4.4 • 921 Ratings
🗓️ 15 October 2019
⏱️ 71 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
In his devastating new book The Madness of Crowds, Douglas Murray examines the 21st century’s most divisive issues: sexuality, gender, technology and race. He reveals the astonishing new culture wars playing out in our workplaces, universities, schools and homes in the names of social justice, identity politics and intersectionality. We are living through a postmodern era in which the grand narratives of religion and political ideology have collapsed. In their place have emerged a crusading desire to right perceived wrongs and a weaponization of identity, both accelerated by the new forms of social and news media. Narrow sets of interests now dominate the agenda as society becomes more and more tribal — and, as Murray shows, the casualties are mounting. Readers of all political persuasions cannot afford to ignore Murray’s masterfully argued and fiercely provocative book, in which he seeks to inject some sense into the discussion around this generation’s most complicated issues. He ends with an impassioned call for free speech, shared common values and sanity in an age of mass hysteria. Shermer and Murray discuss:
Douglas Murray is an author and journalist based in Britain. His previous book, The Strange Death of Europe: Immigration, Identity, Islam, was a No. 1 bestseller in non-fiction. Murray has been a contributor to the Spectator since 2000 and has been Associate Editor at the magazine since 2012. He has also written regularly for numerous other outlets including the Wall Street Journal, the Times, the Sunday Times, the Sun, Evening Standard and the New Criterion. He is a regular contributor to National Review and has been a columnist for Standpoint magazine since its founding.
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0:00.0 | This is your host, Michael Sherman, and you're listening to Science Salon, a series of conversations |
0:10.4 | with leading scientists, scholars, and thinkers about the most important issues of our time. |
0:20.0 | Douglas Murray, congratulations on the new book the madness of crowds gender race and identity |
0:27.2 | I love to cover by the way it really captures that kind of mass hysteria look and of course your your title echoes a |
0:34.0 | yeah it's a swarm that's right you're and your title echoes one of the most famous books in the history of the |
0:39.2 | skeptical movement the you know extraordinary popular delusions in the Madness of Gras, which you acknowledge in your |
0:46.6 | introduction. |
0:47.6 | I wanted to say, before we get into it, I believe I found the end of wokeness today in today's newspaper. |
0:56.4 | Here's the Los Angeles Times headline, |
0:58.9 | Sports, Money Walks and Mori, money talks and Mori walks. This is the NBA walking back one of their general managers. |
1:07.0 | You're going to have to walk me through that. |
1:10.0 | Okay, so the NBA is the National Basketball Association is considered the most woke of all the American sports. |
1:18.0 | And you know they always condemn racism and misogyny and they come down hard on their players when they act out and so forth and |
1:25.0 | and so one of their general managers tweeted yesterday support for the |
1:31.0 | Hong Kong democracy movement. |
1:33.0 | Oh yes. |
1:34.0 | And the NBA has, well I'll give you the numbers here, they have made inroads into China |
1:39.0 | and China's favorite sport is basketball. And they are able to deliver no less than 300 |
1:45.8 | million players and 500 million viewers. So the NBA decided that that wasn't such a good idea to support Hong Kong democracy movement. |
1:56.8 | So their wokeness came up against their bottom line and guess what won. |
2:01.8 | So this guy... I saw that South Park, however, maintained a proper and strong stance on this. |
2:09.0 | Yes, they did. Well, yeah, they don't care, but you you know maybe they're not big enough I don't |
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