-German countries?
00:33:17.000Yeah, Germany is looking pretty weak too, fiscally.
00:33:28.000But to your last point, which is exactly what you anticipated, or I was going to say, which is with Germany itself now being, I think, not exactly in the brightest spot, That means there is no fiscal backbone, right?
00:33:41.000So the mother nanny that was providing and feeding mother's milk to the children but required it to adopt the social dictas is itself an emperor without any clothes anymore other than printing money, which they've already done that version of it too.
00:33:56.000So they've run out of the tricks in the book for the fiscal and then as a substitute for fiscal monetary mana from on high that was the compliance mechanism In the carrot that they use to get the social compliance.
00:34:57.000But yeah, a lot of these countries are about to be disciplined by Brussels for For overshooting their deficit targets.
00:35:09.000You get put into a disciplinary procedure if you're above 3% deficit.
00:35:16.000But they're having a very hard time doing it because energy prices are so high.
00:35:23.000I think the reality is that when you lose that economic lever, you lose your ability to implement and backdoor a lot of the social policies anyway, right?
00:35:35.000So even if the people of each of these nation states are segregated, in return from my seeding governance and sovereignty, at least I get this sort of financial blanket of security.
00:35:44.000If that financial blanket starts to wear thin or even proves to be illusory, then you start asking the question of, well, why the hell am I giving up my ability to self-govern if it's at least not even for the economic arrangement that we had?
00:36:03.000A lot of the things you thought you were self-governing for, you wind up doing in the privacy of your own home now.
00:36:14.000You sort of say, well, I can't go out and, I don't know, sort of Do what I used to do, but I can join a group on the internet or something.
00:36:42.000And I think that's really, I think, the interesting point, I think, really into Western Europe.
00:36:47.000I'd love to probe on, but even lessons for the United States is, it's one thing if, you know, you had the woke stuff in the United States that sort of annoying, more than annoying, even reflects, I think, a cultural denigration of our heritage and who we are as a country.
00:37:03.000You see vestiges of that emerging in Europe, but against the conditions of economic plenty, right?
00:37:08.000In some ways, it was even a product of A Federal Reserve, and you could talk about the ECB playing a similar role in artificially creating money that didn't actually reflect underlying value.
00:37:19.000And you have the ability to engage in this sort of cultural indulgence that then the government's actually able to sort of codify through legal or quasi-legal means.
00:37:29.000It's another then when the tide recedes to say, okay, that stuff is here to stay.
00:37:34.000But I also can't afford my house anymore.
00:37:38.000And that my wages have stayed flat, but prices have gone up.
00:37:43.000And nobody seems to give a damn, but they care about everything else relating to the way we're supposed to have moral obligations to take care of migrants or those who are disempowered when somebody tells me that I'm on the top of some sort of intersectional totem pole.
00:37:57.000And that was annoying while I was doing pretty well, but it's downright insulting when I'm actually not doing so well right now.
00:38:05.000And so in some ways, the buildup of a lot of the woke people Intersectional ideology in economically tolerable times becomes...
00:38:20.000Utterly intolerable with vengeance at a moment where you actually feel real economic pain.
00:38:26.000And that, I think, is a formula for catalytic change.
00:38:31.000But I'd ask you for your perspective, both on the other side of the pond as well as ours, for what's really going on there.
00:38:52.000I mean, people talk about, you know, the popularity of books about civilizations and how civilizations decline, both in the United States and in Europe.
00:39:04.000And basically, we've done what our grandparents warned us against.
00:39:08.000We've traded We've traded a certain amount of independence for comfort, which is a trade that's always available to people.
00:39:23.000Having traded away our independence, we now find we don't have enough independence to sustain our comfort.
00:39:30.000We're going to have to relearn some More kind of peasant-y truths, I think.
00:39:39.000About how it's maybe more valuable to build things than to dream things up.
00:39:50.000Or about how you have to get up in the morning and do real work and that kind of stuff.
00:40:00.000We've traded our independence for comfort.
00:40:02.000Now, I think if you play this out, if you no longer have the comfort, then you're not going to trade off your independence, like not even a little bit, which creates – I think that's the backdrop of social unrest because it gets to the second part, which you said we're about to reopen a lot of questions that you thought were closed.
00:40:19.000If the question was closed, that at least creates a status quo of stability, maybe a stable equilibrium that you don't love, but everybody at least prefers stability to not.
00:40:27.000But if your point is that I'm no longer getting the comfort that was the backbone of that trade-off, I'm going to go back and relitigate some of those questions that we thought was water under the bridge, which is really a formula for turmoil, social turmoil outright.
00:40:44.000Where do you see evidence of that in Europe?
00:40:46.000Do you see early vestiges of that happening, or do you think this is still skating to where the puck is going a little bit, but we're not quite there?
00:40:56.000We're skating to where the puck is going, I think.
00:40:58.000Well, look, where I see it is that these so-called populist groups have...
00:41:09.000I wouldn't say they've triumphed in very few countries, but they have become the top party in many countries.
00:41:18.000And I think that these issues are being reopened.
00:41:23.000I mean, the fact that a right wing party can be You can be elected in Germany is really extraordinary.
00:41:30.000The fact that a right-wing party can top the polls in Austria is also extraordinary.
00:41:40.000You have a right-wing government in Italy.
00:41:41.000You also had a government, I think, the one that was elected in 2018, was even more right-wing than it is now.
00:42:53.000Let's just talk about the dynamic of this last year.
00:42:55.000I have my own view on it, but you are somebody who's probably thought even more deeply about what we're to take about the original rise of Le Pen, Bartorella in the context of the first set of elections, but then the domestic elections that represented a...
00:43:12.000In a retreat from what you saw from the same voting public.
00:43:22.000The National Front finished tops with a third of the vote.
00:43:29.000Then, perhaps unwisely, probably unwisely, Macron called national elections, which people sort of suspected, looking at the way the polls were looking, were going to bring the national front to power.
00:43:45.000The reason they thought that is that France has Uh, elections that follow the same system that, uh, uh, we follow in, in Louisiana, right?
00:43:56.000You have a two round, you have an open first round, and then the top people who get over a certain threshold, which is usually either two or three people run off in the second round, which means if you're like, generally the guy who gets 37% in the first round winds up being your, your next, um, congressman.
00:44:18.000There are many cases where there are three candidates in a race.
00:44:23.000And what happened is that Macron and the hard left, which is a very interesting development in its own right, considerably more radical, I would say, than the national rally, the Le Pen party.
00:44:38.000But on the left, I mean, they're very anti-Israel.
00:44:41.000They are the party of the Muslim immigration to France.
00:45:29.000But the thing that really topped it off is having used the hard left to keep the right wing out of power, Macron then appointed a right-wing premier, a person on the right of the old, you know, let's call it the center-right, let's say the Mitt Romney-type romp of the French right.
00:45:53.000He appointed a guy who would be acceptable to the national rally, because if he's not acceptable to Le Pen, the government will fall.
00:47:46.000You know, nope, I'm not going to listen to you.
00:47:49.000For me to get engaged in a sort of like conversation with you, even if you're being nice to me, even if what you are offering me seems good to me, I'm not going to do it.
00:48:01.000And that's what And so I think that it's an interesting thing in this country.
00:48:06.000You look at these two huge debates we've had in which, in each of them, one side seems to have drubbed the other, and yet they have no effect on the polls or anything.
00:48:57.000I think for the future, even the conservative movement, in what direction we take, are we actually willing to say to the voter, you've been screwed by the nanny state arrangement, and then that involves taking some of the cocaine away, to use that as an analogy or whatever, right?
00:49:15.000You take the coke away from the coke addict, but that actually gives you your autonomy back.
00:49:23.000And that's really part of the dignity of the individual that we've traded off, and people feel that sense of the loss of dignity.
00:49:29.000But we have a conservative movement, and I'm not talking about just the old right or whatever.
00:49:34.000I'm talking about even, in some ways, one of the reluctances of the so-called new right is actually to take Real serious aim at a lot of those nanny state entitlements that were part of the barter transaction that you described,
00:49:51.000the deal with the devil, that, you know, I think that's the real question for the conservative movement is do we just sort of, you know, reconstitute the devil a little bit that made the trade and make sure it's one that actually respects the The peasants, as you put it, with shared values that align with conservative principles,
00:50:11.000or do we actually say, no, the arrangement was in some ways a sham arrangement from the start, and we have to undo the whole thing and dismantle the nanny state, even if that comes with some discomfort, some pleading from, like you say, coke addict, you take the coke away, the first reaction is not going to be great.
00:50:31.000But it's what needs to be done for his own betterment in the long run.
00:50:35.000Yes, but there's a difference because when you take the coke away, you assume that the society is still there.
00:51:14.000You can't ask a person like that to just go.
00:51:18.000To just go out and make that leap of faith.
00:51:23.000This was always the problem with the welfare state, certainly with the retirement part of the welfare state, which I think is now the biggest part.
00:51:33.000At the very start, you had a generation that got to collect without paying in.
00:51:39.000And at the very end, you're going to have a generation that pays in without collecting.
00:51:49.000So I think that what has to happen is that the...
00:51:53.000Just punctuate that point even further.
00:51:56.000So you have a generation that pays in without collecting, but against the backdrop of being told that they had to cede their sovereignty on issues relating to cultural matters and self-governance...
00:52:08.000It's sort of the generation that pays in without collecting is going to be pissed off enough and frustrated enough, but may work in the context of a self-governing republic to say, okay, but at least we self-govern.
00:52:20.000We're going to solve these problems together.
00:52:21.000But it's another, if you've already ceded your ability to self-govern in the name of the barter transaction to say, okay, well, we're going to shower you with stuff.
00:52:29.000Even as we take away your sovereignty, now it's a double whammy.
00:52:34.000But I think there's enough self-government left that this can be eventually.
00:52:39.000And it can be an electoral platform for some presidential candidate.
00:52:45.000And it's a bad electoral platform now because we have this baby boom generation that is about 38% of the voting public that...
00:53:00.000But once it falls below a certain demographic level and the people who are paying without collecting rise above a certain demographic level, it's going to happen almost instantaneously.
00:53:13.000You know, it's going to be something that you didn't think of.
00:53:17.000You know, at one point, six months later, it's going to be a fait accompli, you know, with a law and effects on your bank account, etc.
00:53:26.000And, you know, the paying without collecting uprising, if you're calling it that, is an uprising that is more than just I got screwed economically.
00:53:35.000It's that I got screwed in a deeper sense, which is, you know, that's real 1776 stuff right there at that point.
00:53:42.000Yeah, but if you can get the monkey off your back of paying taxes for this, there is some scope to do something different with those funds.
00:54:22.000Well, I mean, his idea was that we had surpluses in the annual budget rather than deficits as we had had, you know, basically from the 60s until Clinton.
00:54:35.000And so we should give the surpluses back.
00:54:37.000But he got a little too enthusiastic about it.
00:54:47.000But we wound up on the way to a $34 trillion You know, debt.
00:55:12.000You know, I do think one of the interesting moves of the neoconservative movement was in some ways the codified acceptance of the existence of the nanny state, but just in some sort of attenuated form versus kind of a paleoconservative or a pre-neoconservative vision that was just hostile to the whole project.
00:55:29.000And, you know, it's interesting because I think in the America First right, you have a lot of hostility to the so-called neocons as it relates to foreign policy.
00:55:38.000But in some ways, it has borrowed and even ossified in certain strains of the America First right.
00:55:43.000And I love the view that there's two strains of the America First right ahead.
00:55:47.000There's the more national libertarian direction and there's national protectionist direction.
00:55:51.000The National Protectionist direction has more leaders certainly articulating that position.
00:55:57.000I believe the National Libertarian version of it is actually going to be more lasting and successful and better for the country.
00:56:04.000I mean, the title of this book is Truths, the Future of America First.
00:56:08.000As it relates to the future of America first, that's the fork in the road that I see.
00:56:12.000But anyway, the irony to bring it back is I think as they rail against the neocons on foreign policy, they've actually accepted the neoconservative premise, which is kind of fatalistic about the existence of that nanny state, rather than taking up the project.
00:56:25.000It sort of is a question that we thought was closed.
00:56:28.000And I think we may see a moment in the conservative movement ahead to reopen some of those questions that we thought were closed.
00:56:47.000I think it's coming, but I think it's going to challenge the protectionist version of the America First movement that sort of takes the nanny state as given, but just tries to recompose it to advance more conservatively palatable ends.
00:56:59.000I think it's going to really put some real pressure on the protectionist pro-regulatory version of it.
00:57:06.000I think that if you make this distinction between what's basically a domestic neoconservatism and a foreign neoconservatism, you have to remember when they arose.
00:57:19.000I mean, the domestic neoconservatism that sort of arose in Washington and New York in the 60s and 70s was aimed at making the welfare state more.
00:57:30.000It didn't want the government to be mismanaged.
00:57:34.000It was, you know, people were really getting sloppy, I mean, and it was becoming a very poorly run state.
00:57:42.000And it said, you know, you have orderly cities, you have to fight crime and all that stuff.
00:57:49.000You know, that was in the heyday of the welfare state we're talking about, where the country was shared by the generation of the people who designed it, the greatest generation, and their children whom it was designed for, the baby boomers.
00:58:19.000I think that the domestic neocons did a good thing.
00:58:24.000They did as much as they could do at the time to keep the country from sort of really breaking down into a poorly organized, poorly run Yeah, I mean, their point is, you know, we'll pay the taxes so long as government functions, right, and does a good job of at least, we're going to accept some element of this post-LBJ great society, okay, it's here to stay, the social winds went in that direction, but let's at least be smart about it, was the domestic neoconservative vision.
00:58:54.000And the foreign policy version of it went on foreign adventurism, which is unclear and worth reflecting at some point.
00:59:02.000I haven't quite gotten to the bottom of what might be the causal link of both of those strands arising at the same time.
00:59:08.000It seems like those are two very different projects, but they arose in the same form.
00:59:13.000I don't think they arose at the same time.
01:00:23.000Yes, this has to do with the demographic hand he was dealt.
01:00:27.000You know, the welfare state was fully funded and it was non-problematic in terms of actually people choosing not to have children and that kind of thing.
01:00:40.000So Nixon did the thing that made sense for him, even if he was probably temperamentally as uneasy with the welfare state as Reagan was, or maybe more.
01:00:50.000Yeah, I mean, it didn't really translate as much into his policy agenda.
01:00:57.000Nixon's complicated domestic legacy is a discussion for probably another day.
01:01:02.000But I do think that this question of the future of the both strands of the neoconservatism Maybe one came after the other, but actually created a cycle.
01:01:11.000And the cycle, I think, goes something like this, where the warfare state, which ended up being the foreign policy, foreign adventurism strand of the neoconservatism, which came later on your telling of it, which I think is probably correct, actually.
01:01:24.000The warfare state then necessitates a different kind of welfare state, which sort of goes like this.
01:01:29.000If you invade the rest of the world, you have to invite them.
01:01:33.000In some ways, Europe is actually the strongest argument you have if you're a European.
01:01:38.000I care about America, so I don't want to offer them great arguments for this, but in the interest of truth, I'm going to give you sort of someone in Europe, if they want to make the best argument for America bearing a disproportionate share of NATO budgets or something like this, which...
01:01:51.000I'm against, but if they wanted to make the argument for it, they would say, your foreign adventurism in the Middle East is what's caustic creating our mass migration crisis into Europe.
01:02:00.000So you better darn well pay your fair share and then some, because you guys caused this problem for us.
01:02:06.000And in some ways, our southern border crisis Is part of this too.
01:02:10.000The more you invade the rest of the world, the more you have to invite them.
01:02:13.000The welfare state is downstream of the warfare state.
01:02:16.000And then you have a welfare state at home, which actually draws even more of that as a magnet.
01:02:20.000And that relates actually to the immigration crisis.
01:02:22.000And most people don't think about this linkage between this welfare state and anti-state issues and the immigration crisis when in fact they're sort of deeply linked.
01:02:30.000And it just sort of leads back to, I think, the unambiguous right answer for the future of the conservative movement is to take up with the late 1980s, 1990s version of the neoconservatives, which are like sort of containing the containment of the LBJ Great Society project, to then take the other approach now, even if belatedly to say the right answer is shut it down, restore actual self-governance in the true sense.
01:02:54.000The bargain was a deal with the devil to start with.
01:02:57.000And right now, you're about to have a generation that paid in that isn't going to get paid out.
01:03:02.000Let's get ahead of the social upheaval that comes in front of that and just give the money back to the people, self-governance, not just economically, but even on some of the areas where their sovereignty has been ceded.