Hello, I'm Jesse Hirsch and welcome to Meta Views, recorded live in front of an automated audience.
Jesse HirschAnd today we're gonna talk about something that I think quite frankly is needed, which is making sense of all the nonsense, or more accurately addressing the culture of outrage, the culture of toxicity, the lack of discourse, even the corruption of discourse or something.
Jesse HirschWe've talked a lot here on Meta Views is pollution in the information ecosystem.
Jesse HirschAnd I'm joined today by David Beckmeyer, who.
Jesse HirschDavid, we like to start each of our show with kind of set of icebreakers.
Jesse HirschAnd in traditional media fashion, we always like to start with the news, partly because Metaview publishes a daily newsletter on substack.
Jesse HirschBut the breaking news that I just saw before we started recording was the Supreme Court has upheld the TikTok ban.
Jesse HirschAnd even though it's still uncertain as to what that means, cuz of course the incoming administration says they wanna make a deal, they wanna come across as saviors.
Jesse HirschBut now TikTok saying they're gonna go dark as a protest move, that they're just gonna shut everything off, all services in the United States.
Jesse HirschCause they recognize that their users are pissed off and it could be a moment if there is some kind of negotiating for them to sort of have the advantage there.
Jesse HirschNow, David, this is always where I turn to the guest and I say, is there any news you would like to share?
Jesse HirschCould be personal news, could be world news.
Jesse HirschUnfortunately, I have had some guests share some fake news, which I'm sure you understand the dynamics of the Internet and how that happens.
Jesse HirschBut I'm curious, within the spontaneity of this newscast, if there's anything you think our audience should know about in terms of the general landscape of either your personal life or what's happening right now in politics and media.
David BeckmeyerYeah, okay, sure.
David BeckmeyerI don't know if I'd call it a news exactly news, but there was some commentary.
David BeckmeyerI don't know if you saw it from.
David BeckmeyerPaul Bloom talked about this theory of America, this humiliation theory of American politics.
Jesse HirschNo, I didn't.
Jesse HirschThat sounds hilarious.
Jesse HirschPlease.
David BeckmeyerYeah, so, I mean, he was.
David BeckmeyerHe's kind of coming from this perspective that, you know, it's obviously not the only driver for, for some of these.
David BeckmeyerThese things, but one driver.
David BeckmeyerIt was like, you know, there's sort of the famous thing about Donald Trump was humiliated at the roast by Obama at the.
David BeckmeyerWhatever it was, the.
David BeckmeyerWhat do they call that?
David BeckmeyerThe.
Jesse HirschThe press dinner.
Jesse HirschThe Washington press dinner.
David BeckmeyerYeah, yeah, the press corps dinner thing.
David BeckmeyerAnd he was in.
David BeckmeyerAnd a lot of people cite that as that's why he was determined to go become president.
David BeckmeyerEddie.
David BeckmeyerEddie also talks about how I think Tucker Carlson was sort of, quote unquote, humiliated.
David BeckmeyerI often, like, really, was he, though?
David BeckmeyerBecause I know people on the right would see him as humiliated, but he's humiliated by Jon Stewart a while back on, like, a crossfire kind of thing.
David BeckmeyerAnd.
David BeckmeyerAnd I think even if the right wouldn't see it as humiliation, they see it as the left humiliate, humiliating them.
David BeckmeyerAnd they're found to be humiliated.
David BeckmeyerHumiliated within the.
David BeckmeyerI'm having a hard time with that word today.
David BeckmeyerAnd within the.
David BeckmeyerWithin the sphere of kind of the left media and all that sort of stuff.
David BeckmeyerAnd now he's sort of saying Musk is kind of in that same thing.
David BeckmeyerHe feels slighted by Biden that he wasn't invited to the electric vehicle event, which is probably dumb, because here's a guy that's like, got the largest, you know, electric vehicle market out there, and they've been in it the longest in some sense, and doesn't invite him.
David BeckmeyerI mean, that was dumb, probably, but.
David BeckmeyerAnd he's slighted by that, so he's citing that as a reason why this kind of public embarrassment.
David BeckmeyerAnd he sort of saying, stop doing that.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerBut.
David BeckmeyerBut for me, I kind of take it to a next step, though, and it kind of ties back to my show a little bit that, you know, I hear this from my audience a lot.
David BeckmeyerYou're just telling me to be nice to the other side and stop having my own perspective on things or whatever, or, you know, and I'm really not doing that.
David BeckmeyerI'm.
David BeckmeyerI'm sort of saying just be better at conflict.
David BeckmeyerRight?
David BeckmeyerYeah.
David BeckmeyerYeah.
David BeckmeyerIt's fine to have different views, and some things you're probably not going to be able to resolve, like.
David BeckmeyerBut, you know, you still have to sort of coexist with these people and find the places where you can have dialogue or whatever.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerSo.
David BeckmeyerSo I.
David BeckmeyerI thought of that as, like, the.
David BeckmeyerBecause the opposite of that would be what?
David BeckmeyerNot saying anything.
David BeckmeyerI mean, I still think you need to hold people accountable when they do stuff.
David BeckmeyerSo I.
David BeckmeyerI get it.
David BeckmeyerLike, maybe don't do it.
David BeckmeyerDo it in a way that doesn't publicly humiliate them.
David BeckmeyerBut I think we want to also be mindful that you can't just not do anything either, or you can't just let everything go, I guess, is what I want to say.
Jesse HirschAbsolutely.
Jesse HirschAnd although I love this argument, and it kind of foreshadows the idea that if TikTok were to humiliate the US Government.
Jesse HirschAnd they're certainly hum humiliating Congress right now in terms of the pushback.
Jesse HirschBut if they were to humiliate Trump and the executive, I mean, jokingly, does that lead then to a conflict over Taiwan, or quite the opposite, does it stay just in the language of media?
Jesse HirschAnd it is funny, I think, how the right, as they ascend to power, have never been more insecure.
Jesse HirschYou'd think that they'd be sort of in this kind of hubris of, all right, yeah, we made it, we're getting there.
Jesse HirschBut never have they bit more insecure, I think.
Jesse HirschAnd I think we're seeing that play out in the nomination hearings and just how easily some of the nominees for the cabinet are, quite frankly, being made fools of.
Jesse HirschAnd that doesn't mean that they won't end up in their positions, I think, due to the nature of contemporary politics.
Jesse HirschBut it fuels the outrage machine, which I think we're going to end up talking about quite a bit.
Jesse HirschNow, our second segment that we do on every episode of metafiews is wtf or what's the Future?
Jesse HirschBecause we are a future centric podcast.
Jesse HirschWe like to provoke our audience, our guests, to imagine futures, whether desired or undesired, because we operate under the principle that nothing's inevitable.
Jesse HirschProvided you're willing to pay attention.
Jesse HirschRight, Provided you're kind of scoping the horizon to see what's there.
Jesse HirschSo I'm curious, David, what is something that either you're looking at or that you think our audience needs to be looking at when anticipating the next year, the next few months, in what's looking to be a pretty turbulent and volatile period?
David BeckmeyerOh, well, I was kind of framing it into longer world when I was thinking about, please go right ahead.
David BeckmeyerBut you know, in terms of like, yeah, the next few months or the next year or so, I mean, I'd be looking at resiliency, right?
David BeckmeyerI mean, I think there's going to be a lot of stuff being thrown at the wall.
David BeckmeyerOverreacting is going to happen a lot.
David BeckmeyerPeople are going to, you know, think everything is a doomsday, you know, kind of, and we're going to have to sort through which ones are as big a deal as that, that probably deserve our attention.
David BeckmeyerI think that's.
David BeckmeyerThat's going to be a challenge.
David BeckmeyerAnd so, you know, what are the, you know, how do you do that?
David BeckmeyerIt's like, easier said than done.
David BeckmeyerBut a lot of it is just trying to be mindful and trying to ask those questions, like, you know, am I?
David BeckmeyerIs this as big a deal as they're really portraying it as, because that kind of gets to what you're saying about the outreach industry world that wants to hype, you know, wants to get us so afraid all the time.
David BeckmeyerSo.
David BeckmeyerBut it's going to be tough.
David BeckmeyerI mean, I think we're going to see a lot, a lot of things thrown at the wall and it's going to be hard to sort through which ones are the places where we should probably spend energy.
Jesse HirschWell, and part of what I've been following in terms of the climate volatility right now, we're seeing it in L.
Jesse HirschA and we saw it with Hurricane Helene and in Carolina and Tennessee is the anxiety a lot of people feel because of the trauma, the disruption to their lives.
Jesse HirschAnd to your point, how do we divert that from the outrage machine?
Jesse HirschWhat are the mechanisms that we need to kind of help people go through these types of crises, help them face these types of challenges?
Jesse HirschFostering community, fostering solidarity, fostering discourse, dialogue around how to measure it.
Jesse HirschAnd again, I suspect that we're really going to get into the weeds, hopefully, of how that works.
Jesse HirschSo to transition then to our feature which I construct these kind of frames and wrap these conversations partly because I want to get the most of your wisdom in the least amount of time, as selfishly as possible.
Jesse HirschBut I also try to push my guests to really think about, you know, the next level of their thinking, the implications of the ideas they're presenting.
Jesse HirschAnd I wanted to start with media literacy because media literacy is something I've certainly benefited from my entire life.
Jesse HirschI, at a very early age, recognized that media literacy was one of the most enabling aspects of living in the world that we are in, that if you were high up on the learning curve of not just media skills, but knowledge, because that fundamentally is what media literacy is about, that you could go far.
Jesse HirschAnd yet it also seems that we're in a world now where media literacy is kind of a double edged sword, where I always saw it as a path to empowerment.
Jesse HirschI'm kind of now seeing it become weaponized, that it's being used by nefarious actors to be vague, to pollute the information ecosphere, to target people who are vulnerable.
Jesse HirschSo I'm curious, in 2025, where do you see the conversation around media literacy?
Jesse HirschIs it still something empty that we just encourage people to do, or are we now coupling with it with larger social responsibilities or larger commitments around respect and civility?
Jesse HirschI'm curious how that synthesizing as our understanding of media literacy is I think fundamentally maturing.
David BeckmeyerSo you actually think media literacy is maturing?
Jesse HirschI know where you're going with that and I'm in accordance.
Jesse HirschWhen I say maturing, I mean our understanding of it, the distribution of it among society, unfortunately is not as widespread as we require it.
Jesse HirschBut I mean on a scholarly level, on an intellectual level, I think our understanding of how it's used and where has changed over the last 10 years.
Jesse HirschDanah Boyd, for example, has written a couple of essays which are kind of critical of media literacy on its own.
Jesse HirschSo as someone who is on the front lines, right, who both as a practitioner and as an intellectual, I'm curious how this idea for you has evolved while acknowledging where you were headed there, which is it's still an elite resource and not something that is pervasive amongst the citizenry.
David BeckmeyerYeah, well, I think the biggest way, you know, being sort of a STEM person and more, more kind of in that rational science side and you know, was always the person that thought, well if you just have a rational argument, you can win the day.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerWhat I've learned in a couple of years, doing this show and talking to all the experts and all the research papers and other work that I've read, you know, that's obviously that's like, doesn't work.
David BeckmeyerAnd, and, and there's evidence for that, that that doesn't work too.
David BeckmeyerThat's the kind of irony of it.
David BeckmeyerAll right.
David BeckmeyerThe people that say that I'm going to convince you with evidence, there's actually evidence that shows you that convincing you with evidence doesn't work.
Jesse HirschThat's a meta view right there.
Jesse HirschLiterally.
David BeckmeyerRight, right, exactly.
David BeckmeyerYou know, and that's actually metaview is kind of interesting too because that's kind of what my show is.
David BeckmeyerIt's kind of a, it's not a.
David BeckmeyerWe don't talk about political issues very much, but we're sort of above that.
David BeckmeyerLike we're talking about how you talk about political issues, that kind of thing.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerBut, but yeah, with media.
David BeckmeyerYeah, I guess that's true.
David BeckmeyerWe understand a lot more about it and it has become a lot more weaponized.
David BeckmeyerSo that's one things I've learned is that, you know, it's a lot more our psychology and it's an uphill battle because it's our, it's kind of our, our innate tendencies are to fall into being susceptible to, to misinformation, disinformation and it's not one sided.
David BeckmeyerLike it's not only Republicans that do this or whatever.
David BeckmeyerWe all suffer from These same cognitive biases and we all suffer from these emotions and getting tied up in our tribal thinking when, when we don't think we are.
David BeckmeyerI mean, I think that's the other big piece is we're very blind to it when we're doing it or people on our side are doing it.
David BeckmeyerYou know, I mean, I see these conversations about, you know, a bunch of like minded people talking about how the other side is so, you know, caught up in this.
David BeckmeyerAnd then, and then they'll go on and say things like, okay, you're doing it right now, you're doing the thing you were just accusing the other people of.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerSo I think that's probably what I've learned the most about that, you know, in this journey is that it's much more complicated and it's not, it's going to be a challenge because our innate psychology has not really kept up.
David BeckmeyerOur, our society is not really kept up with, with this.
David BeckmeyerAnd it also requires practice and skills that have to be learned.
David BeckmeyerYou don't just, you can't just be smart and then be good at media literacy.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerYou have to also practice it and look for the signs and things like that.
Jesse HirschWell, and you raise an interesting point.
Jesse HirschAnd one of the things we do talk about often here on meta views is learning how we learn.
Jesse HirschRight to your point about talking about how we talk.
Jesse HirschAnd one of our key insights is that learning is very social.
Jesse HirschIt's inherently social.
Jesse HirschRight.
Jesse HirschThat while it is possible to learn alone, learning in a group, learning with others is far more efficient, far faster.
Jesse HirschAnd it matches what you're describing there in terms of both our cognitive biases, but also our tendency towards groupthink that by default we're gonna want to agree with our parents or disagree by default.
Jesse HirschRight.
Jesse HirschWe're going to want to get along with our friends, we're going to want to get along with our co workers.
Jesse HirschSo to what extent have or should perhaps media literacy efforts acknowledge those group dynamics rather than sort of expect the individual media consumer to develop that critical lens?
Jesse HirschWhen it seems like it's two part, it's both fostering that awareness, fostering that critical lens, but also fostering dialogic techniques, for lack of a better phrase, like ways to engage your social world.
Jesse HirschOtherwise, if everyone around you is saying, yeah, the election was stolen, right.
Jesse HirschThat puts a lot of social pressure on you to agree and go, okay, I guess the election was stolen.
Jesse HirschEven if visibly and critically, you know that that's nonsense.
David BeckmeyerOh yeah, for sure.
David BeckmeyerI mean, there's a bunch of threads we could pull there.
David BeckmeyerBut, you know, so one of the first thoughts I had while you were saying that is this idea of trust, right?
David BeckmeyerI mean, you talked about that we learn things through, through our social networks.
David BeckmeyerAnd I think technically it's.
David BeckmeyerThey talk about it as sort of social epistemology, right?
David BeckmeyerAnd you know, that there was.
David BeckmeyerWe couldn't be human, we couldn't survive without it.
David BeckmeyerSo it's not saying, you know, we can't do it.
David BeckmeyerBut you have to also realize that there's this trust factor, that you trust the people in your network and you don't trust people on the other side.
David BeckmeyerAnd, and, you know, there's a, there's a social psychologist and I'm forgetting the name now, I can get it to you for the show notes.
David BeckmeyerBut she said, she said something so profound when she said that the fear of social death is greater than the fear of physical death.
David BeckmeyerSo, like the thing you're talking about, like, I, I have.
David BeckmeyerI can't lose my tribe.
David BeckmeyerAnd we don't even know this is going on because it's that deep, ancient part of our brain, you know, that survive.
David BeckmeyerHumans traded brain power for muscle.
David BeckmeyerThey traded muscle for this social cohesion and, and work operating as groups.
David BeckmeyerAnd so groupiness is like, literally critical to our survival.
David BeckmeyerAnd our brain is very afraid of getting ousted out of a group.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerAnd we don't even know that's going on.
David BeckmeyerBut, but it's happening all the time.
David BeckmeyerAnd so, you know, it's a balance because you have to have.
David BeckmeyerYou can't know everything.
David BeckmeyerI can't know everything about how an iPhone works, but I'm still going to use an iPhone, right?
David BeckmeyerSo there's a whole bunch of people and there's a whole bunch of history there that just comes collapsed with that.
David BeckmeyerAnd I have to kind of accept it.
David BeckmeyerAnd there's a bunch of.
David BeckmeyerAnd that same thing is true in a bunch of other realms.
David BeckmeyerWe can't know it all ourselves, right?
David BeckmeyerWe're going to have to draw some lines about where we're going to accept the information that we trust from somewhere.
David BeckmeyerAnd this is the challenge that we have going forward.
Jesse HirschWell, and it's funny, you sort of describe or you evoke the kind of black box society, right?
Jesse HirschThe consequence of algorithms is we don't always know why they make the decisions they make.
Jesse HirschAlthough we are starting to understand now the kind of outrage machine that the bias of fostering engagement is.
Jesse HirschExtremists end up being rewarded because they're more engaging.
Jesse HirschWhether you're telling them that they're wrong or whether you're saying, wow, I didn't know that.
Jesse HirschThat type of secret knowledge.
Jesse HirschAnd we've looked previously at this concept of algorithmic folklore, which is basically people reverse engineering how the algorithm works by talking to each other.
Jesse HirschDo you see that as either facilitating or enabling a kind of media literacy?
Jesse HirschQuite the opposite.
Jesse HirschIs it facilitating further weaponization in the sense that the average person is probably not thinking, okay, now that I know algorithmic optimization, I'm going to make sure my puppy photos are more popular versus it's those who are politically motivated who are perhaps more likely to use that information, use that media literacy to, you know, further destabilize the public discourse.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerI mean, some of it's grift, right.
David BeckmeyerI mean, some people have figured out how to use these tools just.
David BeckmeyerAnd sometimes that there's a political aspect of that grift.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerThey've figured out that that's a hot button I could use and I can then go sell my.
David BeckmeyerWhatever crazy products they have.
David BeckmeyerI mean, you know, you could go, I guess, to.
David BeckmeyerAlex Jones is sort of an example of that in some largest way.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerHe has all this nonsense he says.
David BeckmeyerWho knows how much he believes, but.
David BeckmeyerAnd then he goes and sells, you know, vitamins and I don't know, all kinds of crazy stuff that he sells.
David BeckmeyerAnd he's even said in court that he doesn't really believe in him and he's just trying to sell pills.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerSo it doesn't matter.
David BeckmeyerPeople still listen.
David BeckmeyerI mean, that gets back to our.
David BeckmeyerHow this tribalness that we have and we want this information, we want to be lied to, basically, Right?
Jesse HirschYeah.
David BeckmeyerBecause hearing what we want.
David BeckmeyerBut yeah.
David BeckmeyerSo can it.
David BeckmeyerCould it be used for good?
David BeckmeyerPotentially.
David BeckmeyerBut I think this gets back to our innate.
David BeckmeyerThe challenge.
David BeckmeyerI mean, every time a technology has come out, you know, with this idea that somehow it'll solve our problems and make.
David BeckmeyerMake the world better, it's often just created more division and loud misinformation to spread better, going all the way back to the printing press and 150 years of wars over the church.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerSo this is not new.
David BeckmeyerLike, every time these technologies come out, rna, human tendencies come out and you get sort of the good and the bad with it and finding how to sort of tease out the good and.
David BeckmeyerAnd somehow make the good win and win the day.
David BeckmeyerIt has historically been a challenge.
David BeckmeyerAnd I don't know what that answer is.
David BeckmeyerI do, you know, kind of believe there's some possibility that maybe AI could be applied In a good way on this.
David BeckmeyerBut again, you're back to that.
David BeckmeyerIt also can be applied in really horrible ways.
Jesse HirschWell, and, And.
Jesse HirschAnd hopefully we'll sort of come back and end around that in terms of, I suspect, use of incentivizing.
Jesse HirschRight.
Jesse HirschAnd rewarding people in terms of their desire for attention and their des.
Jesse HirschDopamine could be engineered to get the outcomes we desire.
Jesse HirschAnd I do want to come back to that, but I'm curious to kind of open up outrage overload as both a concept, a phrase, and then fundamentally a journey or a path that you've been on.
Jesse HirschBecause for me, outrage overload kind of evokes a system breakdown.
Jesse HirschLike, on the one hand, I sort of imagine the overload of the individual, right, where this is a kind of sensory overload.
Jesse HirschBut then there's the democratic implication, right, that this is overloading.
Jesse HirschI think it already has overloaded our democratic capacity to handle disputes, to handle disagreements, to handle conflict.
Jesse HirschGive me a sense of, you know, the narrative, the.
Jesse HirschThe kind of.
Jesse HirschWhat's the word I'm looking for here, the direction, the momentum of outrage overload.
Jesse HirschAnd as I describe this, I almost imagine thinking of Dune, that you're riding Shai Hulud, right?
Jesse HirschYou're riding this big worm that is outrage overload, and you're holding onto it, trying to say, hey, here's what's going on.
Jesse HirschPlease enlighten me.
David BeckmeyerYeah, no, the way you characterize it in the beginning is really perfect because there is this sort of individual side of it, because outrage is itself using outrage.
David BeckmeyerYou know, it's kind of a placeholder for this whole set of emotions, often anger, moral indignation, stuff like that.
David BeckmeyerAnd it has a place in society.
David BeckmeyerIt has a place in human history and society.
David BeckmeyerThere's evolutionary biology.
David BeckmeyerWe believe that outrage was sort of invented as a way to enforce social norms so that those groups could stay together.
David BeckmeyerThis goes back, you know, tens of thousands of years.
David BeckmeyerAnd so it's very innate in our brain.
David BeckmeyerBut.
David BeckmeyerBut if you're just swimming in it, obviously it doesn't serve that purpose anymore.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerAnd that's where the overload side comes in.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerSo should we be outraged at some things?
David BeckmeyerProbably, yes.
David BeckmeyerI mean, I'm not saying you shouldn't be outraged.
David BeckmeyerThere's probably things that deserve are being outraged about it.
David BeckmeyerMaybe when you go learn about them, you'll find I should be more outraged about that thing.
David BeckmeyerBut there are a lot of things we're outraged about just for no reason.
David BeckmeyerLike, it's a small enough thing that there's better ways to spend our time and it's causing us to lose the ability to do the thing we talked before, which is be critical of media and be a critical thinker because it turns off that part of our brain, our emotions kick in, all these other flight and fight and all this kind of stuff kicks in and we're not very good at being a logical being anymore.
David BeckmeyerSo.
David BeckmeyerYeah, and then like you say, then that extends into society, right?
David BeckmeyerSo people have figured out this works, whether accidental, like just kind of randomly running algorithms until they get the engagement they want or whether actively, you know, in media and a whole industry of folks that know that this is the way they're going to have to keep viewership.
David BeckmeyerAnd it's back to that word you use in earlier, the incentive thing, right?
David BeckmeyerSo how do we flip those incentives in some way that you know, and then some.
David BeckmeyerThat starts with us, right?
David BeckmeyerWe have to stop wanting to stop, we have to stop clicking on it.
David BeckmeyerWe have to stop, you know, viewing it when, or calling them out when they use these kind of techniques.
David BeckmeyerAnd that's hard, right?
David BeckmeyerI mean, because you get caught up in it and require, it's going to require us to do it.
David BeckmeyerBut I do believe bottom up movements can happen and I think that's probably the way, the way out of this.
David BeckmeyerBut yeah, that's exactly what you're saying.
David BeckmeyerIt's like it's, it's, it's outrage is a good thing, but not when you're just swimming in it and you can't tell the difference between what's hurting you and what's not.
Jesse HirschWell, and it also strikes me, as you've alluded to earlier, the group dynamics here are crucial because on the one hand there's a kind of snowball effect combined with the fear of missing out.
Jesse HirschWhere you want to be part of the pylon, right?
Jesse HirschYou want to be part of the powerful side of the mobile.
Jesse HirschThe same way that if that's coming at you, it's very terrifying.
Jesse HirschAnd that is another kind of overload.
Jesse HirschAnd there are unfortunately a lot of people on the Internet who have had to experience that.
Jesse HirschHow do we build a culture of solidarity, a culture of community defense, so that it's not just that we discourage each other from engaging in that behavior.
Jesse HirschAnd I'm seeing this on airplanes more often that when someone has an episode on an airplane, more of the other passengers are standing up to the defense of maybe they're harassing the staff, maybe they're harassing a person.
Jesse HirschIt seems like there's a greater community responsibility coming on.
Jesse HirschBut on the Internet, that's harder.
Jesse HirschOn the Internet, it's easy to just go away or close the window.
Jesse HirschIs there a need for that kind of.
Jesse HirschYou're describing the incentives to create the alternative.
Jesse HirschIs there a need to create a similar group dynamic that is a positive force rather than fueling this outrage and fueling the kind of emotions that go with it?
David BeckmeyerWell, yeah, I mean, there's definitely some of this going on.
David BeckmeyerI mean, this is one thing to keep in mind that there are lots of groups out there kind of recognizing that this is a problem and, and that there's working on ways out.
David BeckmeyerDo people have all the answers or we got it figured out and do they have enough traction yet?
David BeckmeyerYou know, probably not.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerBut.
David BeckmeyerAnd maybe that's a problem.
David BeckmeyerIt's too.
David BeckmeyerThere's too many organizations, and we somehow need to consolidate a little bit in some way.
David BeckmeyerBut, but there is.
David BeckmeyerThere are some movements.
David BeckmeyerMovements on this, I think.
David BeckmeyerYeah.
David BeckmeyerAnd I think this, this idea of, of, you know, the airplane example that you use, you know, that can go too far too.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerBecause now you can, you can find.
David BeckmeyerFind that now suddenly all kinds of things are.
David BeckmeyerAre not acceptable in certain situations.
David BeckmeyerAnd, and you are starting to make it, you know.
David BeckmeyerWell, I say social media is a perfect example of this where you talked about you.
David BeckmeyerIt's easier to just walk away.
David BeckmeyerWell, and that's part of the problem because now it creates this perception because the loud voices are who stick around.
David BeckmeyerIt creates this misperception that they represent a larger group than they really do because a lot of the people that, like, are more, like, more soft on this or have a more rational view of it are like, I'm out.
David BeckmeyerI can't deal with this.
David BeckmeyerI got better things to do.
David BeckmeyerSo all you get are those loud voices.
David BeckmeyerSo you get a misperception of the world as being more sort of polarized emotionally than it really is.
Jesse HirschWell, and allow me then, to bring that right to the core of politics, because I think what you just described is what we're seeing in the electoral space, that, that smart people, rational people, sane people are staying the hell away from politics.
Jesse HirschRight.
Jesse HirschThere's zero incentives for them to be mocked, attacked.
Jesse HirschThere's a certain level of vicious partisanness that I think alienates a lot of smart and sensible people who go, I just like the Internet.
Jesse HirschI just don't want to be part of that.
Jesse HirschAnd we as a society suffer, right, because we don't get the best and brightest in office and in our body.
Jesse HirschInstead, we get the loudest and those who covet power the most.
Jesse HirschAnd so I'm curious, in terms of this outrage loop, how do we, to your point, how do we switch that culture, acknowledging that this culture is strong and being constantly reinforced?
Jesse HirschBecause while you acknowledge.
Jesse HirschAnd maybe.
Jesse HirschActually, I have two questions now forming, so I'll stick to the political one.
Jesse HirschYou acknowledge that there are organizations trying to stop this.
Jesse HirschAnd it strikes me, fundamentally what we have is an outside of government problem, right?
Jesse HirschThis is not the state.
Jesse HirschThis is not the Department of Justice.
Jesse HirschThis is.
Jesse HirschSocial media is not actually a public square because the public state, the government does not have power to enforce there.
Jesse HirschAnd Meta, for example, has just said, hey, we're backing off moderation, forget about it.
Jesse HirschYou guys say whatever you want.
Jesse HirschIs there a danger then, and I'm being hyperbolic here deliberately, is there a danger here then, in vigilantism, that rather than focusing on social norms, rather than focusing on social institutions, we're instead just escalating the information war by, you know, unfortunately saying the other side is winning.
Jesse HirschWe need different tactics.
Jesse HirschWe can't use the methods that the other side is using, because then we're just the other side.
Jesse HirschBut we're also not creating the type of governance and responsibility and trust that we would think we would need in a democratic society.
Jesse HirschAm I off base here?
Jesse HirschAgain, this is the political scientist in me going, where is legitimate power within this larger context?
David BeckmeyerYeah, well, certainly, first of all, on the, on the sort of politician side, even if they are, you know, sort of more moderate in their views or more moderate in their.
David BeckmeyerThey would prefer to be more moderate in the way they interact with the opposing party.
David BeckmeyerThey can't even do that anymore.
David BeckmeyerLike, that now has become something that will get them canceled or whatever you might want to call it, that their own people will go after them if they're too nice or, you know, they're willing to compromise.
David BeckmeyerJust.
David BeckmeyerWe've made compromise a bad word, right?
David BeckmeyerAnd it's like the only way to get anything done is compromise.
David BeckmeyerPeople like you can't always get your way.
David BeckmeyerAnd, you know, and there's certainly.
David BeckmeyerI'm not saying you can't have issues you won't compromise on, but the reality is you have to build coalitions to make things happen.
David BeckmeyerAnd so you can't just always get your way.
David BeckmeyerBut.
David BeckmeyerBut.
David BeckmeyerAnd we've made that a bad word.
David BeckmeyerSo, yeah, within.
David BeckmeyerEven within politicians, if they are not so much just this crazy, they almost have to pretend to be this, you know, this kind of wild Extreme, because their own people, they'll get black from their own people for not doing that.
David BeckmeyerAnd I think to the, to the platforms and what could happen, obviously, we've kind of seen it, right.
David BeckmeyerI mean, look at the changes in Twitter slash X over the last couple of years.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerI mean, it's become a cesspool of misinformation.
David BeckmeyerAnd, you know, and it's.
David BeckmeyerAnd it's.
David BeckmeyerYou know, there's probably.
David BeckmeyerIt says.
David BeckmeyerIt's this challenge of there's lots of good information on these platforms.
David BeckmeyerIt's just hard to weed it out.
David BeckmeyerLike, where is the good information?
David BeckmeyerHow do you tell the difference?
David BeckmeyerAnd that.
David BeckmeyerThat's a heavy lift for the average person to.
David BeckmeyerTo work with.
David BeckmeyerAnd so you're overwhelmed.
David BeckmeyerI mean, it's.
David BeckmeyerWhat is Bannon's thing?
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerJust throw BS at the wall and.
David BeckmeyerAnd that will, you know, that just was it.
David BeckmeyerFlood the zone, I think he said.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerAnd.
David BeckmeyerAnd that works.
David BeckmeyerI mean, that basically you have to say the guy's winning.
David BeckmeyerRight?
David BeckmeyerThe guy's.
David BeckmeyerHe wants to destroy the.
David BeckmeyerThe administrative state.
David BeckmeyerHe's.
David BeckmeyerHe's achieving it with essentially what the word that you use, this information warfare idea.
David BeckmeyerSo, yeah, I don't.
David BeckmeyerIt's.
David BeckmeyerIt's.
David BeckmeyerI'm trying not to be the negative nanny here or whatever, because I try to bring positive messages, but it's a challenging landscape, for sure.
David BeckmeyerI mean, we have diseases like polio coming back and things like that.
David BeckmeyerAnd so it's a dismiss information world.
David BeckmeyerIt's a challenging landscape.
Jesse HirschWell, and I think to your point about the public health dynamics, I think there's a side to this larger battle, and I think framing it as a battle is problematic, but it is right now, until we get a ceasefire, it is a battle is that the scientists, the institutional authorities, they've kind of sat it out, right?
Jesse HirschBecause they recognize that the other side isn't playing by the rules, that they're using tactics that are unfair and vicious, especially in terms of some of the death threats targeted or now the threat of prosecution against Dr.
Jesse HirschFauci.
Jesse HirschRight.
Jesse HirschBut at the same time, there really isn't.
Jesse HirschTo bring it back to podcasting.
Jesse HirschI'm both pleased and disappointed at this talk of, oh, the left needs a Joe Rogan or the Democrats need a podcasting kind of ecosystem, the way that the right has a podcasting ecosystem, which that happened with talk radio, that happened with cable news.
Jesse HirschIt's a recurring phenomena.
Jesse HirschBut at the same time, it doesn't feel as if the people who have power, the people who have the expertise, have the scientific know how as if they are willing to wade into these public battles.
Jesse HirschAnd part of me gets it because they're probably going to get clobbered before they have a chance of getting their point across.
Jesse HirschI'm curious what you think.
Jesse HirschIs this something in which we need to be asking those leaders, we need to be asking those experts, academics, community leaders to kind of, you know, engage more, or is the deck stacked against them?
Jesse HirschRight.
Jesse HirschIs it a situation in which the casino's always going to win and they're smart by not really wading into the morass that has become our public discourse?
David BeckmeyerYeah, I think there's a lot of things going on there.
David BeckmeyerI mean, one is the trust thing we talked about.
David BeckmeyerBut one challenge is a very legitimate.
David BeckmeyerI had David Helfand, who is a longtime astrophysicist and tries to go out and talk about various science things and communicate.
David BeckmeyerKnow, he just talked about how he, you know, basically science communications are not very good at telling stories and convincing people.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerThey.
David BeckmeyerIt's.
David BeckmeyerSo that's a challenge.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerSo you.
David BeckmeyerAnd, you know, we need those storytellers.
David BeckmeyerSo we had, you know, people like Carl Sagan and we had people like Burke, the, the English science communicator, forgetting his name now.
David BeckmeyerBut I'm sure you know who I'm talking about.
David BeckmeyerYou did like, connections.
David BeckmeyerJames Burke.
David BeckmeyerJames Burke, yeah.
David BeckmeyerFolks like that.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerWe need more folks like that that can communicate some of this science and bring it down to a level and get that message through with storytelling.
David BeckmeyerAnd, you know, I'm, I'm sort of thinking about how can I.
David BeckmeyerI help do that, you know, and as I need to do more of that on my show because I still often, I mean, we do storytelling through interviews a little bit, but I have to do more storytelling to get some of these messages across because I've, you know, I've had listeners come back and say, you know, this thing, this thing, this thing.
David BeckmeyerAnd I said, dude, we talked about that on episode, you know, 32.
David BeckmeyerAnd we talked about that on, you know, but clearly it's my problem.
David BeckmeyerI didn't get the message across.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerAnd so I think we have to take.
David BeckmeyerI think the scientists typical community has to take the responsibility for being poor at communication, basically.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerAnd I think Democrats as at large do as well.
David BeckmeyerI mean, I think they've really struggled to communicate with that segment of the sort of mass.
David BeckmeyerThe masses.
Jesse HirschWell.
Jesse HirschAnd in their defense, you know, lying is easier.
Jesse HirschRight.
Jesse HirschLike, if you're just going to make stuff up versus scientists tend to feel a commitment to not misrepresenting the science or even exaggerating the science versus going with people who are literally just making the nonsense up as they go along.
David BeckmeyerWell, yeah, you're absolutely right about that.
David BeckmeyerAnd I failed to kind of talk about that a little bit too, because, yeah, it is an unfair playing field a little bit.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerBecause we sort of sometimes position disinformation on one side and quality news reporting or something on the other, but they're very different.
David BeckmeyerQuality news reporting is simply trying to give you the.
David BeckmeyerThe information you need to make a decision if it's really quality journalism.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerWhereas disinformation is trying to take you someplace and have an outcome.
David BeckmeyerAnd so those two things are not opposites.
David BeckmeyerLike, they're not.
David BeckmeyerOne doesn't.
David BeckmeyerYou don't defeat one with the other.
David BeckmeyerYou kind of need a disinformation campaign, or you need a propaganda campaign and anti propaganda propaganda a little bit to actually fight disinformation.
Jesse HirschAnd that's where, you know, unfortunately, the journalism crisis is obviously complicating this, because in an ideal democratic society, you'd have a strong culture of journalism, which was the counter to disinformation.
Jesse HirschYou'd have science saying, you know, here's what we're Lear, here's what we're researching, here's how we respond to a pandemic or the climate threat.
Jesse HirschAnd then you have journalists who are saying, yeah, that Alex Jones guy.
Jesse HirschNo, those supplements are snake oil.
Jesse HirschThe conspiracies he's peddling are designed to make you afraid.
Jesse HirschBut the journalism has kind of fallen apart for a bunch of different reasons, partly economic, partly technological.
Jesse HirschBut I think where the journalism crisis and the science communication inadequacies, where they're a little united, is the clutching onto objectivity.
Jesse HirschAnd where I think objectivity as a concept has a role and should evolve.
Jesse HirschScience is teaching us that we are subjective beings and that as you were saying, within our ancestral brain and our social and collective kind of connections, Right.
Jesse HirschWe're far easily trusting the people around us and the people we love, even if they're spouting nonsense sense compared to a legitimate, verified, credible expert who spent their entire life around a little bit of research.
Jesse HirschAnd I think the issue there comes down to we want to see people's humanity.
Jesse HirschWe want to see their authenticity.
Jesse HirschAnd this is where Neil DeGrasse Tyson, he's not perfect, but he is a credible science communicator because he's himself and you get a sense that he's himself.
Jesse HirschAnd I think the Journalists, the science communicators, the people who are leaning away from objectivity and more to their honest, humble perspective.
Jesse HirschI'm seeing that as a much more viable way of how people communicate.
Jesse HirschUnfortunately, those folks are on TikTok and they may be SOL real fast.
Jesse HirschBut I'm curious again, through your own experiences, especially vis a vis your audience relations, because I thought that was a really powerful example.
Jesse HirschHow do you see your own relationship with objectivity?
Jesse HirschBecause you're dealing with emotion, you're talking to people about often the irrational side of their thinking and their psychology.
Jesse HirschWhere do you, as a guide, as an educator, as a host, where do you fall within that spectrum and how do you manage it yourself in terms of the tone that you take on your show and the way that you relate to your constituency or community?
David BeckmeyerYeah, again, there's a little bit of a meta aspect of this as well, because again, I'm sort of talking about how storytelling is the way to do things and I'm often presenting it with facts.
David BeckmeyerSo I fall into the same problem.
David BeckmeyerBut, but, but, yeah, I mean, it's a message that I really try to work on, is that this, we have this assumption sometimes you could call it like naive realism, where we assume the way we see the world is how everybody else will see.
David BeckmeyerIf we had the same facts, we'd come to the same conclusion.
David BeckmeyerAnd you know, that's clearly not, not how things work, you know, and, and, and facts are, play a role in it.
David BeckmeyerAnd so, but a lot of people see, and this has been true in science communication for a long time, that there was this idea of information deficit, I think was the theory and this idea that if we just give more information, we'll, we'll, we'll close that gap and everyone will come to the same thinking on this.
David BeckmeyerAnd it's clearly shown that that doesn't work, that that's not how things work.
David BeckmeyerSo, you know, a lot of people talk about there's a fact gap, and that's true.
David BeckmeyerThere are.
David BeckmeyerWe learn our bubbles and there's some fat gap.
David BeckmeyerBut even when the facts, when we have shared facts, if you don't talk about objectivity, even if we have shared facts, it doesn't mean we're going to come to the same conclusions from those facts.
David BeckmeyerAnd that's where people have a hard time.
David BeckmeyerLike, how could you not come to this conclusion?
David BeckmeyerLike, you late.
David BeckmeyerYou literally see people saying they must be literally insane that they did not come to the same conclusion as me.
David BeckmeyerAnd that's where we have to get better at appreciating that and get better that empathy side to.
David BeckmeyerTo try to understand how people view things.
David BeckmeyerAnd I think this is one reason why on my show, sometimes I'll say the same thing in different episodes with different guests in different ways, because people take away what they take away day and.
David BeckmeyerAnd it's almost like if you're going to talk to your kid, I don't know if you have kids, but if you're going to talk to your kid about.
David BeckmeyerAbout reproduction, like, you know, the story you tell them at five years old is going to be a lot different than the story you tell them at 7.
David BeckmeyerAnd, and you have.
David BeckmeyerYou can't just give that story once at 5 and say, I'm done.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerYou know, you're gonna.
David BeckmeyerThey're gonna get a different thing out of it every time you.
David BeckmeyerYou talk about that story.
David BeckmeyerAnd, and at, you know, at some point, hopefully they'll understand it all right?
David BeckmeyerBut.
David BeckmeyerBut it's the same.
David BeckmeyerSame sort of thing here.
David BeckmeyerPeople take away what they take away, and you have to almost present the same issue, maybe in different ways to get it across.
David BeckmeyerAnd I think that's a lesson that people don't appreciate in their own lives.
David BeckmeyerLike, they really still think, I can charge into the room, lay out my facts, and win the day.
David BeckmeyerAnd I think the biggest thing we lose about that is we don't understand that even if you win, you lose when you do that.
Jesse HirschAnd I think that's sort of the power of podcasting, that it's much more about emergence and dialogue rather than persuasion.
Jesse HirschRight.
Jesse HirschIt's not some PowerPoint where someone's like, here's why you need to do this.
Jesse HirschIt's people talking and exploring a concept and an idea.
Jesse HirschAnd that's where only because I feel I would be just as guilty of the hypocrisy as you've acknowledged.
Jesse HirschI also promote storytelling and narrative, and yet at the same time, often just end up doing exactly what we're doing.
Jesse HirschRight.
Jesse HirschWe're just not so much crafting a clear narrative, but getting into arguments and sharing ideas.
Jesse HirschAnd I do think that that is a form of storytel.
Jesse HirschAnd I think to your point about not so much repetition, but iteration, where you're telling kind of the same concept or making the same argument and using different language.
Jesse HirschI think that's tremendously important from an accessibility perspective because everyone has a different frame of reference for where they came from.
Jesse HirschRight.
Jesse HirschWhat they're thinking about now, who they've read, what they've listened to.
Jesse HirschAnd I think that Speaks to, as we sort of segue to the common ground part, why we've heard all sorts about echo chambers and filter bubbles and I think you and I have been talking about their predecessor, which is the community, right, the family.
Jesse HirschHow our ideas, our conceptions are very social and our peers, for example, often have way more influence on us than our parents in terms of the kids.
Jesse HirschAnd how as parents we want our kids to be one way, but their friends almost certainly shift them in another.
Jesse HirschBut I really liked how you touched upon empathy.
Jesse HirschAnd I definitely believe that empathy is the key to effective communication, period, full stop.
Jesse HirschBut also to countering this culture, the culture of outrage, the culture of toxicity we have.
Jesse HirschHow do we, and in particular in the online remote sense, how do we infuse more empathy into how we not just discuss, but discuss contentious issues?
Jesse HirschRight, Because I think that's where it can be most difficult for people and that's when they tend to withdraw from empathic attitudes and get more into combative ones.
David BeckmeyerYeah.
David BeckmeyerWell, leaving the social media part and the digital world set aside for just a moment, I think I want to say a couple things on the idea of common ground.
David BeckmeyerRight?
David BeckmeyerSo sometimes people, if you talk about common ground, they turn off, they're like, oh, you're just trying to get me to be a milk toast, you know, not have any position on anything.
David BeckmeyerAnd I'll, and I'll let these people that I think have really terrible ideas have their way.
David BeckmeyerAnd, and you know, that's really not what we're saying.
David BeckmeyerI mean, often we're talking about, sometimes we are talking common ground.
David BeckmeyerThere are applications of common ground for like, if you're going to work together as a community on some project, you're probably gonna need some common ground to be able to sit down and do that.
David BeckmeyerBut we're not always only talking about that.
David BeckmeyerSometimes we're just talking about, about shared humanity, common humanity, seeing humanity with the others and, and being less extreme, be more realistic.
David BeckmeyerActually it's better to say more realistic because the reality is those extreme positions you have in your head aren't a reflection of reality.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerNobody fits this very, I mean, somebody, maybe one person somewhere fits the stereotype you have for your political rivals, right?
David BeckmeyerNobody really is like that.
David BeckmeyerLike, when you go meet real people, you find they're not really like that stereotype that you have.
David BeckmeyerAnd so you know, that, that, and you know, clearly all the, you know, the folks working in this space doing these kind of things, having these kind of cross dialogue conversations and, and so like that, you know, show this to be true, right?
David BeckmeyerThat, that when you, you get an opportunity.
David BeckmeyerBecause we often don't have an opportunity for these kind of conversations that aren't so heated that they go off the rails.
David BeckmeyerWhen you have those exposure to that, you do, you know, gain some of that humanity and you start to have more empathy for their positions and all that kind of stuff.
David BeckmeyerNow that is really hard to scale, right?
David BeckmeyerTo just do it with conversations plus just doing the conversation doesn't ne necessarily like that's work.
David BeckmeyerLike why would I do that?
David BeckmeyerLike, you know, so there's, you sort of got to have some reason to do that.
David BeckmeyerAnd that reason to do that might be as an advocate for something and you know, that, you know, what is the line.
David BeckmeyerI forget who said this one too.
David BeckmeyerBut like if you're going to, you know, solve a problem or you're going to, you know, stop being in a war, you don't talk to your friends, you talk to your enemy, right?
David BeckmeyerAnd, and, and so that's what we have to get.
David BeckmeyerSo us getting in a room with a bunch of like minded people and arguing about the other side isn't going to change anything, right?
David BeckmeyerYou're going to have to start figuring out the other side and empathy is how you start to have some.
David BeckmeyerI think that we've been coached that every idea they have is terrible.
David BeckmeyerThey're terrible people, right?
David BeckmeyerAnd we believe it, that we've been, we bought into that, that we really think these other side is evil.
David BeckmeyerAnd now you can't negotiate with evil, right?
David BeckmeyerSo when you, but when you actually go, you know, interact with real people and you're ready to be real about listening and, and, and hearing their position, you may find that there is some, you can see a rational argument for how they are think about the world.
David BeckmeyerYou may not agree with it.
David BeckmeyerAnd this is the other thing that really frustrates me.
David BeckmeyerAnd I'm going to get, you're going to get me going here in a minute.
David BeckmeyerBut one of the things that really frustrates me, a lot of people think letting the other side tell, express their views is somehow agreeing with them.
David BeckmeyerLike you don't have to change your mind to let them express their views like you, you aren't obliged to change your mind.
David BeckmeyerLike we're not, I'm not always telling you to change your mind, but if you are an advocate for your position, you're going to be a much better advocate for your position.
David BeckmeyerIf you understand those opposing views and even have some, maybe some empathy for how they arrive at Those views.
David BeckmeyerAnd this is what often people like, a bridge people can't seem to cross, Right.
David BeckmeyerThat they can't seem to understand that if you want to be an advocate, you're going to be a much better one by having.
David BeckmeyerBy appreciating those opposing views.
Jesse HirschWell, and I would argue even a better human being, right.
Jesse HirschA better partner, a better parent, a better person in the world.
Jesse HirschBecause you said a couple things I want to tease out.
Jesse HirschOne, that every human being fundamentally is unique and I would argue contradictory.
Jesse HirschRight.
Jesse HirschSo however you imagine your ideological opponent, not only are they not that, but they probably have their own contradictions that you also do.
Jesse HirschAnd we need to afford that level of humanity and humility, I think, in our politics.
Jesse HirschBut the other side to this too is, I think.
Jesse HirschAnd this is problematic because the other point I think you argued was for nuance, because you acknowledge that there are a lot of people who are like, no, you can't give the other side an inch, or why would you be civil when the other side is so disrespectful?
Jesse HirschAnd that to me is just a race to the block, bottom right.
Jesse HirschIt's a race to conflict without any chance of resolution.
Jesse HirschAnd this is paradoxical.
Jesse HirschI do feel we need a base level of respect that even amongst people who hate each other, there needs to be for a society to exist.
Jesse HirschThere needs to be a base level of respect, a base level of social norm.
Jesse HirschAnd I do fear that in the online world, we've lost that.
Jesse HirschI think in Face to Face, that's still kind of there, right?
Jesse HirschThere is still.
Jesse HirschYou know, to your point, this is all easier face to face.
Jesse HirschIt's easier to connect to someone's humanity.
Jesse HirschIt's easier to connect to someone's empathy.
Jesse HirschAnd I say this more for our audience because, you know, I love to share these kind of personal anecdotes.
Jesse HirschI paradoxically identify as a Jewish Communist.
Jesse HirschAnd while that's both a historically accurate but contemporarily oxymoronic identity, I was a member of a very conservative golf club for about 10 years.
Jesse HirschAnd not only did nobody at that golf club know that I was a communist because this was a very right wing, you know, whatever, but we were all friends, right?
Jesse HirschThese are people who are ideologically on the other end of the spectrum of me, right, who I have very little in common with, but the golf club created an environment of respect.
Jesse HirschIt created an environment of civility.
Jesse HirschWe weren't there to debate taxation.
Jesse HirschWe were there to enjoy the outdoors.
Jesse HirschWe were there to enjoy each other's time.
Jesse HirschAnd it was transformative for me because on the one hand, I was this huge outlier.
Jesse HirschThere were certainly no other Jewish radicals at the golf club, maybe only one other Jew at the golf club.
Jesse HirschBut to be able to connect with these conservatives, right, with these people who was so rewarding for me because it humanized my opponents.
Jesse HirschIt humanized all the people who politically, I would never agree with.
Jesse HirschBut socially, I live in the same world as I wish that there was a way for other people to have similar experiences to that, where on the one hand, I'm confident enough in my identity that I know who I am and I don't have to go to a golf club and feel I need to conform, But I'm also able to open myself to other people's views and other people's perspectives.
Jesse HirschIronically, my experience at the golf club probably made me more of a radical than I was going in because I got a greater sense of sort of what these people's attitudes were and more.
Jesse HirschBut I have been privileged enough to be in situations with people right across the political spectrum, and they're all human beings, right?
Jesse HirschThey all breathe, they all fart, they all eat, they all do those things.
Jesse HirschAnd I have struggled since then to think about how we recreate that, how we create environments in which your humanity is all that matters.
Jesse HirschNot your views, your faith, your attitude on particular policies.
Jesse HirschHas that come up in your many conversations in terms of how do we get back to that point where people who are ideological enemies, people who are disagree, can still drink beer, smoke a dube, shake hands and hang out with each other?
David BeckmeyerOh, yeah, for sure.
David BeckmeyerBoth in terms of scientific research where people have studied this, and also with the practitioners.
David BeckmeyerRight?
David BeckmeyerSo one.
David BeckmeyerOne group has an idea of this, uses the word dignity.
David BeckmeyerLike they prefer dignity over respect.
David BeckmeyerSo you're affording your.
David BeckmeyerThese opponents, your political rivals, or whoever you're having.
David BeckmeyerHaving a conflict with, you know, dignity.
David BeckmeyerAnd they have this scale called the Dignity Dignity Index.
David BeckmeyerAnd you can look it up, and they have a lot of information on that.
David BeckmeyerThis is like this 1 to 8 scale from contempt P to dignity.
David BeckmeyerAnd I think that's a.
David BeckmeyerI use that scale often when I'm in my.
David BeckmeyerAnd I think, you know, I think they.
David BeckmeyerThey created this and they admit this.
David BeckmeyerThey kind of created this as a tool to measure or rate the people on the other side.
David BeckmeyerI think it's a much more useful tool.
David BeckmeyerAnd they have found the same thing too, to sort of rate your own speech and rate.
David BeckmeyerRate folks on your own side, like, am I Affording my, My rival dignity.
David BeckmeyerSo that's, that's one example of that.
David BeckmeyerAnd there's lots of other, that kind of work out there in terms of the, A lot of the research and some of the groups working on this, on that example you talked about, about, of, you know, getting to spending time with somebody in an environment where politics is not the central identity factor of that sort of the premise of the interaction is, you know, always a great thing because that way if politics does come up later, you'll at least have some amount of benefit of the doubt because you do see them as human.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerAnd so you can, you know, go play video games together, something like that, that, and get to know them as a regular person.
David BeckmeyerThat, That's a huge factor in this.
David BeckmeyerAnd.
David BeckmeyerBut these are heavy lifts, right?
David BeckmeyerSo to go do that, especially if someone, you know, is sort of a political opposite, it's.
David BeckmeyerIt's a heavy lift.
David BeckmeyerI mean, and I, and I of course always say, you got to do what you can do.
David BeckmeyerWe only have so much emotional energy.
David BeckmeyerBut some of the things we talked about before, if you do, you know, start to look at some of these things with a more rational lens and a more critical lens, you know, not only will, you know, you're helping society better, helping yourself, I mean, you're going to, your mental health is going to be so much better if you're not just constantly in fear of everything around you.
Jesse HirschYeah.
Jesse HirschAnd I think that kind of mental health is contagious in a positive sense.
Jesse HirschRight.
Jesse HirschThat you start helping other people sort of feel good.
Jesse HirschAnd that's why I sort of titled this episode Making Sense of the Nonsense and that I think the consequence of outrage, overload is mental health crisis.
Jesse HirschRight.
Jesse HirschIs people not really understanding how to navigate their world, how to participate in their democracy.
Jesse HirschSo I kind of want to end on that notion of incentives.
Jesse HirschRight.
Jesse HirschAs part of your journey, as part of your research, as part of your discussions, have you started to see incentives, whether psychological, whether technological, whether economic, whether social, that help us foster dignity, regard other people with dignity and respect ourselves in so much as we think about how we treat others and the benefits of doing things?
Jesse HirschSo, yeah.
David BeckmeyerAnd from my, for my, for the experience, from my little show, the best way to that I, the most obvious way I see that is, is it from.
David BeckmeyerAt the individual level where that incentive related to that mental health, like people are just, they're overloaded, you know, they're overwhelmed, they're.
David BeckmeyerThey feel like they're drowning.
David BeckmeyerThere's all these metaphors, you can use and, and that's like the trigger to say I want to understand this better and for my, you know, starting and I always talk about that too.
David BeckmeyerLike do this for yourself first.
David BeckmeyerFirst then you can worry about society and the world and the planet and everything else.
David BeckmeyerBut you know, you can't be a very good advocate if you're losing.
David BeckmeyerIf you're losing it.
Jesse HirschYeah.
David BeckmeyerAnd so that, that's probably the biggest incentive I see in individuals is that they just need to re like, you know, they just, they're just beginning to see that they're falling apart and, and this is not good for their health and physical too.
David BeckmeyerI mean this stuff, the stress carries over into physical, your physical health as well.
David BeckmeyerSo that's probably the first incentive there in terms of incentives like in the larger system frankly it's a, that's, you know I talked to Peter Coleman, he's with an organization called.
David BeckmeyerWell he's a lot of organizations but works with, starts with us among others and he's a professor and other things.
David BeckmeyerBut he's one of the big leaders in this space for many decades.
David BeckmeyerYou know, he says, well I have to say I've been in this space for a long time and it's not a feel good space.
David BeckmeyerYou don't always get, you know, you don't always feel like you're seeing progress, you know, so it is challenging and when you look at the bigger picture, it is challenging.
David BeckmeyerRight.
David BeckmeyerYou have all these disincentives, right.
David BeckmeyerThe opposite incentives that are going to be hard to overcome.
David BeckmeyerBut, but so you know, you know, in the research side of it, you know, you see things like to the most, for the most part many people know how you could make social media a better force.
David BeckmeyerBut there's no like, like they're not going to do it.
David BeckmeyerLike the company aren't going to do it because it's going to affect their bottom line until we can somehow make it flip that.
David BeckmeyerSo that also works for their bottom line.
David BeckmeyerAnd I'm not smart enough to have come up with how that is yet, but maybe somebody will figure that out.
Jesse HirschRight on.
Jesse HirschWell, and I think you know, the bottom up, you sort of described there a bottom up process that I see aligned with mental health, which is as individuals we could use this as a way of helping foster greater defenses of our sanity, a greater process of dealing with it.
Jesse HirschThen we can empower our family, our friends, our colleagues, our workplace and that creates this bottom up kind of again virus of sanity that helps people again make sense of the non sand that we find ourselves swimming in.
Jesse HirschThat brings us to our last segment, which is the Shoutouts segment.
Jesse HirschThis is really designed kind of like a.
Jesse HirschImagine it like a bibliography.
Jesse HirschThis could be a shout out again to someone personal, could be a shout out to someone you've had on your show.
Jesse HirschCould be a shout out to someone you've read recently.
Jesse HirschIt's again, designed to let our audience know of people you're thinking about that you think they should pay more attention to.
David BeckmeyerYeah, well, I got.
David BeckmeyerI think I thought about this and I thought, well, I can't not say this person.
David BeckmeyerThere's so many people I could thank and shout out to.
David BeckmeyerI mean, I've had fantastic acceptance into this world, being sort of a nobody in it, and now making all these connections.
David BeckmeyerBut I'm gonna.
David BeckmeyerI'm gonna shout out my sister because, you know, of all my family, you know, she.
David BeckmeyerAnd also Prep.
David BeckmeyerI don't know, I guess I shouldn't say I didn't expect it, but it was maybe still a little bit of a surprise.
David BeckmeyerBut other than my wife, she's been the most engaged, you know, and supportive of this journey that I've.
David BeckmeyerI've embarked on.
David BeckmeyerAnd.
David BeckmeyerAnd I also want to shout her a little bit because I also think she represents a lot of folks right now.
David BeckmeyerShe's also struggling right now with the results of this election.
David BeckmeyerSo I hope that my show has helped to give her some resilience to this.
David BeckmeyerBut she's struggling, so that's who I was going to shout out.
Jesse HirschRight on.
Jesse HirschAnd to your point, I think a lot of us are struggling.
Jesse HirschThat's what's motivating me as well, is that there's a lot of people I know who are depressed straight out and are really looking for guidance for hope.
Jesse HirschSo I thank you, David, because I think you're doing that very much with your show and you've helped me here in terms of what we're doing.
Jesse HirschI want to give a shout out to the association for Media Literacy.
Jesse HirschNeil Anderson and Carol Arkes were two big influences of mine when I was younger and not so young, and they're possibly listening today as well.
Jesse HirschSo what's up, Carol?
Jesse HirschHow you doing, Neil?
Jesse HirschThey've also done great work.
Jesse HirschAnd so, finally, before we go, how can our audience learn more about what you're doing, connect with your show?
Jesse HirschI brought up your sub stack here only because it's hard to bring up a podcast visually on a podcast, but, you know, tell everyone where they can find you and how they can tune in.
David BeckmeyerWell, all my all my stuff, all the stuff you wanted to know about the show is that is at a website called outrage overload.net.
David Beckmeyerthat's where we have.
David BeckmeyerYou can find episodes there.
David BeckmeyerYou can find other work, and then you can also find the link over to the substack where I do some writing on substack as well.
David BeckmeyerWell, and so that's the best place to start if you.
David BeckmeyerAll my contact is more Orlander, too.
David BeckmeyerAll my socials.
David BeckmeyerBut the socials are all Outrage Overload.
David BeckmeyerSo you should find me pretty much on Blue sky or Instagram or all the places.
David BeckmeyerAnd if you want to email me directly, again, that's on the website too, but it's outrageoverloadmail.com so always, always love to hear feedback from real people.
Jesse HirschRight on.
Jesse HirschWell, thank you very much, David.
Jesse HirschThat's been, I think, a fantastic episode.
Jesse HirschWe've been really, I think, honored to have a lot of folks on our show who are on the front lines of the public education work that we need to be doing to really flip the script in terms of the direction our society's heading politically.
Jesse HirschThanks, everyone, for tuning in.
Jesse HirschMetaviews.
Jesse HirschWe tend to publish as often as possible for the same reason that we are trying to counter the disinformation and nonsense that's out there.
Jesse HirschYou can reach us on metaviews on pretty much all the platforms that there are.
Jesse HirschI'm Jesse Hirsch.
Jesse HirschWe'll see you soon.
Jesse HirschAll right, take care.