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Know Your Enemy
Know Your Enemy

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BONUS: Sympathy For The Hitch

Matt and Sam break out the good stuff for a late-night, in-depth discussion of Christopher Hitchens, the hot-take economy, and how to be a person. (There's a few minutes of Democratic Primary shoptalk in the beginning; you've been warned.) We apologize for any discernible decline in the quality of Sam's insights or enunciation toward the end of the episode (see: the good stuff).


Readings:

George Packer, "The Enemies of Writing," The Atlantic, Jan 23, 2020

George Packer, "When the Culture War Comes for the Kids," The Atlantic, Oct 2019

Christopher Hitchens, "Booze and Fags," LRB, March 1992

Christopher Hitches, "Philip Larkin, the Impossible Man," The Atlantic, May 2011

George Scialabba, "Farewell, Hitch," N+1, Winter 2005

Sam Adler-Bell, "Unpopular Opinions Suck Ass," The Outline, Dec 30, 2019

Osita Nwanevu, "The Enemies of Truth," The New Republic, Jan 27, 2020

Benjamin Kunkel, "Hitch," N+1, Dec 19, 2011 


And ICYMI, here are Sam's much-despised articles on Bernie/Warren unity one and two

BONUS: Sympathy For The Hitch

Comments

Something that would be cool to expand on from this episode would be an episode about how our prior political beliefs impact every ideology we have in the future. For example, how Neo-Conservatives carry over a lot of Marxist beliefs into conservatism, even though they are no longer Marxist themselves. I suspect there are versions of this with other figures, and I know I've experienced this myself(used to be a tankie), and how our prior ideologies influence our present.

Killer300

It's a tough question. Maybe I was unfair to Packer wrt that essay; there's a lot to untangle. I'll have to think about it more. Thanks for listening and for the thoughtful comment! - Sam

Know Your Enemy

Really great episode, but it left me with a question. As someone who read and liked Packer's essay back in October, I'm struggling to see how he (or anyone) could have been immune to Sam's criticism. I certainly agree that it is better to assert something genuinely thoughtful than to pander to a crowd of anti-SJWs or whatever. However, isn't anything written with the hopes of being read in some sense pandering or trying to engage an audience? I thought Packer's essay was conveying his concern for his children's education and his hesitance to embrace certain ideologies about the ends of education. On one level, of course he is pandering to people who are similarly hesitant to embrace those ideologies (how could he not?). Although, on another level, I think his essay can be read as being at bottom positive rather than polemical. Is there any way to know the difference?

Benedict Wright

Matt: It was never going to hurt *Bernie*. I continue to be disappointed in your stance on this. Sam: thank you for those articles. They helped my will-to-live.

Eleanor McConnell

Loved this ep (as someone not super familiar with Hitchens' work). Thanks for the thoughtful discussion guys!

Joel


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